Imagine shaving 30 seconds off your stage time in just one hour of targeted drills—that’s the electrifying promise unpacked in this eye-opening video featuring AG Cup Winner and MDT Pro Francis Colon coaching a novice shooter. Forget the myth that speed is just about frantic trigger pulls; Colon dives deep into the fundamentals, breaking down grip transitions, sight alignment under pressure, and efficient movement between positions. Watching this unfold feels like peeking behind the curtain of elite competition shooting, where pros like Colon transform raw potential into precision machinery. It’s not magic—it’s methodical: laser-focused reps on key stages reveal how micro-adjustments in stance and reloads compound into massive time savings, hitting a jaw-dropping 63% improvement.
For the 2A community, this isn’t just training porn; it’s a blueprint for empowerment in an era where anti-gun narratives paint us as reckless hobbyists. Colon’s approach underscores why defensive pistolcraft and competitive speed shooting are intertwined—faster, more accurate draws mean real-world confidence against threats, whether on the range or in a grid-down scenario. Newer shooters often plateau because they chase speed without mastering the why behind splits and transitions, but this session proves elite coaching can accelerate progress exponentially. Implications? Affordable dry-fire mimics of these drills democratize pro-level skills, bolstering our collective readiness and dismantling the guns are for cowboys trope. If you’re serious about 2A rights, integrate this into your regimen—because in a nation divided on firearms, personal proficiency is the ultimate rebuttal.
The ripple effect extends to broader competitions like USPSA or IDPA, where MDT’s precision gear (shoutout to their chassis systems) pairs perfectly with Colon’s tactics, giving everyday defenders an edge. Grab the video, hit the range, and clock your own gains—63% faster isn’t hyperbole; it’s achievable science for anyone committed to the fight. Stay armed, stay trained, stay free.