Today we bring to you, once again, some words of warrior wisdom (see that awesome and apropos alliteration?) from Jared Ross of Rockwell Tactical. Mad Duo

Grunts: apropos

Shot Placement in Combat Shooting

Jared Ross

As kind of a follow-up to last year’s Why Dots?, I wanted to talk more on shot placement in a combat setting. What do I mean by combat? Any situation with a physical confrontation where there is potential for injury or loss of life. This type of situation causes a surge of adrenaline (Fight or Flight response).

All kinds of things happen to your body physiologically in combat, tunnel vision being one of the most common. When my wife used our Mossberg 590 to defend our home, she experienced “combat” just a real as I did while executing missions in Iraq and other places.

There is an interesting phenomenon that occurs with shooters as they go through a shoot house. We see it at every SF CQB class. Combat, as those who have experienced it will attest, is sensory overload. As students are entering the room and scanning for threats, we give them all kinds of targets. What, generally, are they looking for? What are professionals all over the world looking for? Hands. As soon as the hands are identified as having or not having a weapon, the students will react as they are clearing the room.

With minds racing, and weapons identified, the students will begin to shoot to eliminate the threat. What tends to happen is that all the shots go toward the weapon and hands, not at the center of mass or head. This may not seem like a big deal, but it is. This needs to be noted by trainers and pointed out to students. We need to train to have good shot placement on threats.

Let me give you an example of what HAS happened. Gun fight: real world threat presents himself with an AK. Soldier identifies threat, sees AK, and immediately engages the threat. After soldier shoots 5-6 rounds AND KNOWS they were hits, the threat falls. Soldier now ignores the fallen threat and starts looking for another. The old threat then rises and continues his original attack, minus the AK, catching the soldier completely off guard.

So what happened? Was this a scene from The Walking Dead? No, it was real life. All those rounds hit the old-school, milled AK, effectively destroying it and knocking down the threat. Then, much to his surprise, Johnny Taliban realized that instead of being dead, he just had minor injuries to his hands. So with an “Inshallah” he continued the fight.

You need to train for real life. It all starts with MMS (read my first article for an explanation of MMS). That’s why we use dots to work on the fundamental principles of MMS. You need to know your weapon. You need to know your holds. You need to know where your rounds will impact if you are three feet, thirty meters or 600 meters away. It’s not enough to just identify your target, you need to identify the threat and place well-aimed shots that will neutralize the threat.

I can’t emphasize enough the importance of reviewing and practicing the basics of shooting. Every RTG live-fire class starts with three basic types of drills. The rounds per drill, and distance, are up to the individual situation.