This is very helpful for someone whose never done it before. She is incredibly impressive. He did very well, not letting an ego interfere with his first time, and how fortunate to get tips from such a pro.
I try like hell to get some of our customers, who spend lots of money on guns and mods, to come out and do Steel Challenge with me. Can't get any of them to try it. I think they are afraid of how bad they might be. It's amazing how much money these customers spend on expensive guns and expensive parts. But rarely shoot any of there guns. And when they do, they go to an indoor range and shoot at 20ft on paper targets, Boring.
Weird, I went the opposite way. Did my first steel challenge a couple weeks ago with a completely stock Glock 17. Now I’m addicted and want to get a fancy gun like the top 10 had. They all had red dots and trigger jobs, etc etc…
@@warrenb8228For starters you don't need a Gucci gun to be competitive or shoot at a high level. There's plenty of guys who have won USPSA/Steel Challenge competitions with pretty much stock guns. The reason the absolute creme de la creme top 0.001% use super race guns is because quite frankly the game for them is won/lost by millimeters or one tenth of a second so they need to squeeze every absolute drop of performance they can. This isn't the case for 99.9% of the people competing in the sport. And second of all he was obviously referring to the consumer gun guy (which unfortunately is the majority of gun owners today) who will buy extremely overpriced pieces of aluminum every month when the new flavor of spec ops cool guy gadget comes out. They might not consciously think it that way, but subconsciously they're thinking that if they buy everything the cool guys are using, that they themselves will now inherit those skills and abilities. When the reality is, they don't even know how to shoot at an intermediate level.
This is very helpful for someone whose never done it before. She is incredibly impressive. He did very well, not letting an ego interfere with his first time, and how fortunate to get tips from such a pro.
Every gun owner, especially military and law enforcement personnel, should experience something like this. Great video!
I try like hell to get some of our customers, who spend lots of money on guns and mods, to come out and do Steel Challenge with me. Can't get any of them to try it. I think they are afraid of how bad they might be. It's amazing how much money these customers spend on expensive guns and expensive parts. But rarely shoot any of there guns. And when they do, they go to an indoor range and shoot at 20ft on paper targets, Boring.
A whooooole lot of em' out there too.
Weird, I went the opposite way. Did my first steel challenge a couple weeks ago with a completely stock Glock 17. Now I’m addicted and want to get a fancy gun like the top 10 had. They all had red dots and trigger jobs, etc etc…
@@warrenb8228For starters you don't need a Gucci gun to be competitive or shoot at a high level. There's plenty of guys who have won USPSA/Steel Challenge competitions with pretty much stock guns. The reason the absolute creme de la creme top 0.001% use super race guns is because quite frankly the game for them is won/lost by millimeters or one tenth of a second so they need to squeeze every absolute drop of performance they can. This isn't the case for 99.9% of the people competing in the sport.
And second of all he was obviously referring to the consumer gun guy (which unfortunately is the majority of gun owners today) who will buy extremely overpriced pieces of aluminum every month when the new flavor of spec ops cool guy gadget comes out. They might not consciously think it that way, but subconsciously they're thinking that if they buy everything the cool guys are using, that they themselves will now inherit those skills and abilities.
When the reality is, they don't even know how to shoot at an intermediate level.
So excited to try my first steel challenge. I dont own anything fancy but im willing to put myself out there.
Great video, I remember my very humbling experience shooting my first steel challenge match.
Just signed up for my 1st. I'm ready to get embarrassed 😂
@@buckeyeblasterHave fun! It’s awesome!
Great video. I do my first steel challenge (and my first shooting of a pistol) in about 8 weeks. Excited and nervous. hehehe
1st and not the last!
Cool. Jessie I am curious about your stance versus isosceles, can you elaborate please.
Modified weaver feels more natural to me. It provides more forward and aft balance and is more like an empty handed fighting stance.
That was awesome
There's no arguing with her in her home😂
What an amazing range! Where is that?!
I'd like to know this, too . . . very nice set-up!
Harrison pros trujillo
He's actually not a bad shooter either lmao
The shoe is on the other foot she is was mansplaining to hil and he looked like a little girl shooting hilarious
You mean a well thought out sentiment with logic and patience. Unlike women normally.