Very nice. Do you look through a scope to see how you are doing? I don't with center fire because if i miss the black I can see it. With 22 I keep peeking.
part of the challenge is learning how to not blow a good target with bad nerves.
When I was doing bullseye shooting ie one handed I have a range box with a scope mount on it and would peek through the scope to see how I was doing.
You can learn a lot from bullseye and a good coach doesn't hurt either!
But for the target above, two handed I just focus on lining up the sights the exact same way for every shot and to pull the trigger smoothly and consistently from shot to shot.
And of course you have the sights set on the gun.
I am really lucky to have pretty good eyesight though it's not as good as it was, and to have very steady hands.
But if I get in any state but calm those steady hands are gone.
I've also done battle with flinching and .22 is the best remedy for that, you know what you've done wrong.
I did shoot a couple targets today one handed and they would be in the low 80's
If people want to become really good shooters, shoot a lot of .22, get coaching if you can, and just shoot lots of everything, you can analyze till your head explodes quality trigger time and lead down the range are the only real ways to learn.
I also used to shoot 2-3000 rounds of .22 a month, 500-1000 rounds of 9mm, 1000 rounds of .38 (148gr. Speer hbwc 2.7gr. Bullseye) maybe 3-400 rounds of .45acp.
I did that for a few years steady and 99% at 20m