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Reader Comments:

Thank you for this excellent e-newsletter. The links and information are great.
Sincerely,
John B.
I greatly enjoy the USAMU shooting tips in the newsletter and also being able to find them on-line.
Regards, Ray in FLA
EXCELLENT BRIEF UNDERSTANDABLE ARTICLE ON SITTING RAPID POSITION, BEING CLOSE TO 60 THIS IS MY WORST POSITION AND ANY HELP I CAN GET IS GREATLY APPRECIATED!
GOOD ARTICLE; MARTY
SFC Singley:
It has been a while, but I sent CMP a request for a TFS article on possible means by which us "centrally endowed" (read that as 'fat') shooters might work ourselves into a useable sitting position. Spring is coming and I will be trying to get ready for matches. Your article has been copied and I will read it and work on trying the options you have provided. Thanks very much for your individual military service to our Nation and for your personal efforts to help other shooters improve our skills.
Melvin C.
Really enjoyed the M1 for Vets article. Its really good to read something that was done for wounded vets. The match must have been a real wingding. Too cold for me. There is alot of history 1903 Springfield and the M1 . I had to sleep with my o3 for baning the butt on the deck in boot camp. Anyway thanks again for the story.
Jim N., Ok
I enjoy the TFS. In fact, occasionally I like to print some of the articles to be able to review them in the future.
James L. M.
Whenever we come back in from the field it’s always a good day when “The First Shot” is in. I drill the guys in the fundamentals – many of which I learned and fine tuned at CMP matches – and it comes back in spades out here when it really counts!
Dean H.
LTC - US Army
Security Advisor
Kabul/Afghanistan
Finally caught up with the October '06 story: A Rifle For Shifty. It was simply one of the best things I've read. As someone who had two uncles in combat in WWII, one air corps and one infantry, I will forever believe those men were heroes of the first echelon. Anything any of us can do for any of them is simply the least we can do.
Steve R.
Birmingham, Alabama
The article about Bill Krilling was very good, a great shooter, coach and a gentlemen to boot!
Ruth S.
Thanksfor the great stories and tips. Even old dogs can learn new tricks. This is great for keeping the CMP active.
Tim H., AZ


Printable Version

2007 Pistol SAFS and M9 EIC Match

By Spc. John D. Ortiz, 211th Military Public Affairs Detachment


CAMP PERRY, OHIO – Learning gun safety and target shooting techniques under the instruction of master shooters is beneficial to a newcomer as well as to an experienced shooter in the sport of competitive shooting.

CMP staff members register participants in CMP matches and give them scorecards for all of their CMP matches.

The Pistol Small Arms Firing School or SAFS that was conducted here at Camp Perry on 9-10 July was sponsored by the Civilian Marksmanship Program and conducted by the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit or USAMU from Fort Benning, Ga.  The school gave classroom and one-on-one instruction to over 401 individuals from all over the United States.

The Pistol SAFS started with registration on Sunday that started at 7 a.m. in the morning and ended at 9 p.m.  Everyone who registered was asked to fill out post locator cards that indicated where they were staying as well as emergency contact information.

William R. Hiddink consults with CMP employee Samantha L. Miller about a question that he had during Pistol SAFS registration. Hiddink, from Long Island, N.Y., has been coming to the National Matches for the past 11 years.

In addition to the SAFS students, other individuals were checked into CMP matches where they received scorecards for those matches, while those who came only for National Rifle Association matches signed release forms and received wrist bands signifying that they completed registration.

“It’s very hectic,” said Samantha L. Miller, a member of the CMP staff, “but once we get problems worked out, [the registration] calms down and smoothes out.”

“There was no problem,” said William R. Hiddink, from Long Island, N.Y., who has endured 12 registration days to date, “I had questions, and the staff did a good job answering them”

“All-in-all, it was easier than in previous years,” he said.

SAFS students finished registration by receiving a USAMU T-Shirt, a free USAMU Advanced Pistol Guide written by the USAMU and published by the CMP, a match information sheet and a name badge as well as entry into the next day’s pistol instruction class, practical work on the range and entry in the M9-EIC match on Tuesday.

Sgt. 1st Class Charles E. Coffey with the Army Marksmanship Unit raises a range paddle to signify that the range is not clear during the M9 competition.

The pistol SAFS began with a half-day of classroom instruction conducted by the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit where they covered topics that included safety, pistol functioning, shooting positions and basic firing techniques.

“The class provides a half-day of instruction that gives novices the ability to start with a basic foundation that they can build on to reach a semi-advanced level,” said Sgt. 1st Class Charles E. Coffey, a shooter with the Army Marksmanship Unit, “it basically teaches everything that [people] need to know about pistol firing.”

“It was one of the better classroom instructions ever,” said Windell F. Fisher, a native of Columbus, Ohio, who this year marked the 38th consecutive time that he has attended the National Matches.

The instructors also covered special topics that are vital to a shooter including the effects of weather and mental conditioning in preparation for match along with showing the basic position fundamentals and how to shoot.

“The class was taught well by the instructors.  It was easy for people to understand,” said Fisher.

(From left to right) Staff Sgt. Thomas A. Grieve, Dr. Judy L. Tant, Gunnery Sgt. Brian H. Zins, Steve F. Reiter and Staff Sgt. James M. Henderson answer questions in open forum at the Pistol Small Arms Firing School. The panel has a combined 94-years of experience and over 40 championships between them.

After formal instruction USAMU soldiers, the audience had an opportunity to ask questions to a five-person panel composed of Staff Sgt. Thomas A. Grieve, an armorer with over 10-years of experience; Staff Sgt. James M. Henderson, a 2670 shooter and the current National Champion; Steve F. Reiter, also a 2670 shooter, member of the 1980 Olympic Shooting Team and Triple Distinguished; Gunnery Sgt. Brian H. Zins, noncommissioned officer-in-charge of the U.S. Marine Corps Pistol Shooting Team and seven-time National Champion, and Dr. Judy L. Tant, a three-time Woman’s National Champion.

The panel had over 40 championships and 94-years of experience between them.  They answered questions ranging from the use of apertures for the eye to using red-dot and iron sights on .45 pistols.

A Pistol SAFS student sits on the ready line in preparation of moving to be instructed and coached by service members on shooting teams.

Once the classroom instruction was finished, the instructors moved the students to the firing range where they were issued M9 pistols and ammunition to fire.  There they were coached by members of the USAMU, Marine Corps, Navy, Air Force, Coast Guard, National Guard, and USAR shooting teams.

“The coaches devoted most of their attention to teaching the new shooters who had never fired an M9 before, which left me feeling good that they where helping those that needed it the most,” said Fisher.

Staff Sgt. Robert S. Park, a member of the Army Marksmanship Unit, looks on as his student fires the M9 service pistol.

The session concluded with individuals shooting four targets on a 25-yard firing range, going through a practice competition round of slow, timed and rapid fire, where shooters could ask questions of their coach on numerous topics that concerned target shooting.

 

Marine Staff Sgt. Kramp, a member of the Marine Corps Pistol Shooting Team, carries two M9 pistols to his students on the firing line.

On the second day of the school, SAFS students were able to compete in the second annual M9 Excellence-in-Competition or EIC match, where the top 10 percent of competitors who have not earned EIC-points could earn four-point introductory legs that counted toward earning a Distinguished Pistol Badge.

The winner of the 2nd annual M9 EIC-match was Paul C. Kane, from Rockville, Md.  Kane fired a 271-6X to  receive four-introductory leg points that count toward earning a Distinguished Pistol Badge. A total of 28 shooters including Kane earned their first EIC points in the M9 match.

 

Paul Kane, of Rockville, MD, won the M9 Pistol EIC Match.

Kane, a graduate of University of Maryland, has been shooting for the past year-and-half. “[Competitive] shooting is a very enjoyable activity, and all the other shooters I’ve met have been nice and very encouraging to young people,” he said.

“I encourage young people to contact their local shooting league and get involved,” said Kane.

“I was very pleased with the CMP, NRA, and the post commander,” said Fisher, “everything was organized, in tip-top shape and with a friendly atmosphere, it lived up to the highest standards, and I want to commend them.”

Results from the M9 Pistol EIC Match can be viewed on the CMP web site at http://clubs.odcmp.com/cgi-bin/report_matchResult.cgi?matchID=2112

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