mwezell
Mike Ezell
275 scoring
If I understand the concept right, it's just like what we are already shooting in UBR centerfire matches. There are no x's, and the dot simply scores as another point. It works very well for us and IMHO, is a better indicator of who shot best that day. Much like group shooting, it allows you to make up for a bad shot more than the standard scoring system that is used in most br for score disciplines. The age old question of "who shot better..the guy who shoots a 249-24 or the guy that shoots a 250-0" is an easy one to answer, imo. One bad shot carries an inordinate penalty yet the current system rewards the guy that can't hit a single chigger.
What I've seen is that the point value puts even more emphasis on hitting that dot, every time, than is already there. It really shows up at 200 yards and beyond, in our cf UBR discipline. In IBS and NBRSA at 200 yards, I can recall many times where someone could protect a lead by "playing it safe" and only worrying about keeping all shots in the 10 ring. In UBR, you can't play it safe, as the guy a few benches down may catch a condition and run off 5 or 6 points(x's) on you...passing you by. This simply puts more emphasis on that tiny dot and thus, accuracy.
I know this puts me on the side of the WLM but so be it. It is what it is.
If I understand the concept right, it's just like what we are already shooting in UBR centerfire matches. There are no x's, and the dot simply scores as another point. It works very well for us and IMHO, is a better indicator of who shot best that day. Much like group shooting, it allows you to make up for a bad shot more than the standard scoring system that is used in most br for score disciplines. The age old question of "who shot better..the guy who shoots a 249-24 or the guy that shoots a 250-0" is an easy one to answer, imo. One bad shot carries an inordinate penalty yet the current system rewards the guy that can't hit a single chigger.
What I've seen is that the point value puts even more emphasis on hitting that dot, every time, than is already there. It really shows up at 200 yards and beyond, in our cf UBR discipline. In IBS and NBRSA at 200 yards, I can recall many times where someone could protect a lead by "playing it safe" and only worrying about keeping all shots in the 10 ring. In UBR, you can't play it safe, as the guy a few benches down may catch a condition and run off 5 or 6 points(x's) on you...passing you by. This simply puts more emphasis on that tiny dot and thus, accuracy.
I know this puts me on the side of the WLM but so be it. It is what it is.