Jeff Cooper

no mention of Cooper or his passing on the IDPA website as much as I can see....?

What I did find was this, which is a direct bashing of IPSC, (although the specific "shooting sport" being bashed was not mentioned:rolleyes: )
Why do we need another shooting sport?
Prior to the formation of IDPA, there was no place to compete and hone one’s skill with equipment designed for and suitable for self-defense. Other shooting sports are just that, sports that have no relevance to self-defense. IDPA offers an exciting forum for practical shooters in which truly practical equipment, techniques and courses of fire are mandated. Prior to IDPA, there was no place at all to compete with common service pistols such as the Beretta, Glock or Sig. Nor was there a shooting sport where your concealed carry holster could also be your match holster without handicap. When you come to an IDPA match, you can not only use your duty/CCW equipment, you can be completely competitive with it! Other shooting sports have become equipment “races”; IDPA will not. If you’re interested in using truly practical pistols to solve challenging and exciting defensive shooting problems, then IDPA is the sport for you.


Pretty petty to bash another shooting sport:confused: , and does nothing to make it more attractive to me. They are both shooting sports,
I do like the use of cover rule, but it is really subject to what the RO calls, like how much of your body was behind cover, etc... I like the drawing from concealment rule, but the mag retention rule is dependent on the situation in the "real world":rolleyes: :rolleyes:
 
Last edited:
This topic always gets me.
Any time you take a martial concept and make it into a competition, give it a set of rules to govern it....you are creating a SPORT. IDPA is no different from IPSC in that regard. It is a sport. The martial applications of both IPSC and IDPA are to any reasonable person, valid and obvious. The type of gun is immaterial. The rule set is immaterial. You pays your money and you takes your frame of reference and go out and have some fun. What is important is the mind set, and the willingness to break down a problem; tactical or competitive, and solve to it one's best advantage. That is what makes a successful martial artist and that is ALSO what makes a successful competitor. Anyone who wants to bash IPSC or for that matter IDPA, for reasons of "validity" does so only by diminishing their own credibility.
 
jesus it would've been to see relliot on these forums more often, common sense like he has is a rare commodity!
 
I'm saddened to hear this news... Even if it is old by now.

As others have said while I didn't always agree with everything he said, he contributed more to shooting sports than any one other person I can think of and much of his teachings were inspriational.

I'm disappointed I never got to attend any of his courses at the ranch. My thoughts go out to his family and all who knew him.
 
Back
Top Bottom