Many shooters practice every day…
but after some time, their scores stop improving.
This is called a plateau.
A plateau does not mean:
- You are bad
- You are unlucky
- Your pistol is the problem
It simply means your body has learned enough, but your mind has not.
Now let’s understand why this happens—and how to fix it.
Why Shooters Get Stuck (Very Simple Truth)
In the beginning, improvement is fast.
Later, improvement becomes slow and difficult.
At this stage:
- Shooters shoot more shots instead of better shots
- They get angry after bad shots
- They think too much after every shot
- Practice becomes boring
- They start guessing instead of following a system
This is where most shooters stop growing.
Now let’s break the plateau using 5 very easy ideas.

1. Decide What a “Correct Shot” Means
Most shooters say:
“That was a good shot.”
But what does good mean?
You must decide before practice:
- How steady must the sights be?
- How smooth must the trigger be?
- How long must you hold after the shot?
If the shot does not match your rule, it is not correct.
No cheating.
No guessing.
Clear rules = faster improvement.
2. Count Correct Shots, Not Score
Score makes shooters emotional.
Instead, count:
- How many shots were done correctly
Example:
- 60 shots fired
- 45 shots done correctly
That means 75% correct.
This is very powerful because:
- You stop worrying about score
- You focus only on doing the process right
- Your mind becomes calm
In matches, you then focus on doing correct shots, not chasing numbers.
3. When You Are Stuck, the Problem Is in the Mind
If your technique is okay but improvement stops, the problem is usually:
- Fear of making mistakes
- Fear of going backward
- Losing motivation
- Getting lazy or careless
This is normal.
To fix this:
- Use positive self-talk
- Imagine yourself doing the shot correctly
- Stay patient even when practice feels boring
This stage builds mental strength.
Good shooters are made here.
4. Practice With a Little Pressure
In practice, everything feels easy.
In matches, everything feels hard.
Why?
Because practice has no pressure.
So you must add small pressure in practice:
- Time limits
- Targets for correct shots
- Small punishments (extra drill if goal not met)
This teaches your mind to stay calm when it matters.
5. Improve Only One Thing at a Time
Many shooters try to fix:
- Aim
- Trigger
- Breath
- Balance
—all together.
This never works.
Instead:
- Pick one small skill
- Practice only that
- Improve it step by step
When one skill becomes strong, move to the next.
Slow is fast.
Final Message (Very Important)
A plateau is not a failure.
It is a test.
Everyone reaches it.
Few people pass it.
If you stay honest, patient, and focused on correct practice,
you will break the plateau.
And when you do,
you will become a much stronger shooter, not just a higher-scoring one.
Keep it simple.
Keep it honest.
Keep going.