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That style of shooting is only good for marksmanship competition.
It is totally incorrect for real world scenarios.
I was taught by a Marine that this is the proper way to shoot accept when laying prone or room clearing and such situations where it's not possible. I think I'll trust him since he has actually been in real world scenarios, unlike most here, not saying you haven't though.
What's so
about that?
I was a Marine. I have shot in competition and in combat...
There is no real life scenario that I can think of in which you would adopt the offhand position used in precision shooting competitions.
I think this guy said it well:
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At the Appleseed, they taught us the sort of standing pose the AMU is using, and then said, "Try that with a .30-06 and it'll knock you on your ass." Recoil management is one of the reasons we lean into the rifle. The other reason is for a quicker transition from shooting to moving to shooting. You aren't ready to move quickly from that position.
Finally. You'll never see the standing up, hip thrown back stance in real life combat because it makes you tall, immobile, and takes time to assume properly. It's a very stable platform for establishing a very stable Natural Point of Aim. You use this stance to aim very accurately by moving your entire body, in it's natural point of aim, until you are on target, instead of moving the rifle to get on target.
It makes you a very large, stationary target, and you cannot shoot accurately quickly, or transition quickly from target to target. It's only useful for stationary shooting low-recoiling rifles at tiny paper targets during accuracy competitions where victory is measured in tenths of an inch increments. If that's your thing, great.
I think competition style shooting is great. I enjoy it for what it is but it is not practical. My wife wife has no desire to shoot in competition. So when I take her to the range it is for three basic reasons: 1- To become familiar with firearms so she can defend herself if necessary. 2- To learn firearms safety (since I have guns in the house) and 3- To have a little fun.
Teaching her competition shooting techniques would be counterproductive.