Kyle DeFoor is highly respected and humble individual who provides excellent technical and tactical reasoning behind his training methods. He prepares his students for real gunfighting scenarios, including civilians who have never shot before.
This video has opened my eyes to the importance of correctly training to shoot on the move. I will apply these tips and knowledge to my training routine.
It's fascinating to see how much thought and research goes into training shooting on the move. I'm definitely going to dive deeper into this topic after watching this video.
Thank you Tim. You are right. People put the law above their lives. When I was a policeman, at almost every community or neighborhood watch meeting, there was always this question, "If I come home and there's a man standing there holding my wife with a blade to her neck, can I shoot him?" I believe that if a man has to ask that question, that man has never given any thought about preserving his or his loved one's life. He is the type of person that approaches training with the fear of consequences from the judicial system. They make poor students or will never take the time to train because they prefer to die or their wife die than get interviewed by a Homicide detective who is truly the one that is going to present the case for possible prosecution. Sometimes it is a waste of time explaining that all species have a natural instinct for self preservation and nothing else matters. It is a very personal matter that involves you and the A-hole that wants to kill you. In that instance there are no third parties. Your guests seem to know how to explain things better than most people out there that consider themselves real teachers, yet they have never been "there". It is truly hard to relay what I am trying to say with that. But it makes a difference learning from personal experience or the experience of others who have lived and can remember that unique "moment" or "moments" where you did everything right to survive. And you feel that necessity to teach others so that they too can survive their "moment" and talk about it later over a beer. God bless you Tim.
Frank Windle, Tom Kier, Bill Rapier, now Kyle Defoor. You are keeping great company. Keep up the excellent work with these outstanding interviews. These guys really know what they are talking about.
The speaker discusses the increase of tactical trainers on social media platforms, highlighting that not all trainers are bad, but that some are more difficult to access than others.
At 48:01, you mentioned using the blade in conjunction with the gun, I have seen video from Kyle where he draws the blade in .8 and the gun in .1.02, in close quarter training. With O.S.S.curriculum training an edge of hand strike to the throat or a chin jab with a post (both deadly) can be accomplished in .4(I have personally tested this), so why is this left out of the training?
You might want to include the words "Kyle Defoor" in video's title if you want this to blow up Tim, lol. You've been getting some whales as guests latelty, keep up the good work!
At 1:31, pushups and running will not do it, 100% correct thank you, elevated heart rate from aerobic exercise is not the same as elevated heart rate from an adrenal dump. Too bad you did not mention your procedure to generate adrenal stress reaction I am very curious if it is similar to what I use for training purposes. I can tell you from personal experience that the first-time professionals do the drills under induced adrenal stress they fumble like a beginner. ( I did not invent the drills I use, I learned them from a very good source)
Interesting because I've listened to hundreds of hours of SOF podcasts and I've never ONCE heard a guy talk about using g a knife as a weapon. In fact, most scoff at the idea. I could be wrong, this man did the job and I did not...at leat at the level. I'd love to be pointed to some real life instances of this happening...short of WW2 or Vietnam.
Well there are many if you check out Paul Cales story Aussie SOF he has the first verified kill with a knife for Aussie SoF since Vietnam. Many of the low vis SOF units have used knives extensively in their missions.
@@PROT3CTPROJECT rare enough that in the last 20 years of combat, there's only one name? The number of dudes that actually used their pistol in combat is ridiculously small. The number that used their knife is all but non existent. I'm not trying to be a dick but the truth is the truth....
@@MrCashewkitty i was attempting to give you a case thatcwas made public. Many aren’t available to be shared but thats fine if you don’t believe using a knife is viable or worth learn in g that is your prerogative. The individuals i’ve interviewed are at the tip of the spear and they find it is an essential addition to their cqb training. All i do is put out the info. You decide if its worth considering. You are the one who will have to face any violence on your own. This is one option
This video has opened my eyes to the importance of correctly training to shoot on the move. I will apply these tips and knowledge to my training routine.
Kyle DeFoor is highly respected and humble individual who provides excellent technical and tactical reasoning behind his training methods. He prepares his students for real gunfighting scenarios, including civilians who have never shot before.
Finding a mentor and trainer is a must
This video has opened my eyes to the importance of correctly training to shoot on the move. I will apply these tips and knowledge to my training routine.
What an awesome interview
I had no idea that data was so important in shooting. This video is really interesting and has given me a new perspective on how to improve my aim.
It's fascinating to see how much thought and research goes into training shooting on the move. I'm definitely going to dive deeper into this topic after watching this video.
This is nice interview
Thank you Tim. You are right. People put the law above their lives. When I was a policeman, at almost every community or neighborhood watch meeting, there was always this question, "If I come home and there's a man standing there holding my wife with a blade to her neck, can I shoot him?"
I believe that if a man has to ask that question, that man has never given any thought about preserving his or his loved one's life. He is the type of person that approaches training with the fear of consequences from the judicial system. They make poor students or will never take the time to train because they prefer to die or their wife die than get interviewed by a Homicide detective who is truly the one that is going to present the case for possible prosecution.
Sometimes it is a waste of time explaining that all species have a natural instinct for self preservation and nothing else matters. It is a very personal matter that involves you and the A-hole that wants to kill you. In that instance there are no third parties.
Your guests seem to know how to explain things better than most people out there that consider themselves real teachers, yet they have never been "there". It is truly hard to relay what I am trying to say with that. But it makes a difference learning from personal experience or the experience of others who have lived and can remember that unique "moment" or "moments" where you did everything right to survive. And you feel that necessity to teach others so that they too can survive their "moment" and talk about it later over a beer.
God bless you Tim.
Frank Windle, Tom Kier, Bill Rapier, now Kyle Defoor. You are keeping great company. Keep up the excellent work with these outstanding interviews. These guys really know what they are talking about.
I’m fortunate to have access to these folks and able to get them to share their info.
Thanks for sharing your expertise with us! I've learned so much from this video and can't wait to try out some of these techniques.
Glad it was helpful!
Thanks for the interview. A lot of important and informative points in it. 👍
The speaker discusses the increase of tactical trainers on social media platforms, highlighting that not all trainers are bad, but that some are more difficult to access than others.
Very informative
Wow, I never knew that the main purpose of shooting on the move was to create a safe background shot.
Tim expresses his appreciation for being able to interview several highly respected tactical trainers, including Kyle DeFoor, a former Navy SEAL.
It's essential to find a trainer who can provide both the technical knowledge and the real-world experience necessary to succeed.
At 48:01, you mentioned using the blade in conjunction with the gun, I have seen video from Kyle where he draws the blade in .8 and the gun
in .1.02, in close quarter training. With O.S.S.curriculum training an edge of hand strike to the throat or a chin jab with a post (both deadly) can be accomplished in .4(I have personally tested this), so why is this left out of the training?
Can you recommend a good self defense trainer in the midwest? Ideally the chicagoland area?
Does Kyle Defoor cover "what if you cannot get to your gun" as part of his classes?
I was just saying the other day that Tim hasn't put out a video in a while.
seems Tim learned a lot from training civilians regarding gear, as most civilians are on top of it.
For an inexperienced beginner, this was yet another fantastic podcast. Thank you so much, Mr. Larkin.
You might want to include the words "Kyle Defoor" in video's title if you want this to blow up Tim, lol. You've been getting some whales as guests latelty, keep up the good work!
It’s in the thumbnail but I take your point. Thanks for watching
How many times can you call him Bill?
At 1:31, pushups and running will not do it, 100% correct thank you, elevated heart rate from aerobic exercise is not the same as elevated heart rate from an adrenal dump. Too bad you did not mention your procedure to generate adrenal stress reaction I am very curious if it is similar to what I use for training purposes. I can tell you from personal experience that the first-time professionals do the drills under induced adrenal stress they fumble like a beginner.
( I did not invent the drills I use, I learned them from a very good source)
who was the source ?
Interesting because I've listened to hundreds of hours of SOF podcasts and I've never ONCE heard a guy talk about using g a knife as a weapon. In fact, most scoff at the idea. I could be wrong, this man did the job and I did not...at leat at the level. I'd love to be pointed to some real life instances of this happening...short of WW2 or Vietnam.
Well there are many if you check out Paul Cales story Aussie SOF he has the first verified kill with a knife for Aussie SoF since Vietnam. Many of the low vis SOF units have used knives extensively in their missions.
@@PROT3CTPROJECT rare enough that in the last 20 years of combat, there's only one name? The number of dudes that actually used their pistol in combat is ridiculously small. The number that used their knife is all but non existent. I'm not trying to be a dick but the truth is the truth....
@@MrCashewkitty i was attempting to give you a case thatcwas made public. Many aren’t available to be shared but thats fine if you don’t believe using a knife is viable or worth learn in g that is your prerogative. The individuals i’ve interviewed are at the tip of the spear and they find it is an essential addition to their cqb training. All i do is put out the info. You decide if its worth considering. You are the one who will have to face any violence on your own. This is one option
I just found his videos. What is his background?
Whose background? Kyles?
I’m sorry for pirating movies I think I’ve learned my lesson ;(.
👍
Take way to long to get your questions out man. Think about what you want to say before you say it. Thanks
Thanks for your feedback
This video has opened my eyes to the importance of correctly training to shoot on the move. I will apply these tips and knowledge to my training routine.