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IPSC And IDPA Give Shooters A Choice

The discipline that we now call "The Modern Technique of the Pistol" had its beginnings in California in the 1950s. Jeff Cooper was living up in Big Bear and got an idea of holding some sort of a shooting event to attract the tourists to the popular ski area during the summer months. Accordingly, he recruited some pistol-shooting friends the likes of Jack Weaver, Ray Chapman, Thell Reed, John Plahn, and Elden Carl. The shooting methods were close range, fast, and freestyle. In the beginning it was primarily a fast-draw contest fired with live ammunition.

IPSC competition has evolved into using very specialized equipment, but IDPA rules allow only the use of practical guns and equipment.

It soon became apparent that Weaver was cleaning everyone's clock with his shooting style. Firing from the hip, as soon as your gun cleared leather, was supposed to be a good deal faster than using two hands and bringing the gun to eye level. But Weaver was coming to eye level, actually seeing his front sight, and beating all comers. Cooper, among others, took careful note and soon had accumulated some techniques that would become the foundation of the modern technique of the pistol; they included the use of a big-bore autoloading pistol, the Weaver Stance, the flash sight picture, and the surprise break.

Cooper always tried to make it clear that he hadn't "invented" anything. As a keen observer, and a lifetime student of the handgun, he brought together techniques and methods. As a skilled teacher he developed a method of passing these skills on to others in a manner that was easy to understand and learn. To date, the modern technique of the pistol is the most effective method of dealing with violent threats in the real world.


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By the mid-1970s Cooper and the growing number of his students and friends began to discuss finding a way to test and evaluate these life-saving techniques in a competition format. Cooper had observed that people would train harder and longer to win a trophy than to be able to defend themselves. Regardless, open competition was a way of allowing equipment, ideas, and techniques to be tested and evaluated. It was from this platform that the International Practical Shooting Confederation (IPSC) was founded, with Jeff Cooper as its first president.

I was living in North Texas back in those days and was working as a policeman at the Denton Police Department. There were a number of avid pistol shooters in the area, and we soon had a pretty good idea of who this Cooper fellow was and were extremely interested in his methods of handgun deployment. In short order we formed an IPSC club and began to hold regular shoots.

In those early days the idea was to design courses of fire that were as realistic as we could possibly make them. Our goal was to use our IPSC matches as a means to practice techniques and evaluate equipment that would save our lives in actual gunfights. And Cooper was right: The spirit of competition and the chance to win a trophy was what spurred most shooters to try harder, to work harder, and to strive to improve.

Unfortunately, this spirit of competition began to overshadow the initial purpose and the real value of the IPSC organization. Gamesmen, as they came to be called, began to show up with guns and holsters that would not be practical for actual carry. They also began to use lightly loaded ammunition to gain an advantage in fast strings of fire. And their match scenarios began to feature a good deal of running, jumping, and rolling around while expending large quantities of ammunition. In short, IPSC became an armed track meet that exhibited little resemblance to the use of the defensive handgun in real-life encounters.

Those of us who used our IPSC matches to practice life-saving skills pretty well got our noses out of joint. We believed the gamesmen were ruining our sport and seriously diluting the principles that Colonel Cooper and others had worked so hard to develop.


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