top of page

“Helpful Squadmate” Etiquette

Question:

I am very new to this sport. I’ve abandoned golf and am hooked on Sporting Clays. I recently shot at my first registered Sporting Clays event. I was placed in a squad with total strangers (nice guys). I was shooting poorly (I’ll admit I was nervous). In the middle of shooting, I felt a tap on my shoulder and heard, “You’re not following through.” A few stations later I feel another “tap tap” and hear, “You need to get in front of that bird two more feet.” Later, while I was standing in the box shooting, I was surprised to hear a lot of chatter and conversations from other squads waiting to shoot. What is the etiquette for offering unsolicited advice? And, as a former golfer, is the shooting stage like a putting green where silence should be the rule?

Answer:

There is nothing more annoying than unsolicited and especially unwanted advise while in the shooting stand.

For NSCA registered events, coaching someone while in the stand is not specifically prohibited by NSCA rules, but interrupting the harmony and flow of the shooting process, is. More often than not, the advice from these well-meaning squad-mates is incorrect anyway.

Within your question, lies a classic example. It is a common misconception that the cure for inadequate “follow-through” is to “keep swinging the gun!” That is patently false. The primary cause of a shooter’s shotgun slowing down or stopping during execution is lack of “visual follow-through,” not physical follow-through. In other words, the gun will continue to move to and through the breakpoint as long as the shooter’s acute focus remains on the target.

The best advise to give a shooter while in the stand is no advice at all unless the shooter specifically asks for it. And even then, advice should be rendered only in subtle ways so as to maintain the natural flow of the event. In FITASC, a judge may actually call the “helpful coach” for interference.

Bottom line: save the advice for the clubhouse, not the shooting stand. And while everyone around the shooting stand should be mindful of creating a distraction for a shooter in the shooting stand, not everyone is unfortunately.

6 views0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

The Benefits of Skeet For Practice

After a few years on the competition circuit, there aren’t many target presentations that will come as a surprise.  As we ascend through the ranks of “seasoned” sporting clays and FITASC competitors,

Ask The Instructor: Where To Look

Question: Where should my eye be during the pre-shot planning, and where should the barrel be in relation to my peripheral vision? How far out from the trap should I set the visual pick-up point? Shou

Ask The Instructor: Hold Point

Question: I’ve always been told to keep my eyes centered in my head to follow the bird (ocular center) and turn my head toward the visual hold point. I see in your video that you say to cut your eyes

bottom of page