Those who are familiar with the modern technique understand the concept of Stand and Deliver. This is the tactic of the good guy, upon seeing a lethal threat, immediately and rapidly drawing his pistol and placing effective fire on the bad guy—before the bad guy can react. Action versus reaction—we’ve all heard it, but is it true? I think there is a fundamental flaw with this the stand and deliver technique--in reality; your action will rarely beat their reaction if the bad guy is paying attention and committed.
One of the drills we do in force on force training is for each student, one with pistol drawn, the other drawing their pistol to both attempt to shoot each other with Airsoft while standing in place (important caveat). In the force on force drill each student invariably shoots the other with a little plastic pellet; however this is not what happens in real life.
We conducted an experiment with 100 different trials. We had four participants: one advanced shooter, one intermediate, one somewhat trained, and one basically untrained. The advanced shooter had studied the modern technique for 30+ years, attended close range gun-fighting and force on force courses. The intermediate shooter had attended a couple of modern technique classes and was an IDPA sharpshooter. The somewhat trained shooter had attended no formal instruction and was an IDPA Marksman while the basically untrained shooter had no formal instruction and only limited experience drawing and firing a pistol from the holster.
The experiment has two shooters standing side-by-side, one drawing and shooting a target 3 meters down range. The shooter drawing from the holster (good guy) starts with his hand on the pistol grip, draws his pistol when he chooses, and fires one shot at the silhouette. The other shooter (bad guy) starts with his pistol aimed at the head of a silhouette target (also 3 meters away); reacting and firing when he sees (using peripheral vision) the good guy draw his pistol. In 98 out of 100 trials, the bad guy with his pistol aimed at the head of his target fired and hit first. Only once did both shooters fire simultaneously and only one time did the good guy fire first.
We used a video camera at 60 frames per second to time the movements. We measured the draw time starting with the first frame indicating upward movement of the pistol from the good guy’s holster and ending with the first frame indicating that the shooter has fired. We measure the bad guy’s shot as the first frame indicating the bad guy is firing his pistol (e.g. bullet has departed the barrel, pistol is unlocking, etc.).
Some numbers: The average draw time for all shooters starting with their hand on the pistol was .372 seconds. The fastest draw time recorded was .300 seconds while the slowest draw time recorded was .479 seconds--all draws in less than half a second. The advanced shooter recorded the fastest draw time while the basically untrained shooter recorded the slowest. The average reaction time for all bad guy shots was .279 seconds; the fastest reaction time we recorded was .133 seconds, the slowest reaction time was .383 seconds. The intermediate shooter recorded the fastest reaction time while the basically untrained shooter had the slowest.
Observers of our experiment often thought both shooters fired simultaneously; however, that was not the case. The shortest split time between the bad guy firing and the good guy firing was .017 seconds or 17/100s of a second. However, even in this short time-frame the good guy's finger was not on the trigger and his pistol was not yet on the target when the bad guy fired. So unlike Airsoft where both get hit with a little plastic pellet, in the stand and deliver mode the good guy gets shot in the head and never fires a shot in 98 out of 100 times. The bottom line to these numbers--if you attempt to stand and out draw your opponent when the bad guy is paying attention, then a flash at his pistol muzzle is likely the last thing you will ever see.
The solution is to move, draw, and shoot—-in that order. When I first began practicing the skills I learned in short range gun-fighting, I genuinely believed that I was moving and then drawing and firing my pistol. Video proved I was not and I discovered it takes some effort to overcome this tendency. Based upon our experiment, the time I was taking to begin my draw before I started moving would have likely resulted in me taking a bullet.
I believe this is a common training scar associated with those who have only received traditional square range training or (perhaps not surprisingly) those regularly shooting International Defensive Pistol Association (IDPA) matches. I believe IDPA courses of fire or stages that encourage stopping in the open or moving over a short distance while engaging threat targets encourage this bad habit; the way these stages are typically designed, if you move first and then draw you typically must slow down or you do not have time to fire the shots. Standing still, slowing down, and/or walking slowly in the open is a really bad idea if you are receiving incoming bad guy rounds.
One final word. Do not try to replicate this experiment. Often participants do not have the trigger finger discipline and skill to rapidly and safely draw their pistol. Newer shooters frequently place their finger on the trigger too early in the draw stroke and end up with unintended discharges that could cause property damage, serious injury, or death.
This is an update of an earlier article published in the 12 January 2016 edition of the IDPA Tactical Brief (click here) and on my blog. Multibriefs produces articles for a variety of industry newsletters including the IDPA Tactical Brief (click here for additional articles).
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