Breaking through that B or C Class Barrier

Published on August 23, 2025
Duration: 13:59

This video offers expert advice for shooters stuck in B or C class, identifying two primary camps: the slow and deliberate, and the reckless. For those too slow, the advice is to embrace practice mistakes and push speed, particularly in dry fire. For those too fast but inaccurate, the focus shifts to building discipline by waiting for sight alignment before firing. The instructor, Joel Park, draws on his own experience of being stuck in B-class for a decade to provide actionable strategies for improvement.

Quick Summary

Shooters stuck in B or C class typically fall into two camps: slow and deliberate, or fast and reckless. Slow shooters must embrace practice errors and push speed, especially in dry fire. Fast but inaccurate shooters need to build discipline by waiting for sight alignment before firing and focusing on consistent aggregate scores.

Chapters

  1. 00:01Introduction: Stuck in B-Class
  2. 00:34Early Shooting Habits and Stagnation
  3. 01:33Two Camps of Shooters
  4. 01:41Camp 1: The Slow and Deliberate Shooter
  5. 02:02Example: Over-Confirming Sights
  6. 03:10Breaking Out of the Deliberate Camp
  7. 03:29Dry Fire for Speed
  8. 04:06Counterintuitive Speed Training
  9. 05:28Net Gain: Faster Gun Handling
  10. 05:36Using Par Times
  11. 06:22Improved Index and Gun Handling
  12. 07:14Trusting Your Index
  13. 07:36From B to High A Class
  14. 08:53Advice for Over-Aiming Shooters
  15. 10:02Camp 2: Lack of Discipline
  16. 10:10Fast Shooters with Poor Hits
  17. 10:56Learning Discipline for High A/M Class
  18. 11:19Visual Cues Over Cadence
  19. 11:40Scoring Aggregates in Practice
  20. 12:33Summary: Two Camps Recap
  21. 13:27Frustration of Being Stuck
  22. 13:54Conclusion and Call to Action

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the two main types of shooters who get stuck in B or C class?

Shooters often fall into two camps: those who are too slow and deliberate, focusing on perfection but lacking speed, and those who are too fast and reckless, achieving quick times but with poor target hits. Identifying which camp you belong to is the first step to improvement.

How can a slow and deliberate shooter improve their speed?

A slow shooter should embrace making mistakes and missing in practice. They need to push speed aggressively, especially in dry fire, focusing on draw times, magazine changes, and gun handling. Adding trigger presses during dry fire can also help overcome over-confirmation.

What advice is given for fast shooters who lack accuracy?

Fast but inaccurate shooters need to build discipline. This involves waiting to see sights on the target before pressing the trigger, rather than shooting to a cadence or sound. Practicing by scoring aggregates and aiming for consistency over single best runs is crucial.

What role does dry fire play in breaking shooting class barriers?

Dry fire is highly effective for practicing speed and gun handling without the safety constraints of live fire. Aggressively practicing draws, reloads, and transitions in dry fire can significantly improve overall shooting speed, even if it requires correcting some bad habits later.

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