JerrySharrett
Senile Member
First, I'm not a "full time" Long Range shooter. I do shoot 3-4 600 yard events each year and have attended a couple of IBS 600 yard Nationals.
Now that everyone who attended the recent IBS 600 at St Louis will have gotten their match reports they will notice almost a half page of the entrys were disqualified. That was 32 of 74 entrys that did not get rated in the 2-gun. I feel that something is wrong, probably in the rules, that caused this to happen. I also DQ'ed in the LG competition. My DQ, as were many was for a bullet off the target page. That probably should be some sort of penalty not a disqualification.
My main concern about IBS LR DQ rules did not effect me though. This issue is the DQ rule about too many shots on a target. Heres the thing, if you are ahead of me in the standings and we are shooting the same bullet diameter, I can take you out by putting an extra hole in your target if it can not, for some reason, be distinguished from yours.
I know for fact that a long time and top BR shooter was DQ'ed for having 6 holes in one of his LG targets. The first scoring was scored as a DQ. Larry Schenherst, the shooter, being a seasoned shooter protested, as he should have. Later upon further close, very close, inspection it could be seen that one hole was slightly lighter than the other 5. This difference occurred because Larry was shooting moly coated bullets. What if he had not, or if the other shooter had been shooting moly also.
There are two main DQ rules that should be revisited at the upcoming IBS annual meeting. I certainly don't know a good answer for either of the two situations I presented but, some shooters feel, for instance, that the NBRSA has better solutions for these two. It behooves us to keep the IBS and NBRSA rules very close to the same.
Having nearly half of the field disqualified is not good, IMO. Be thinking about this and discuss it with your fellow shooters.
PS-this is not to be taken as any criticism of this event. I feel that Jerry Kloeppel and the crew ran an excellent match and I thank them again for that thankless effort.
Now that everyone who attended the recent IBS 600 at St Louis will have gotten their match reports they will notice almost a half page of the entrys were disqualified. That was 32 of 74 entrys that did not get rated in the 2-gun. I feel that something is wrong, probably in the rules, that caused this to happen. I also DQ'ed in the LG competition. My DQ, as were many was for a bullet off the target page. That probably should be some sort of penalty not a disqualification.
My main concern about IBS LR DQ rules did not effect me though. This issue is the DQ rule about too many shots on a target. Heres the thing, if you are ahead of me in the standings and we are shooting the same bullet diameter, I can take you out by putting an extra hole in your target if it can not, for some reason, be distinguished from yours.
I know for fact that a long time and top BR shooter was DQ'ed for having 6 holes in one of his LG targets. The first scoring was scored as a DQ. Larry Schenherst, the shooter, being a seasoned shooter protested, as he should have. Later upon further close, very close, inspection it could be seen that one hole was slightly lighter than the other 5. This difference occurred because Larry was shooting moly coated bullets. What if he had not, or if the other shooter had been shooting moly also.
There are two main DQ rules that should be revisited at the upcoming IBS annual meeting. I certainly don't know a good answer for either of the two situations I presented but, some shooters feel, for instance, that the NBRSA has better solutions for these two. It behooves us to keep the IBS and NBRSA rules very close to the same.
Having nearly half of the field disqualified is not good, IMO. Be thinking about this and discuss it with your fellow shooters.
PS-this is not to be taken as any criticism of this event. I feel that Jerry Kloeppel and the crew ran an excellent match and I thank them again for that thankless effort.
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