BM wrote:It all comes down to four technical elements;
1 shooting position
2 breathing
3 aiming
4 triggering
All four can be trained with Scatt.
I'm afraid that's way too simplistic. What does shooting position mean, and how can you measure that with scatt ?
So to answer my own question, 'position' encompasses;
stance, body position and weight distribution, stability of position, orientation, alignment, foot position and alignment, waist, shoulders, head and neck (and eyes), shoulders, arm, hand and wrist, gripping pressure and hand position, finger position on the grip and the trigger, and probably a dozen other attributes that elude me for now. As I said none of those are captured using scatt.
Exactly the same breakdown is required for breathing, triggering and aiming and it is those sub-elements that you need to train. Some things are more simple to train and can then be moved to the completed pile, other elements need more detailed and long term training and require regular evaluation to check they are still being performed correctly.
<as an addendum, can I suggest a read of the ISSF training academy article on the fundamentals of pistol shooting, it's what their coaching platform is based on;
http://www.issf-sports.org/academy/trai ... istol.ashx>
Rob