2ndovc wrote:What is the best shot you have ever made?
Hunting, plinking or target shooting. Doesn't matter.
I'd have to say it was a target shot... It was a three rifle match, levergun pistol cartridge, levergun rifle cartridge and traditional single shot in a buffalo cartridge. It was the rifle cartridge levergun portion. The format was freestyle, any flatpoint tubular magazine levergun. It was to be judged on the most hits @ 200 yards of 10 shots, any ties to go to a shoot-off.
I'd hitched a ride with my friend Joey to this match out in East Texas. We were both shooting Winchester 94s with tang peep sights, and whereas mine had a globe front sight, his used the original sight from his 1910 (IIRC) rifle. We tied the first go-round with 10 hits a piece. We then tied the 2nd go-round with 10 more hits. The match organizer then decided that we needed to make it more challenging. There was one 18" square gong @ 400 yards, again, most hits outta ten. Joey and I tied again with 9 hits each. (We each missed our first shot).
About this time the rest of the competitors were getting antsy about getting to the awards and getting on the road home. Some had come a fair piece to attend this TSRA sanctioned one of a kind match. So intead of going downrange and taking the 18" gong down and putting up a 10" gong and shooting 10 more shots, Joey suggested that we simply shoot the 18" gong @ 400 yards standing up, off-hand!
We then traded back and forth over who'd go first, with both of us offering the other the first opportunity to MISS! As I don't think either of us actually expected to hit from that distance in that shooting position.
Joey had taunted me all day about how it was far better that he was lucky versus his assumed perception of my skill! Mind ya, Joey had beat me on the pistol caliber, but I'd beat him with the single shot... so this would decide the overall. So I said, "...ok, I make a mark for you to shoot for..." and shot first. I had been holding about a foot high and to the left of the upper left corner of the target during the previous 9 hits and figured that should be the same holdover... win, lose or draw, that's what I went with. I tucked that Winchester into my shoulder, settled my cheek on the comb and let the circles created by the wavering barrel settle onto that corner. They never settled, per se... but did diminish enough to let me let the shot off as the sights passed that spot above the corner. Even allowing for follow-thru with the shot, I already had the rifle down at low port arms when the spotter yelled "HIT!" A second or so later the slight "TINK" of the hit came back to us.
Now, I have no ideas what all went thru Joey's mind as he went thru the same process of getting a stance, a hold, and relaxing for the shot that I did. I have no doubt that Joey didn't give that shot everything he had to make the hit. While you might beat him, his never lost the competitive spirit needed to win in all the years we competed against each other. And yes, I remember the details of that day very well... it was one of the very rare ocassions where I bested my friend and shooting mentor. This shoot was in 1995. My 1st, 2nd, & 3rd in the category shoots was match by Joey's 2nd, 3rd, & 1st... but my total hit count was higher, included all shoot-offs for each category, by that one shot at the end of the match. So yes, that one shot decided the match.
Ammo: .309 diameter 150 grain FPGC cast of 6:1 (WW:Lino), Speer GCs, Federal cases (cc'd for capacity), 27.5 grains of RE-7, WLR primers.
Side Note: After the shooting, the spotter told me that my 400 yard prone shots off X-stix were all within a 6" circle of the center of the target... and my last shot was just about the dead center of the target. Whereas Joey's shots had used the entire target. On that day I finally felt that my barrel selection for this target .30-30 was justified.
