How to stop hitting low left/right NOW!

Ойын-сауық

The dreaded flinch.
There are many facets of WHY most people miss low, left, or right.
This video is designed to help you understand what you’re doing, and why you’re doing it. Also, it contains some tips on what you can do to fix it immediately, but with caveats.
These are just one man’s thoughts. It’s not THE way. Just A way.
Let me know what you think and remember to share if you dig it.
See y’all at the range.
www.jbstraininggroup.com

Пікірлер: 20

  • @charlesreeves3426
    @charlesreeves3426 Жыл бұрын

    This is one of the best explanations of an out of time anticipation and demonstration on how to program your brain to correct it. Your love for the craft and passion to teach others is obvious in your videos. Most people that are in the business of making money by teaching others, when making a free video on performance shooting, will give the "what". That being said very few give the "why and the "how" with an in-depth explanation and demonstration. You are one of the few. If the Lord is willing, Ill being seeing you in a class.

  • @jbstraininggroup3640

    @jbstraininggroup3640

    Жыл бұрын

    Super cool, man. Thanks for the kind words. Share!!

  • @jackmann7054
    @jackmann70545 ай бұрын

    Great job and clear instruction. Been a pistol shooter for decades with tens of thousands of rounds in bullseye but only 2 years on defensive and rapid fire instinctive shooting and stoked on all your body of work. Craving ccw pistol craft so thanks man.

  • @titanscerw
    @titanscerw Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Mark!

  • @hurricanepaul1
    @hurricanepaul1 Жыл бұрын

    Went to the range and went through your steps here for a friend who always shoots low/left. All the other things never worked (support hand grip, etc) This worked. The drill and the explanation all worked. This is awesome. Thanks Mark.

  • @jbstraininggroup3640

    @jbstraininggroup3640

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome. Glad you got some success. Keep at it.

  • @micheleowens5389
    @micheleowens5389 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Mark. More to work on.

  • @jbstraininggroup3640

    @jbstraininggroup3640

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for watching!!!

  • @jallen312
    @jallen3127 ай бұрын

    Great info!

  • @georgekirby3361
    @georgekirby3361 Жыл бұрын

    I like it.

  • @tb123995
    @tb123995 Жыл бұрын

    Wife told me ED’s are always bad

  • @chamberddefense
    @chamberddefense Жыл бұрын

    Great info Mark! If ppl are doing thier dryfire correctly they will see these EDs. It's all about learning the trigger on your gun. Again Great video. I hate I missed your live with Tim on this subject.

  • @jbstraininggroup3640

    @jbstraininggroup3640

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for watching. Share!!

  • @Shooting-Journey-Guy-Mike
    @Shooting-Journey-Guy-Mike Жыл бұрын

    Very well done video and I'm planning to make content similar to this on my own channel soon. Subscribed to you based on the strength of this video alone. The only thing I would add, which is worth a video all by itself, is something you mentioned early-- alot of this is dependent on your target size and distance and your accuracy requirements, and it becomes what the race gun guys call a "throttle", like a gas pedal in a car. If I'm at 3 yards or 5 yards and my acceptable accuracy expectation is an 8" A Zone on my IDPA target, I'm gripping the gun hard enough to shake and I'm slapping the trigger like it owes me money, and I never see my dot sight as an actual dot, it's just a streak moving up and down as I hammer away-- because at that distance it doesn't matter, I'm at full throttle and I need as much speed as possible and I'll still get acceptable accuracy. Now lets say my target is 15 yards away and I need headshots. I have to throttle back-- I can't grip hard enough for the gun to shake in my hands. I need to maintain a good sight picture while I roll pressure onto the trigger as smoothly as possible. I'm sacrificing time for accuracy. Everyone has to, nobody is getting headshots at 15 yards with .20 split times, not even the best competition shooters. So there's a balance of speed and accuracy that we're all trying to push to improve on, and IMHO when you push too far for your skill level that's when things fall apart and you start seeing low left hits and similar other issues. AND THAT'S OK. You don't get better by doing what you already know how to do. You get better by pushing yourself until you fail forward. Sorry for the wall o' text but this is a subject that's crazy important and you did a GREAT job with it, and I just wanted to throw in my two cents.

  • @jessegpresley

    @jessegpresley

    Жыл бұрын

    pushing low/left isn't "dependent on target size and distance and your accuracy requirements"

  • @Shooting-Journey-Guy-Mike

    @Shooting-Journey-Guy-Mike

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jessegpresley You're right. However in my opinion pushing low/left is caused by flaws in our grip and trigger press which become more apparent as our speed and accuracy requirements increase. At 3 yards going fast I can "get away with" flaws in my shooting that become very obvious at 15 yards. Someone who only shoots crazy fast up close may not ever realize that at 15 yards they would be pulling badly low/left. Likewise someone who only shoots slow fire at 15 yards with one second splits might not realize that they would push low/left if they ever tried to go faster. Seeking both speed and accuracy is what causes our flaws to expose themselves to us. But yes the flaws are there regardless, always.

  • @caleb.w
    @caleb.w Жыл бұрын

    Good stuff. Thanks man 👊🏻

  • @jbstraininggroup3640

    @jbstraininggroup3640

    Жыл бұрын

    Yep yep!!!!!

  • @tommorgan7431
    @tommorgan7431 Жыл бұрын

    For whatever reason, placing pressure on the right sight (I'm right handed) of my flat Overwatch gives me more consistency in placing rounds where I'd like them to go. Is there anything to this? It is a self imposed placebo and by doing that... I'm gripping differently without realizing it? Many moons ago Haley put out a thing where he talked about his finger being straight from the tip to the second knuckle giving him better consistency or some such thing... its been a minute. Tried it and it seems to work.

  • @jbstraininggroup3640

    @jbstraininggroup3640

    Жыл бұрын

    Finger placement is very personal and typically related to your length of finger and/or firing hand placement on the pistol. The finger placement isn’t causing you to do better, something about placing your finger there changes your firing hands ability to affect the shot as often or as egregiously. That’s my bet.

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