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What is IPSC
This new and exciting style of shooting had its origins in California, USA in the early '50s. It quickly spread over the years to many other continents including Europe, Australia, Central and South America, and Africa.
The sport features a combination of exciting speed shooting skills, nerve racking accuracy and athleticism. Competitors move through simulated environments engaging paper and steel targets as quickly and accurately as possible under the ever watchful eye of the Range Officer. Stages are often very creatively designed by the match hosts and it is not unusual to find yourself riding a 'horse" as you chase the bank robbers or shooting off a swaying suspension bridge whilst trying to carry a heavy bag in one hand
The International Practical Shooting Confederation (IPSC) was officially founded at the International Combat Pistol Conference held in Columbia, Missouri, in May 1976. Forty people from around the world were invited to attend this Conference to determine the nature and the future of practical marksmanship. Colonel Jeff Cooper was acting Chairman and was acclaimed as the first IPSC World President.
The promotion of accuracy, power, and speed as three equal elements was the prime objective of the Conference along with procedures and rules for safe gun handling. A constitution was established and the Confederation was born. The eight principles of practical shooting were developed and the motto - DVC - Diligentia, Vis, Celeritas (Accuracy, Power, Speed) was introduced to reflect this balanced objective.
Today, the International Practical Shooting Confederation is promoted in more than sixty countries (called IPSC Regions) from Finland to Zimbabwe. Every year, the elected representatives of these Regions meet at the IPSC General Assembly.
In practical shooting, the competitor must try to blend accuracy, power, and speed, into a winning combination. Targets are a diamond shaped cardboard approximately 60 centimeters by 45 centimeters with a small center representing the "A zone" or bullseye. Most shooting takes place at close range, with rare shots out to 45 meters. Hitting a 15 centimeter A zone at 45 meters or less might seem easy to an experienced pistol shooter, but in IPSC only full power pistols are allowed (9mm or larger). This power minimum reflects the practical heritage of this modern sport, and mastering a full power handgun is considerably more difficult than shooting a light recoiling target pistol especially when the competitor is trying to go as fast as possible. Time, also plays a factor. In Comstock scored stages, the scores are divided by the time, adding to the challenge.
Multiple targets, moving targets, targets that react when hit, penalty carrying no-shoot targets mixed-in or even partially covering shoot targets, obstacles, movement, competitive tactics, and, in general, any other relevant difficulty the course designer can dream up all combine to keep the competitors enthusiastic and the spectators entertained. While the rules of IPSC state that the course of fire should be realistic and practical, they also state that diversity is to be encouraged, to keep the sport from becoming too formalized or standardized. In fact, some matches even contain surprise stages where no one knows in advance what to expect.
Although the roots are martial in origin, the sport matured from these beginnings, just as karate, fencing, or archery developed from their origins. Now, practical shooting is an international sport, emphasizing safety and safe gun handling, accuracy, power, and speed, in major competitions around the globe. The crowning glory for practical shooting is to become the IPSC World Champion.
Nick Alexakos
International President, IPSC

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