Why a Ragged Hole at 100 Yards Matters Less Than You Think

Why a Ragged Hole at 100 Yards Matters Less Than You Think

This perspective comes from doing one thing for a living: teaching long-range precision shooting. Not part-time. Not as a hobby. This is how I pay my bills. I did it in the military, in the private military world on high-threat contracts, and now I do it privately. That has given me the opportunity to test ideas, discard bad ones, and turn experience into repeatable results.

The 100-Yard Trap

If I taught a five-day precision rifle course and spent all five days at 100 yards, every shooter should leave shooting ragged holes. They would also leave poorly prepared. By day two, the first day of live fire, most shooters with appropriate rifles and ammunition are already shooting one-inch groups or better. Half-inch groups are common. .3-inch groups happen regularly. That is great. It is also largely irrelevant. Once a shooter can demonstrate that level of mechanical accuracy, they have exceeded the requirement for that distance.

Impressive, but only the starting point.

Consistency Is Not Group Size

Shooting a tight group in one position does not equal consistency. A shooter who prints a ragged hole left of the target, then another above it, then another to the right, is only consistent once they are behind the rifle. They are not consistent in how they get behind the rifle. There is a difference. I care far more about a shooter’s ability to reproduce accuracy regardless of position, setup, or circumstance than I do about how small their best group ever was.

Long-Range Shooting Is About Systems

I say this constantly: systems make shooters successful. You can press a perfect trigger and still miss if you forget to dial, misread the wind, ignore the angle, or skip parallax adjustment. At distance, mechanical skill without systems is meaningless. You cannot practice systems at 100 yards.

At 100 yards:

  • You are not dialing or holding for drop

  • Wind is mostly irrelevant

  • Angle does not matter

  • Breathing and stress are minimal

  • Parallax rarely changes

Those problems only show up when the distance changes.

Rules, Then Exceptions

Long-range shooting is rule-based. First, you learn the rules and follow them. When you break them, you learn why they exist. Over time, experience teaches you when exceptions apply. As the saying goes, the young man knows the rules, the old man knows the exceptions. That wisdom only comes from shooting at varied distances, on varied days, in varied conditions.

“Long range shooting is about systems…”

The Math Lie

Angular measurements lie to people. Just because you shoot one inch at 100 yards does not mean you will shoot ten inches at 1,000 yards. Shooting does not scale that way. I have seen shooters who can shoot .3 at 100 yards struggle badly at distance. Meanwhile, shooters with average 100-yard groups often perform far better at 1,000 because they understand wind, drop, rifle behavior, and their systems. Experience wins.

What We Are Actually Training For

We are not training to shoot tiny groups at a known distance on a flat range. We are training to make one shot, often under stress, at an unknown distance, with wind, angle, imperfect position, and time pressure. Maybe the target is 930 yards. Maybe it is 847. It will not be conveniently placed at a known firing line. That is why distance variation matters. That is why systems matter. That is why experience matters. A ragged hole at 100 yards is a starting point, not the goal.

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