This is a strange subject and as a relative new commer to clays in my retirement years i am confused by this.
For starters who are these coaches, do they have some form of recgognised academic qualification, in fact do such things exist.
Where did the coaches learn to coach , or are they just blessed with a gift at being good at the sport and work on that factor alone.
If you talk to many sportsmen in the more popular sports, most will name a good coach or two, most will have had many coaches. However I have not met one who has told me they have learnt everything from one coach. They all say they have have good and bad bits from various coaches , plus they have adapted somethings themselves.
I am not saying coaching is a waste of time, everyone can improve with the right advice. However if you have the talent and skill you will make it. If you havnt then no coach will get you to the top. I know blokes who sadly blow quite a bit on coaching with various coaches and from what I see they dont get any better.
Anyway , i am no coach and certainly no expert, but my philosophy is that shooting is for fun,so just enjoy it .
Can of worms this one......
There are recognised qualifications from the CPSA and ASPI. Do you need these qualifications to call yourself a shooting instructor? No
Some people will get into coaching as their own shooting improves, and do the recognised courses. Some good shots will do some of the courses to get a recognised qualification to back up their own proven shooting record. There are also world title holders who are now coaching, that have no recognised qualifications whatsoever, but are exceptional coaches. Unfortunately there are also complete bandits who have no qualifications and can't shoot for s**t that proclaim to be instructors.
Knowing who's worth the money and what their limitations are is the trick. An instructor will get you to one of two levels, yours or theirs. A good instructor will know when they've hit their limit and recommend someone better.
A CPSA Level 1 instructor, with no competition history is going to give you a good foundation into the sport, with a basic gun fit, stance, eye dominance checks, safety and will get you hitting simple targets.
I've recently passed the CPSA Level 1 instructor course and am currently B class. I've been an instructor in a non sports related profession for 30+ years, and though it would be interesting to do the CPSA course as well. Mainly to teach friends, family and getting people involved in our works gun club. I know I can teach, but I also know my limits in the sport, If you came to me, and were anything more than a beginner, then your money needs to be spent elsewhere.
Someone who has had gold medal hanging round their neck is going to take you further. Not just in ability, but in the mental side of it too.
The way I see it is Instructor Dave from the ABC School of Motoring can teach you to drive your first car. He's not going to turn you into a F1 racing driver. On the flip side, Lewis Hamilton teaching you to drive a Nissan Micra would be a complete waste of money. They both have their place in the world.
Do some research on who you're spending your hard earned cash on. There are some exceptional instructors out there, and some crap ones. One club I frequent charge about £90/hr for instruction, and some of their instructors only have a 60% sporting average! On the flip side you can get the likes of Ben Husthwaite for £75/hr. Not hard to spot that one of those is far too expensive, and the other one is a bargain.