Rover wrote:...there is no NPOA.
Why would Brian Zins back him up?
Interesting. I was in Zins most recent clinic. Yes, he *very* firmly stated that there was no such thing as NPOA.
However, I think a few things are worth mentioning, things he and Alan stressed during the clinic.
1. When Zins says there is no NPOA, he's talking about Conventional Pistol. He freely and repeatedly says during his clinic that everything he teaches would be completely different if he were teaching a combat pistol course or a course for any other discipline. Literally, even basic safe gun handling rules change when the disciplines change.
2. Zins has definite opinions about the utility of trigger control in Conventional Pistol but is absolutely clear that those opinions have *nothing* to do with Free Pistol, Air Pistol, or, basically, any of the ISSF sports where a different approach is generally warranted. An example he cited in class was that pretty much the only thing shared by Free Pistol and Conventional Pistol (with irons) is the sight picture; nothing else is the same.
3. Despite saying there's no such thing as NPOA, Zins and Moody both teach that there's a range of angles of body relative to the target that are appropriate and it's counterproductive to exceed those ranges. As he told one shooter in our class "It's easier to shoot downrange when you're not standing facing the parking lot."
During that part of the class, they stress that this range isn't set in stone and can change based on what you ate this morning, how many pounds you gained last month, the current state of your shoulder muscles because of weightlifting, etc., ad infinitum. Ultimately, the example they gave was someone who stands on the line, works very hard to determine their NPOA and then breaks out a length of chalk to mark their foot position on the floor so that they can return to exactly the same body-to-target angle the next day. Their point was that those marks might be fine right now but they might be a little off after lunch and they might be ridiculously wrong a month in the future.
The lesson I took from all this was that a quantifiable NPOA, a defined angle of body to target within a few degrees that does not vary with conditions, is impossible to determine or successfully use. The body changes and the best NPOA body position today may not be even close to what's best in a few months.
I further got the impression that if an athlete is and remains fit and practices rigorously under unchanging conditions, that angle will remain fairly constant.
For Zins, teaching a bullseye clinic, this doesn't mean much. The National Championship for which he trains is basically shot out in a cow pasture (his words, not mine) where variations in footing may cause/require noticeable changes in the angle of body to target.
I think that "Zins says NPOA doesn't exist" is true but also an oversimplification, something that he essentially acknowledged during the class. There was a lot I learned in his clinic but, frankly, if I switched to shooting free pistol I imagine this would be one of the first bits of knowledge I'd either discard entirely or substantially modify.
4. Having said all that, I also know it's easy to find both online and in print from acknowledged experts instructions to pistol shooters that tell them to blade the body 90 degrees from the firing line. Period. No variation. I've tried that. My shoulders screamed at me for a week.
So, no matter who's doing the teaching or talking, whether they're charging money or not, I'm going to listen and apply my own brain to whatever is said. Doing that to this thread is enough to give me a headache; so many of you essentially agree about basic things but insist on arguing over terminology...without even defining terms.
Reading here and elsewhere has helped me enormously but, frankly, I've improved more in the last couple of months by taking personal instruction from champions, molding their pronouncements into something I believe I can use, going to the range immediately after breakfast 5 days a week to fire 30 to 50 shots as perfectly as I can (at which point I reach my limit of concentration endurance and pack it in) and dry-firing in 2 daily sessions to the point to boredom. Once a week I re-review my written shot process and modify or notate as seems appropriate. That's about the limit of what I'm willing to put into becoming a better shot at the moment and I'm making measurable progress.
So please understand that I mean no disrespect to anyone here (especially here) but my groups on target have shrunk by half since I've started essentially ignoring everything I see online in this and (especially) certain other forums. The conclusion I've reached is that there is no such thing as basic marksmanship. There are only particular techniques for particular disciplines and while some cross-talk between disciplines can be helpful, most of it is just noise.
I just don't understand why people spend so much time arguing about stuff they basically already agree on. I'd rather spend my time practising. I note that the volume of my posts here and elsewhere has fallen precipitously of late. Some people should probably send me thank you cards. :-)