Gaining a defensive edge

A recent personal practice day at the range was spent isolating vision, transitions and movement in a short, fast-paced, aggressive drill.

Why is this important to me? From a defensive perspective, I want aggressive shooting with accountability. I don’t want to waste time over-confirming my sight picture because time is a luxury I don’t have. That means visually processing targets quickly, shooting on the move and learning to confidently run my gun at speed.

No range theatrics. No fantasy camp drills that have little application in the real world. My focus is on refining hard skills at a very high level. Skills that I can call upon on demand and under stress.

I run classes for carbine and pistol that are designed to push you to a higher level, in a natural environment where you can develop critical defensive skills in a way that can’t be replicated at an indoor range, giving you a real edge.

Training is a lifelong journey. Are you making an investment in your development?


Prioritize your training.

Build on-demand performance through drills that develop and pressure test speed, accuracy, distance, and movement with your gun.

Explore →


Make contact

Previous
Previous

The importance of positive stress

Next
Next

Isolating skills to improve carbine performance