allaroundhunter
Member
I have been reading through an Outdoor Life magazine (April 2012), and in it there is an article with input from Todd Jarrett about paying attention to reset (primarily for action pistol shooting).
Here is an excerpt from the article:
Apparently when Jarrett teaches, he does not even address paying attention to trigger reset because, according to him, "If you keep barking at someone to pay attention to their trigger, their front-sight focus will only deteriorate, and so will their shooting."
So, opinions on this? Agree? Disagree? And why. I'm just curious as to how many agree with Jarrett's teaching process.
Here is an excerpt from the article:
This [paying attention to trigger reset] is all well and good, but there's one problem with this plan as it relates to action pistol shooting: If you're focusing on trigger reset, you're not focusing on your front sight, which needs to be the primary object of your attention when running a handgun.
"Don't listen for trigger reset," says Todd Jarrett. "Your front sight is always your one conscious focus. Everything else is in the background"
Apparently when Jarrett teaches, he does not even address paying attention to trigger reset because, according to him, "If you keep barking at someone to pay attention to their trigger, their front-sight focus will only deteriorate, and so will their shooting."
So, opinions on this? Agree? Disagree? And why. I'm just curious as to how many agree with Jarrett's teaching process.