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Why Scores Drop in Matches (Even When Practice Scores Are High)

Written by Hemant Jadhav

Table of Content

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Hello friends,

One of the most common frustrations parents and shooters share is this:

“He shoots 560 in practice but struggles to cross 540 in matches.”

This gap is not mysterious.
It is predictable.

WhatsApp Image 2026 01 28 at 9.25.12 PM

Practice Is a Safe Environment

In practice:

• There is no consequence

• No audience

• No ranking

• No fear of failure

The brain stays relaxed.

The nervous system cooperates.

Matches Trigger Survival Mode

Competition activates:

• Fear of Failure

• Fear of Criticism

• Fear of the unknown.

The brain quietly switches from performance mode to protection mode.

When this happens:

• Fine motor control reduces

• Decision-making slows

• Movements become jerky

The shooter hasn’t become worse.

The environment has changed.

Why “More Matches” Is Not the Solution

Many people believe experience alone will fix this.

It won’t.

Without mental tools:

• Bad matches pile up

• Confidence erodes

• Shooters start doubting solid technique

This is how promising shooters stagnate—or quit early.

Bridging the Gap

To reduce the practice–match gap, training must include:

• Body Relaxation Techniques

• Breathing techniques to control emotions

• Focus on technique execution than on the score for each shot.

• Develop a match winning Self Image.

Matches should feel familiar, not threatening.

Final Word

The gap exists because:

• Practice trains skill

• Matches expose mindset

Fix the mindset—and the gap closes naturally.

Shooter’s Say-so

Author 

WhatsApp Image 2026-04-18 at 3.36.00 PM

Hemant Jadhav is the founder of Foresight Shooting and an ISSF-certified 10 meter air pistol coach, specializing in performance under pressure and precision shooting systems.

Through his work, he focuses on helping shooters build consistency, stability, and mental control, turning technical skills into repeatable high-performance outcomes.

He is deeply committed to the sport and spends extensive time training, analyzing performance patterns, and refining methods that improve accuracy and confidence in competition.

Outside of coaching, he values time with his family and often retreats to his farmhouse, where he disconnects, reflects, and resets.

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