You may have clipped the pole because of the footwork on your position exit. Your inside foot stayed planted, your outside foot lifted and performed a front cross over step. Crossing your feet that way turns your hips hard to the right exactly when you mean to be engaging targets on the back berm...you experience torso tension and a tendency for the dot to leak in the direction of the hips (in this case, to the right). Tom Castro's been doing a lot of recent videos on this and he's 1000% correct. Stoeger used to teach this kind of "shoulder fade" exit - keeping the inside foot planted, lifting the outside foot - and I've had to do tons of training to undo those bad habits.
Ive tried "shuffle" stepping vs. Stoegers bar hop method where you cross your feet. Both are fast. But i felt more stable aiming crossing my feet. When you side shuffle like that, you bounce up and down and its harder to aquire the sight.
Having a mannerisms of ( checken) chicken run is makes everyone faster when running, the sidestepping wont but in literally running it makes everyone run with balance.... and (maintaining) with safeties.. Running two hand is only good but only when lowering gun, like rugby players that very fascinating on quick and illusionary side steppelings... Two hand run is unfurtunately affects speed of running to the next station, because it lessen the comfort of balances while running and the preparedness or breaking at the (next)station. Checken run. Not arm extentend, or straigthen downwards, or laterally horizontal, the gun holdup run is also not recommended because the weigth delay of momentum of pistol changes the balance of the shooters while running, compaired to center weigth runners the comfortability is really higher or excellent.
You may have clipped the pole because of the footwork on your position exit. Your inside foot stayed planted, your outside foot lifted and performed a front cross over step. Crossing your feet that way turns your hips hard to the right exactly when you mean to be engaging targets on the back berm...you experience torso tension and a tendency for the dot to leak in the direction of the hips (in this case, to the right). Tom Castro's been doing a lot of recent videos on this and he's 1000% correct. Stoeger used to teach this kind of "shoulder fade" exit - keeping the inside foot planted, lifting the outside foot - and I've had to do tons of training to undo those bad habits.
Ive tried "shuffle" stepping vs. Stoegers bar hop method where you cross your feet. Both are fast. But i felt more stable aiming crossing my feet. When you side shuffle like that, you bounce up and down and its harder to aquire the sight.
To each their own. I would argue that one personally, but go put the reps in and see what works for you.
@@Joe_Farewell I also see no reason you can't do both especially when you toss in a reload.
Having a mannerisms of ( checken) chicken run is makes everyone faster when running, the sidestepping wont but in literally running it makes everyone run with balance.... and (maintaining) with safeties..
Running two hand is only good but only when lowering gun, like rugby players that very fascinating on quick and illusionary side steppelings...
Two hand run is unfurtunately affects speed of running to the next station, because it lessen the comfort of balances while running and the preparedness or breaking at the (next)station.
Checken run. Not arm extentend, or straigthen downwards, or laterally horizontal, the gun holdup run is also not recommended because the weigth delay of momentum of pistol changes the balance of the shooters while running, compaired to center weigth runners the comfortability is really higher or excellent.