Va Jim said:
I am one who asked the NRA for a change to the classification system. I am a Master at LR. I shoot at Camp Butner where you can shoot a 197 day one and a 177 day 2. If the National Champion, Berger SW Champion and Sinclair Champion is still a master I think the level should be lowered. I know of two people who HAVE a HM card in FTR LR. That is the reason I think it should be changed.
James Crofts
US F-T/R Vice Captain
While I agree with the concept of having a different set of classification standards that allow us to break each group (F-open and F-TR), the numbers in this proposal don't make sense to me. For example, I made F-TR HM at Mid Range the first year I shot it. That, in itself tells me that the old standards were too low at midrange. At Long Range, I hold Expert. Some of that is experience, some skill, some cross-fire, some where I shoot (ever shot Rattlesnake? After shooting there I should be a marksman). I think we should define the intent of having classes. For me, I think that the top 10% should be shooting for the aggregate win, not some third-place class award.
So in my mind, it should work this way:
Top 10% are High Masters. There isn't a HM class award - if you want something, win the match. HM donates to the other classes to improve their awards.
From there, each 10% down should be another class. They get class awards.
Let's not look at the Nationals as an example. Nationals should be the top 10 - 20% of shooters in the country except for the less experienced that enter for the sake of experience. In that case, one would expect everyone, save the aforementioned to be Master or High Master.
Now, how would the numbers shake out that way? We need to know how many people in the US shoot competitively on a regular basis. If that number is 800 for example, we should set the numbers where we would have 80 HM and 80 MA. Right now, we have 9? I know there are more than 90 shooters regularly shooting F-TR in the US.