Nationals - experience?
#1
Posted 01 October 2011 - 01:25 PM
- Is it run professionally?
- Is it unorganized and poorly run?
- Besides watching Super Squads, is your experience similar to that of Area championships?
- Does it have that "national championship" event feel or is it just another large shooting competition?
The reason for my asking these questions is that I have read and heard about how poorly the National Championship is organized. I know many shooters have had positive experience and enjoyed the camaraderie, but still thought the event was poorly run. Another reason for my posting the above-listed questions is to be more circumspect by increasing sample size.
Notwithstanding of what I have read or heard, I have yet to form any meaningful perspective as I have not attended or shot a National Championship.
#2
Posted 01 October 2011 - 01:59 PM
Is it run professionally?
Absolutely. I have nothing but positive things to say about the event organization and the ROs. My only critique is that I was not a fan
of the 4 day format. I'm not sure why this was done and there may well be very legit reasons but the extra day meant another vacation day
as well as hotel and doggie boarding costs. Moving the vendor area up to a central location was a great decision.
- Is it unorganized and poorly run?
No. See above.
- Besides watching Super Squads, is your experience similar to that of Area championships?
Not quite sure what you mean by similar. There were more stages, as well as a lot more short and intermediate stages than at Area events I have gone to.
Other than that stages are stages. Last year there were more NSs and hardcover than in any two Area matches I have attended. Not so many this year.
- Does it have that "national championship" event feel or is it just another large shooting competition?
Nobody is ever going confuse this with the PGA tour. It is the nature of our pretty obscure sport. There are no bays of spectators and a blimp overhead. Just one camera crew
following the SS around. I watched my buddy shoot with the SS on 4 stages and there were really no more people watching them than some of the other "unknown" squads.
To me it has the National Championship feel because it is the National Championship.
Not sure if that answers your question but if not here is a more succinct answer. I had a great time and it darn well felt like the Nationals to me.
Amazingly lucky man married to the woman of his dreams, surrounded by great friends in this community and living in the Sonoran desert at the epicenter of the practical shooting universe. My glass isn't half full, my mug is overflowing.
#3
Posted 01 October 2011 - 01:59 PM
This one was very enjoyable for me because...
It is run professionally in my opinion and I have been to smaller matches and area matches. With this many shooters and volunteers, it went well.
Much more organized this year at registration and the awards ceremony and the prize table line was the best yet (could hear your name called and there was not congestion trying to get into the prize room)
Even though the registration started late, once it got going it was pretty fast and painless.
I did not get to see the super squad shoot as I was more focused on shooting my match. It is almost like shooting some of the area matches but on a larger scale. Some area matches have small, medium and large courses of fire and some have mostly large field courses. Depends what type of match you want to shoot.
For me it does have that "national championship feel" because most all of the best shooters in this sport are there competing also. Good to see them in person amongst the many shooters who are striving to be the best.
I like going to the nationals and seeing where I "rank nationally" and the location was good for me (I'm a warm weather shooter). Some shooters rather shoot matches where there are mostly field or run-n-gun stages so it's whatever type of match you want to shoot.
I liked it and will attend again.
#4
Posted 01 October 2011 - 03:02 PM
You won't get screwed out of a re-shoot you are entitled to under the rules because "we need to keep the match on schedule", nor will an RO let an offense like handling ammo in the safety area slip with an informal warning. Expect polite, "by the book" officiating. The manner of officiating, while not dramatically different from area championships, is one thing that makes the nationals worthy of that designation.
If you run into one of these folks in a bar (which is unlikely given the early AM start they have each day) I suggest you buy the drinks if you are a competitor.

Feb. 2006
#5
Posted 01 October 2011 - 04:35 PM
One thing about the nationals that is different from any other stateside match - a team of range officers who function as a team dedicated to the match, who take pride in their skills at running the event "by the book".
You won't get screwed out of a re-shoot you are entitled to under the rules because "we need to keep the match on schedule", nor will an RO let an offense like handling ammo in the safety area slip with an informal warning. Expect polite, "by the book" officiating. The manner of officiating, while not dramatically different from area championships, is one thing that makes the nationals worthy of that designation.
Wrong!
Stage 9(Stand still Bob)at the 2009 Open Nationals was changed twice after the start of the match.
Squads had already shot it the faster way(activate the swinger from the door and skip the window)
and these squads did not re-shoot it while the other squads were forced to shoot the new adjusted stage.
They 1st put no-shoots on the prop(plywood tree)to keep people from the above, then people started going
to a knee to shoot around the other side of the tree. Deep into the match the made the 2nd change...
they changed the written stage briefing to say that it is a FTD... I mean "forbidden action" to shoot the
activating steel around or under the tree.
#6
Posted 01 October 2011 - 05:01 PM
The awards ran like most awards, this is the nature of the beast. I won D class, and when my name was finally called for the prize table the folks in the room told me I should have been called much earlier than I was for a class win. I don't know what order people are called to the prize table,and no way to recover a better prize anyway if that was the case.
I felt that shooting in the Nationals was a memory of a lifetime for me. I met some great folks, had a great time, and strongly recommend to anyone who gets the opportunity to attend.
#7
Posted 01 October 2011 - 05:01 PM
#8
Posted 01 October 2011 - 05:05 PM
It happened and nothing can change it now. I'd like to know what's going to prevent the same thing from happening in the future? Professionalism is, in part, is admitting mistakes and taking the right steps to insure that they will not occur again.
#9
Posted 01 October 2011 - 07:08 PM
Some observations from Nationals:
1. Prize awards for both matches was INFINITELY better than last year, no scrum, no pushing no yelling, screaming etc....
2. Every time someone clicks on something in my web-site it scores a hit. I have had just over half-a-million hits since Nationals started !!!
3. My web-site was updated every night with a short review of the days action along with photographs and video (the same could not be said for USPSA.org which apart from scores had nothing about action at the match).
4. Location of the vendor tent was much better and avoided the gridlock that plagued the lower corner in the previous two years.
5. Range crew was great (as always) though they looked a little ragged at the end of the match.
6. New trophies were awesome.
7. The main reason for the delay in registration for the Open/L10 match was the competitor name tags. They arrived stuck onto sheets in alphabetical order (by first name, not last name). The decision was made to remove them all from the sheets and sort them into order. All the tags were in one lump, for both matches, there were hundreds of them.. It took forever ! I'm not sure how they are ordered but perhaps this can be fixed for next year. I suspect that the names are in a spreadsheet and they need to be re-ordered by surname before submitting to the printers (this is just speculation on my part).
8. I did not like how they scheduled the Super Squads so they were all shooting at the same time. It made coverage very difficult and left me running from one berm to another each time, trying to get video and photos of as many stages as possible.
#10
Posted 01 October 2011 - 09:11 PM
Please be so kind as to cite the rule that was violated.The 2011 Nationals were held despite not running the September 15th classification report. How many shooters shot the Nationals with an incorrect classification? This never should have happened. The pinnacle event of USPSA shooting didn't follow it's own rulebook.
You're shooting Steel like an A class shooter. Why are you shooting the Paper so slowly? ---- Dave Marques, Production Nationals, 2005
This is a game of high-speed precision. If you don't precisely plan what you want to happen, there's not much chance that it will. ---- Brian Enos, 2004
#11
Posted 01 October 2011 - 09:26 PM
From an organizational standpoint Tulsa was superior. The weather was the worst. Tulsa had great facilities but the stages were these little postage stamp stages on huge berms.
IL was fine. A lot of history there. Generally good stages.
This is the first year where we only had one squad member draw blood from rocks or bullet fragments. The sign up for registration was better than the last two years but nowhere near as good as Tulsa. The weather was good and it seemed like we did not loose any ROs to the heat.
As usual, the awards ran late.
Area 2 is the best run, has the best stages, and great staff of any match I have attended in my short time with USPSA. Nationals should aspire to be as good as the Desert Classic.
One of the fundamentals of project management is a Lessons Learned aspect. Putting on Nationals is a large undertaking. Bringing in the techniques of project management would significantly improve the Nationals experience.
The bottom line is I enjoyed Nationals but there is room for improvement.
#12
Posted 01 October 2011 - 09:33 PM
#13
Posted 02 October 2011 - 02:36 AM
Which tells me that USPSA knew well ahead of time that the September update would not run.On my "inviation to compete", the form states "Competitors will compete in the class that is in the USPSA database as of the August 2011 reclassification.
Why not plan to do it early or at least notify the membership of the planned delay.
Production - A, Limited - B, L10 - B, Single Stack - B
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#14
Posted 02 October 2011 - 04:27 AM
(also realize I suck at Open and should stick to iron sights, but thats a diffrent matter
Had a great time overall.
#15
Posted 02 October 2011 - 06:13 AM
I like the use of both targets, it should have made me aim better...LOL
#16
Posted 02 October 2011 - 06:52 AM
I last shot Nationals in 2009. I had a blast. was really great trip for me. Saying that I probably wont go back until Nationals is in driving distance. Or the airlines and TSA are forced to obey basic civil rights.
SOunds like some of the issues were fixed this year though things I noticed in O9,
long hour plus line at registration to get basically nothing, a bag full of junk mail, and if I remember no map or directions to the range.
A stage being thrown out, and another stage with a texas star not being scored in IAW the rules.
I really like the 5 a day format though. Hope it stays that way and I like it for area matches also. Shooting is supposed to be fun and marathon matches shooting 10 plus stages along with all the standing around all in one day just isnt fun to me, Usually by 7 I just want it to end,
#17
Posted 02 October 2011 - 07:13 AM
How far in advance did USPSA advise members the Aug classification would be the one used for the match? I know it was several months. Was it prior to applications being taken? If so, no one who attended the match has any reason to complain. If a competitor failed to notice that detail, it isn't USPSA's fault.The 2011 Nationals were held despite not running the September 15th classification report. How many shooters shot the Nationals with an incorrect classification? This never should have happened. The pinnacle event of USPSA shooting didn't follow it's own rulebook.
It happened and nothing can change it now. I'd like to know what's going to prevent the same thing from happening in the future? Professionalism is, in part, is admitting mistakes and taking the right steps to insure that they will not occur again.
I have never run an operation as big as Nationals...have you? If you have, perhaps you can assist USPSA in reducing the timeline needed between the classification run and getting everything ready for registration. Logistically, I think getting things printed up within 2 weeks with the latest classification and dealing with oter classification issues in that short of a period of time is likely problematic, hence using the classification from August.
#18
Posted 02 October 2011 - 07:16 AM
So one month out of the year you want USPSA to alter it's operations. Even though everyone who submitted an application received written notice their classification in August would count for the match, that isn't good enough. I disagree with you and don't understand why you have tanke the position you have. Notice was given by USPSA wellin advance. Now that the match is over, naysayers are coming out.Which tells me that USPSA knew well ahead of time that the September update would not run.
On my "inviation to compete", the form states "Competitors will compete in the class that is in the USPSA database as of the August 2011 reclassification.
Why not plan to do it early or at least notify the membership of the planned delay.
#19
Posted 02 October 2011 - 07:22 AM
Professionally run, yes. Unorganized or poorly run, no. Not sure what you mean in the 3d question. I thought it was like a big match, which it is. Not really sure what you consider a "national championship". It isn't NASCAR, the US Open, or the SuperBowl.For those who have shot National Championships, what is your view of the event experience? Why?
- Is it run professionally?
- Is it unorganized and poorly run?
- Besides watching Super Squads, is your experience similar to that of Area championships?
- Does it have that "national championship" event feel or is it just another large shooting competition?
The reason for my asking these questions is that I have read and heard about how poorly the National Championship is organized. I know many shooters have had positive experience and enjoyed the camaraderie, but still thought the event was poorly run. Another reason for my posting the above-listed questions is to be more circumspect by increasing sample size.
Notwithstanding of what I have read or heard, I have yet to form any meaningful perspective as I have not attended or shot a National Championship.
All of your questions are subjective. Some people will like Nationals no matter what. Some will hate it no matter what. Was it a great match, IMO, no. Was it a good match? IMO, yes. I would like everystage to be a 30+ round COF. Probably can't happen at a match with 20 stages. That is why I said it was a good, not a great, match.
Edited by remoandiris, 02 October 2011 - 07:22 AM.
#20
Posted 02 October 2011 - 08:06 AM
I am kinda trying to figure out what the purpose of registration actually is.
One important thing is that the nationals staff knows exactly who is actually present for the match - something that cannot be done just by mailing the packets.
Also, your packet is reserved for you, and there is a window of several hours during which registration is open. There is no real benefit to showing up at the opening bell as you are picking up an envelope with your name on it, not concert tickets that are in limited supply.

Feb. 2006
#21
Posted 02 October 2011 - 08:10 AM
Especially when they still don't ring that bell for another hour or so.There is no real benefit to showing up at the opening bell....
"Whether you think you can, or you think you can't--you're right.” -- Henry Ford
Shhhh.... Please don't tell my Mom I'm a DRL. She thinks I'm still a piano player in a cathouse.
#22
Posted 02 October 2011 - 08:15 AM
Notwithstanding of what I have read or heard, I have yet to form any meaningful perspective as I have not attended or shot a National Championship.
Hmmmm....
Kyle F.
Brian Enos Forum Administrator
Area 5 Director - USPSA
Chief Range Officer
NRA Instructor
*** I'm a shooter! ***
"Do you even [see your sights] lift???" - unknown
#23
Posted 02 October 2011 - 08:47 AM
I keep hearing about the classificat5ion update not being run (on the 15th...the match started on the 16th....) can anyone actually cite any examples of someone who would have been bumped up in that month?
Overall I thought the match was very well run and the awards much better this year. The stages were really good and I liked the mix of short medium and long which should be that way in a National Championship (or any Championship in this sport IMO) I've shot Area 2 on a number of occasions and I think it would be great with some medium and shorts mixed in. I think the stage designs lent themselves or resulted in the close finishes we saw in almost every division which makes for a more exciting match.
be
I aim to misbehave
www.patharrison.ca
#24
Posted 02 October 2011 - 08:48 AM
Because only a small percentage of active USPSA members attended and thusly were notified of the intended delay in classification update. That left the majority clueless. Also, I did say "or at least notify the membership.". By "the membership" I meant everyone, not simply the participants of the nationals matches.So one month out of the year you want USPSA to alter it's operations. Even though everyone who submitted an application received written notice their classification in August would count for the match, that isn't good enough. I disagree with you and don't understand why you have tanke the position you have. Notice was given by USPSA wellin advance. Now that the match is over, naysayers are coming out.
Which tells me that USPSA knew well ahead of time that the September update would not run.
On my "inviation to compete", the form states "Competitors will compete in the class that is in the USPSA database as of the August 2011 reclassification.
Why not plan to do it early or at least notify the membership of the planned delay.
Production - A, Limited - B, L10 - B, Single Stack - B
My Youtube Channel
Google Sketchup 3dWarehouse
#25
Posted 02 October 2011 - 09:14 AM
Notwithstanding of what I have read or heard, I have yet to form any meaningful perspective as I have not attended or shot a National Championship.
Hmmmm....
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