solaritx wrote:Ok, I'll bite as well.
I humbly bow my head and recount to the world that not only did a girl outshoot me with a better time than I had at the Smith and Wesson Winter Championships, but she was also a Junior.
Oh by the way, she outshot a heck of a lot of people to win her classification in her division. (at 16 years old)
For the record, the winners of both the ESP/MM (my daughter) and the winner of the ESP/SS of the S&W Winter Championships for 2007 were estrogen fueled.
Humbled by youth and estrogen
Yup, heres mine:
Had a group of youngsters (12-20 yrs. old) out for a "shoot" one weekend about 5-6 yrs ago.
One of the drills for the more experienced shooters is one I call "shooting the V". It is a transistion drill meant to challenge the shooter by forcing them to "transition" from one target to the next while advancing on the targets.
Five 9" steel plates are set up (on steel rods) in the shape of a "V", the mouth of the "V" is about 10 feet wide.
From hands up, at the buzzer, the shooter must draw, advance toward the targets (never stopping), shoot the first target at the mouth of the "V" then swing to the opposite side, and then back... and so on.
The last target in the center is the stop plate.
A 15 yr. old girl I have worked with in the past... borrowed a friend of mines 5" Springfield in 9mm. She cleared the plates in 4.46 the first time and then backed it up with a run in the 4.20's
After everyone had left for the day, it took me three tries to beat her time.
The next weekend at church...I stopped her and "fessed up", she just giggled a little, but her dad was beaming.