S3E13: The Physical SECRET to Becoming Both Fast AND Accurate

Topic: The Physical SECRET to Becoming Both Fast AND Accurate

Today, Riley Bowman and Matthew Maruster discuss the “secret” to being both accurate AND fast at shooting. We talk about one method for being able to develop the physical skill necessary to achieve this in dry fire practice, and this method was recently featured on the latest Shooter Ready Challenge. Check it out at https://www.shooterreadychallenge.com and tune into today's episode!

As always, any questions or suggestions for future episodes can be submitted to podcast@concealedcarry.com!

Two Options to Listen/View:

Press PLAY on the player above to listen to the audio. Press PLAY on the video below to watch the live recording!

Sponsors

Thanks for Listening!

Thanks so much for joining us this week. Have some feedback you’d like to share? Leave a note in the comment section below. If you enjoyed the podcast the biggest compliment you could give us would be to subscribe to future episodes via a podcast app on your phone or via iTunes. You can find past podcast episodes by clicking here.

About Riley Bowman

Riley Bowman is the Director of Training at ConcealedCarry.com and the Host of the Concealed Carry Podcast. He started teaching during his 8-year experience with a state-level law enforcement agency in Colorado. Riley has trained extensively under instructors such as: Rob Leatham, Mike Seeklander, Tom Givens, Tim Herron, Scott Jedlinski, Matt Little, Kyle Lamb, Dave Spaulding, Jeff Gonzales, Bill Blowers, Chuck Pressburg, and others, amassing many hundreds of hours of formal shooting and tactics training. He is an NRA Pistol Instructor, a Colorado P.O.S.T. Handgun and Patrol Rifle Instructor, a Rangemaster Certified Pistol Instructor, a graduate of Trident Concepts Concealed Carry Instructor course, and a Modern Samurai Project Endorsed Instructor. He also competes in USPSA as a Grand Master (Limited Optics), Steel Challenge (Master), and 3-gun competitions, is a multiple-division USPSA Colorado State Champion, and also has multiple top-25 finishes at USPSA and IPSC National Championships in multiple divisions.

1 Comments

  1. Kyle Spisak on September 6, 2021 at 6:15 pm

    Have not yet worked on my speed too much. I still suffer from a pretty obvious flinch. Just working on exposure and firing more and more rounds and trying to power through that flinch.

    I went all of 2020 without firing a single round. So now really trying to get my training down. 100 rounds a week minimum 3 dry fire sessions minimum a week.

    I appreciate this episode. Some really technical stuff you all are trying to explain! Such an incredible service you provide us!

    God bless you! Keep it up!

Leave a Comment