Shooting Drills & Performance Standards
Shooting Drills & Performance Standards
Mastery is not a destination. It is a lifelong pursuit measured by standards.
This page was built for shooters who believe in discipline, accountability, and the constant pursuit of refinement. Whether you are new to the craft, an experienced competitor, a professional, or someone who simply takes personal responsibility seriously, the goal remains the same:
Build skill. Measure performance. Maintain standards.
At Staunch Odyssey, we believe in brilliance in the basics. The fundamentals are not beginner-level concepts — they are the foundation everything else is built on. Grip, sights, trigger control, recoil management, movement, reloads, decision-making, and consistency must be trained with purpose.
Good shooters train until they get it right.
Professionals train until they cannot get it wrong.
A Lifestyle of Standards
Every drill listed here is meant to give you a measurable way to test yourself. Not to impress anyone. Not to chase ego. Not to look good on camera.
The purpose is simple:
To expose weakness.
To sharpen discipline.
To build repeatable skill under pressure.
To track progress over time.
To remain a student, always.
Perfect repetition builds perfection. Poor repetition builds failure. Every round fired should have intent behind it.
How to Use These Drills
Each drill or standard listed below will include a downloadable PDF with the course of fire, target requirements, round count, scoring method, and performance standard.
Use these drills to:
- Establish a baseline
- Track progress over time
- Identify weaknesses
- Build training structure
- Challenge yourself honestly
- Maintain a professional mindset
Do not rush the process. Accuracy comes first. Speed is earned.
Available Drills & Standards
Add your PDF links below as you build them out:
"High Fives" Drill
[Download PDF]
The Mindset
Training is not about proving who you are.
It is about revealing where you are.
A true professional does not hide from standards. They seek them. They test themselves against them. They accept failure as feedback and return to the work with discipline.
There is no final version of a shooter.
There is only the next repetition.
The next standard.
The next opportunity to become harder to beat.
Always a student. Always accountable. Always refining.