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FOF Controversy?


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FORCE ON FORCE CONTRAVERSY?

Randy Harris - Suarez International Staff Instructor

The subject of Force on Force training is one that we should all consider. After all, what are we actually training for? Do we train to avoid getting mugged by a flat piece of cardboard that does not think move or try to hurt you or are we training to deal with living breathing thinking adversaries? The obvious answer is live adversaries. So if your training regimen does not or has never included any Force on Force component then how do you know whether what you are practicing REALLY works or not? Maybe you train with some "guru" who has been in many fights and never lost. All that really tells you is HE has a grasp of his material and was successful. It does not tell you how well you would fair using that in a real confrontation. So how do we know? We have to test it.

Some may say "well what I do works in my IDPA matches". Great. You are thoroughly ready to proactively face a 3 foot tall piece unarmed of cardboard after being told to get ready in advance . Again, not terribly realistic. There really is no reason to not avail oneself of FOF training today. Years ago it was only really available to military and police. But now however , with the wide availability of non lethal airsoft guns. The technology is there so that the average guy can spend $150 or so and be equipped to take a force on force class. Of course there are also Simunitions guns if you prefer to use marking cartridges, but the availability and price of the guns and ammo is somewhat prohibitive.

This brings us to our first controversy. Is the Airsoft gun really adequate for FOF training? There are some that make the argument that there needs to be a "pain penalty" for screwing up in FOF scenarios. I agree. What we are really doing is to some degree hardwiring the ability to make good decisions at a very fast subconscious level. In a real encounter we will not have long to make a decision. If we just stand and dither over whether it is "really happening to me?" or "what do I do now?" then we will likely have waited to long to do anything useful. Getting shot with non lethal yet painful projectiles reinforces that if we do not be decisive and act quickly then bad things will happen. This is where our subconscious starts compiling data for positive vs negative outcomes where action is concerned.

Now, do Sims rounds hurt more than airsoft? Absolutely. And we need that pain to get the message across to our brain that we are doing things that are giving an adverse outcome to what we would like. So in that respect airsoft is not as good for FOF as simunitions. But part of the problem is that students often show up for FOF classes looking like they are armored up for medieval combat. If you are so padded up that you cannot feel the BBs then you are really not getting the most out of the exercises. This is why I recommend that during scenario work you wear virtually no protective gear at all. Just head protection and maybe gloves.. Taking rounds in the hands , especially the knuckles, almost always causes bleeding. This way you know where you got hit, but still protect hands and face.I have seen people hit in the hands with airsoft pellets drop their pistols. I have also debriefed many participants and most all agree that it feels like a bee sting when hit. I'd have to agree. And depending on the distance, it sometimes hurts worse than other times. So yes if we limit the amount of padding we wear then Airsoft is perfectly adequate. In drill work I recommend a LITTLE more padding, maybe a long sleeve shirt, because when you are getting in maybe 50 fights or more per day there is only so much impact you are going to take before you get tired and sore and lose concentration. So for the drills I say pad up a little but run the scenarios with as little as possible.

The next controversy is whether you are better doing scenario work or drills. I mentioned scenario work earlier. That is full blown scenarios with role players who stick to a script of what they are going to do if the student does certain things. Often the instructions might be " Go panhandle the student, ask for money. You are not robbing him, just asking, but if he insults you or gets physical then you amp up the situation and get in his face, but if he just tells you he can't help you , then let him pass unmolested " . The point is that the scenario is not just wide open, the role players are playing a realistic defined part, not just running wild. The scenario based FOF is more in line with real world situations sometimes involving witnesses , maybe even the Police. It is essentially a test of your ability to negotiate whatever the situation is and successfully "survive" the encounter. Often -just like in real life- this can be done without getting into a fight at all.

The other type of FOF work is FOF drills. Gabe Suarez refers to the drill work as light sparring with a partner.The drills are little fights. There is no real decision making left on pre fight matters. In the drill the fight is unavoidable and usually begins with the bad guy initiating some sort of attack.The purpose is to give the students a lot of repetitions on the core skills need in a real confrontation. Those are seeing and reacting to the attack, get off the X if possible, access your weapon if you are armed , deploy that weapon from concealment and if it is a pistol, get hits on the target. These may sound simple, but many students who have never really ingrained these skills often have trouble at first doing all of these things at the same time under stress. After all some ranges do not even allow drawing a loaded pistol from a holster. So unless the student takes the time to work that skill on their own they likely will be a little behind the curve if we just drop them into scenario work from the start.

And I really do not understand why some people have such an issue with drills. We do drills in every other athletic endeavor we might pursue. I played basketball in high school and you'd better believe we did more than just scrimmage. We did drills every practice to build skill. The drills build the skills that you will then employ in the game. The same is true in unarmed self defense. I doubt many martial arts or combative instructors just have the students spar without first building the individual offensive and defensive skills through skill building drills. Even in IDPA and IPSC shooting , no one just practices by only shooting matches. They build their shooting, reloading and malfunction clearing ability through drills set up to build repetition in those areas. The match is then a validation (or invalidation) of their training regimen.

So for me the answer is simply this. Self defense, be it with empty hands or armed is an athletic endeavor. It does not mean you have to be an Olympian to survive. It simply means that the more athletic you are the more you will be able to do. There really is no way around that. Many of the skills that might be required in a violent encounter are able to be performed by everyday folks- IF they have been exposed to those skills. The problem is the majority of people have never found themselves in a violent confrontation, much less enough of them to draw any real statistical data from. Hence the need for FOF drills. The drills build the skills and allow you to use them in real time against an uncooperative real life opponent, not just a stationary human shaped form. It allows you to get many repetitions in being the victim of an assault and get a better perspective of just how little time there is to act and how much time and distance effect the dynamics of the confrontation.

Now just like in basketball or boxing or whatever, the drills will only take you so far. There comes a time to spar or scrimmage. That is where the skills we built in the drills is tested in the mock game. We wouldn't just work drills and then schedule a real boxing match. Just like no sane coach would keep his team from scrimmaging leading up to a game. To have a real idea of how everyone moves and acts and reacts you have to have the scenario work too. The scenario work is where you are able to work the whole package of skills from avoidance and deescalation to getting off the X, accessing pistol, marksmanship, 360 degree scan and even preparing witnesses and talking to the police. The first time you ever do these things does not need to be at 3 AM on a cold rainy night when it is for real!

Now a couple of other minor controversies. Some argue that FOF is not real because there is no ballistic effect- especially with airsoft. I agree . No one said it was REAL. But it is about as close as we can get without having a serious reworking of the liability waiver and a trauma unit on standby. That is why I recommend the least clothing you can get by with for the FOF iterations.In fact at the National Tactical Invitational I wore cargo shorts a T shirt and a light summer weight button down shirt as a cover garment. No padding or layers other than the face mask and neck protection they issued.

Another controversy is that the shooting while moving we teach leads to wild errant shooting and will get bystanders killed. Therefore we should stand still to shoot. I'm Ok with standing still as long as you are behind cover or you are farther than 10 yards distant form your pistol armed adversary. The problem is that if you are in a true initiative deficient situation where your first clue that the fight was on was seeing the guy reach in his waistband, then standing there trying to out draw him is not likely to have a long future to it. We really need to look at the context of the common criminal assault. It will likely be so close that you simply cannot make enough distance to keep from getting shot. This is one of those things that we find out rather quickly in those drills. If you cannot back up fast enough to avoid getting punched then how do you honestly expect to back up far enough, fast enough to keep from being shot? This is where guys that have only worked against motionless targets that do not shoot back (or shoot first) have an unrealistic view of the dynamics involved.

So if we concede that we cannot always make enough space quickly enough to just "make space and shoot" , then we will likely be in very close proximity to the target/bad guy when we shoot. Logical? So when we are shooting and moving this is often done at less than 3 yards. I submit that most anyone with skill at acquiring their pistol with good grip and a modicum of trigger control can make rapid multiple hits on targets at that distance. We are not talking about firing haphazardly over our shoulder as we sprint 20 yards away from the target. We are talking about drawing quickly as we explode laterally off the X and firing a burst at the target often with the muzzle 20 INCHES from the target. Not exactly haphazard reckless shooting by a long shot.

Also what are we looking to learn in drills? The point of the drills are to see what gets you shot less and gets the bad guy shot more. Not who can hit whom the most or who can run the farthest. The drill realistically is only useful for the first 3 to 5 seconds- the time frame of most actual fights. Anything past that is superfluous. And that 5 second and after time frame is where all the misses happen. The drills typically go like this. The bad guy attacks, the good guy gets off the X, shots are exchanged and they move farther apart. As they move apart they keep shooting and that is where the missing begins. But again, we are not looking at the last 3 seconds for data we are looking at the first 3 seconds. In fact I limit them to 3 to 5 rounds per fight when the drills are 1 on 1. This keeps the students focused on getting accurate hits not on hosing down the other guy as you run as fast as he can in the other direction. That is little more than a playground water gun fight.

The last controversy is how is your FOF class set up. Again, there are those who argue that only scenario work is realistic and that is all that should be done. Ok , fine. That is an opinion, but I do not agree. I have had students come through my FOF class (Suarez International's Interactive Gunfighting FOF) who had been to other schools that offered Force on Force classes. The other schools had done ONLY scenarios. The students said that they felt they got a better understanding of the dynamics of the confrontation and were now better prepared by doing the drills too. Now when they got into fights in the scenarios they were able to access the "solutions" they had been working all weekend and run those skill sets and prevail, whereas before they had a lot of decision making to do armed with only the skill sets they already had before they showed up. Now, let me repeat scenario work is crucial too.You need to test your total package of skills. And not only that, but scenario work that tests decision making, not just draw speed and marksmanship. A FOF scenario that is a glorified "shoot house burglar hunt" is frankly of little value.

The students need to be confronted with real life moral dilemmas and have to decide in real time what to do. There needs to be a lot of interaction verbally between the students and role players and there needs to be a level of multi tasking going on. That is why I like to use scenarios that have the student going through everyday life errands like going to the convenience store carrying bags or coming out of the mall talking on the cell phone and things like that where the student is engaged in more than just waiting to draw their gun. But again, I believe best results in the scenarios are obtained by those who have drilled the fundamentals to the point that their "fight skills" run on auto pilot and because of that they are freed up mentally to make decisions without worrying about what to do if the fight is on.

So whether you are an experienced gunman or a novice there is only one training environment that tests your total skill package and that is Force on Force.

Edited by Daniel
ease of reading.
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First thing I did was look up Suarez Int'l for their class schedule ... but, as stated above, nothing scheduled in the Nashville area!

FoF training was already on my to-do list, and I was hoping to go out to Camden to train there - but again, it's not on their schedule locally either!

... so if the intent here was to drum up some interest, consider it done - now lets get a class together!

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Guys,the intent was to cause thought and discussion, but if there is interest in a class so be it. In fact we can run a FOF class pretty much anywhere with enough room to move around since there is no live fire in that class. In fact if someone here has a place and wants to host the class shoot me a PM. I will be offering a FOF class here in the Chatt area in next couple of months. :D

Edited by Cruel Hand Luke
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  • 3 weeks later...
Guest grimel
Guys,the intent was to cause thought and discussion, but if there is interest in a class so be it. In fact we can run a FOF class pretty much anywhere with enough room to move around since there is no live fire in that class. In fact if someone here has a place and wants to host the class shoot me a PM. I will be offering a FOF class here in the Chatt area in next couple of months. :up:

Don't do it! Randy will sweat 10lbs off you.

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  • 2 weeks later...
Guest sn8kbit

Wow, most likely one of the best posts I've seen on the board. For the 4 or 5 people that actually know me on this board, they'll understand where I come from in this answer.

I've preached to most that I know, and my own employees, that any type of armed carry training (license type) is lacking any substance whatsoever, to the point that I am absolutely not comfortable with over 50% of those who do carry carrying at all. Why? The lack of actual scenario training. I honestly believe there should be some type of FOF training involved in any type of permit class. Why? Mindset, plain and simple. I can actually count 2 incidents that I'm aware of in the last 2 years in Nashville where a local instructor (whom I won't name) who damn near forces you on the range to "push off" with the left hand as if to push an attacker away while firing, where both had shot themselves in the back of that left "push off hand" (muscle memory and lack of continual training, also, on edit, these incidents were in real life situations, not during the training). Ridiculous!

My first actual Advanced Hangun course, 2 days (great class by the way), I spent the majority of the first unlearning bad habits over the years. Sure, muscle memory plays into use of the weapon, why shouldn't there be 'muscle memory' for the brain. Until anyone has been in an unpredictable scenario, whether it calls for Deadly Force engagement or not, all the range/trigger time in the world makes no difference. In the majority of incidents I've been in where the use of deadly force could have applied, it's been within the stated 3 yards, or someone actually physically on top of me or someone else. When that happens, it's not just whether to use or not, but other things come into play, primarily weapon retention and surroundings.

I like your approach to FOF 'drills' by complicating a situation by adding the real life aspect. I also think after each, an after action review going over the simple question and discussion of "How could this have been handled different?" doesn't mean the engagment or lack thereof was a mistake, but simply a different approach to learn by. After all, the end goal of a 'surprise' incident is to go home safely, shot or no shot. How can anyone know exactly how to respond if they're not ready for Before, During and After?

I also have nothing against dry drills either. My work gun and my carry gun are completely different, in completely different holsters, and whichever I carry, when I carry, I dry drill a clear weapon before I carry it. A Sig and a 1911 are two completely different animals.

I think the only controversy involved with FOF would be those outside or against weapons entirely. "But you're training to actually fight someone!" and to that I'll respond, "You're exactly right."

Great post, I wish I was close enough to get in on one of your classes.

Edit: Well I'll be damned, you're doing a class the weekend of May 30th about 20 miles from me in Crestview, FL. Parental obligations prevent me from attending, but how often do you get this way?

Edited by sn8kbit
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Well, we are looking at maybe another down there in the fall. I'm trying to schedule 2 to 3 per year. The first down there was in January. The next is the last weekend of May.

That area seems to be an area with little training available to folks and I'm down that way regularly on vacation. I have a friend who has a cousin with property to use, so it just seemed logical. I'll PM you when we have a date for fall.

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Guest sn8kbit

Randy -

Please let me know. You're absolutely correct, training in this area is sorely lacking. I've expanded from the Nashville area to the Blue Mountain/Destin area as far as services go (Private Security), and even thinking about available training for employees gives me a headache. Goal is after summer season to get my own NRA certification to at least do 'in-house' employee training, with thoughts to selective Florida G permit training (statewide required for armed officers), and extremely selective HCP training. I cannot believe the class requirement here is basically a 2 hour course with a small amount of range time, offered at most local gun shows! It'll also free me up to do continual training with the guys in Nashville, since the job there and the job here are two completely different animals.

Thanks -

Steve

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Yeah, it is a bit...minimal. I'm all for EVERYONE being armed, but with freedom comes responsibility. The problem is that most folks (myself uncluded at one time) do not know the depth of what they do not know.And some just want the MINIMAL amount of training to be eligible to receive a permit.

I'm not suggesting people should be master class shooters to get a permit. I'm suggesting they should have solid safe gunhandling and SOME experience with interacting with a living breathing thinking assailant (or 2) in a FOF class. Cardboard does not react like people do to verbal cues. Cardboard does not give off a "something is wrong here" vibe like real participants do. You cannot learn what the cues of impending criminal assault look like by studying an IDPA target. That is why I cover that stuff in the CCW classes I teach too.

Once folks can run the gun competently and hit what they are aiming at, they REALLY need to then focus on FOF work. My opinion.

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Guest sn8kbit

I understand your point between everyone carrying, and class substance. I suppose my point was that there should be more to a simple permit class than there is, with teachers that are more concerned with student preparedness versus vicarious liability an their part in an "IF" situation. I think if that happens, there would be more individuals leaving a class with the mindset to continue some type of training. Not to discount the "THAT guy" almost every class will have..... :)

Make sense?

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Makes sense. Unfortunately it is kind of like any other teaching profession. Some teachers go straight form the syllabus with NOTHING at all else covered and some find a way to cover the material AND do their best to cover a few things that will give their students better preparedness.

And I'm not talking one handed reloads or weak handed shooting, I'm talking about interaction with what Southnarc refers to as "unknown contacts". That is how to read their body language and what cues to look for in someone that approaches you to determine if someone is just a down on his luck panhandler or if he is maneuvering on you. While I can cover these points in a lecture, it is best learned by the students experiencing it in a FOF setting.

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