Ad hominems are the last resort of someone with no leg to stand on. You're welcome.Sobrepuesta,
My apologies , I had forgotten you were American and cannot comprehend logic .
Have a nice day .
The End .
Got to agree with you on this. Well said.Maybe it's the fact that people are stuck indoors looking at a screen rather than out in the open air shooting that accounts for it :wink:
Anyway, manners - whether in person or on t'interweb - cost nowt :angel:
Oh please, you plant a blatant accusation about unfair play by the part of "unknown people" or "maybe the NSCA" with zero proof and didn't like it when called on it.I have no need to hide behind my pseudonym .
But I do take exception when after being courteous , even handed and showing appreciation where needed I get a reply from someone who is rude and cannot accept criticism.
It should be noted that I am not the only one to be offended by his arrogance.
Jim Wheeler, Salopian, and schmokinn could learn a thing or two hereAll of you people banging on about the shoot off, you are looking at it from the wrong way. The shoot from the word go was a 225 bird competition, 100 + 100 + 25. It was never 100 + 100 then shootoff. Just the same as the comps in the UK. It's the best score out of 225, not 200, only difference is only the top 10 get to shoot the last 25 or 3rd course.
A shootoff happens when scores are tied and all shooters start back on 0 again. This was not a shoot off, as the shooters carry on with their score from the previous course, it's the 3rd part of a 3 course event, 100 + 100 + 25
And as for complaining about shooting under lights, as Edd says it's been under lights before and it was again, we have facilities to practise under lights in the UK,I believe Dartford have been running these events. If your going through all the hassle and expense to go to the US and there is a chance you may need to shoot under lights if you get to the final, a round or two of practise would be time well spent.
This is the bit that I find a tad uncomfortable because clearly the home crowd have an advantage here.Sobrepuesta,
Obviously you have a perfectly reasonable explanation as to why after numerous days of competition and thus understanding the time it would take for each rotation that "unknown people or maybe the NSCA" could not get their heads around organising the final day to enable the shoot offs in reasonable natural light in front of a maximum attending crowd of spectators , which surely is the whole point of Super Finals?
Or do you have a reasonable explanation as to why the Super Final was staged at 9 p.m. under floodlights as per the PSCA tournaments.
I can see that this could run and run with no one giving quarter .
But could someone explain why it ran so late ?
Which has been my whole issue all along, NOT who won .
And so might you learn " A thing or two" as well. I stand 100% by my initial post. End of.Jim Wheeler, Salopian, and schmokinn could learn a thing or two here
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