 We're at the NRA's Whittington Center and with Tone New Mexico, it's about 52 square miles of open range and we're here competing in the Rocky Mountain Three-Gun World Shoot. Unlike kind of Table 1, Table 2, which is what the Marine Corps used to do, Three-Gun is a series of stages that the competitors don't know until they show up that can include any number of combinations between rifle, shotgun and pistol, any number of targets at any range. It's really a game of action shooting, trying to get fast and accurate combined into one. Training for each particular match depends on what skills we're lacking in. So we'll pinpoint several skills that we need to work on, whether it's long range accuracy movement between stages, transition between guns. The Marine Corps uses this to pinpoint our deficiencies in training. Because none of the stages are known to us until we actually show up at a match, what we have to do is break down our individual skill sets. Because we have three different guns, there's a lot of small things that need to get drilled individually. For example, reloading, our draw presentation on each gun, transitions between targets and movement. There's also a science behind gaming a stage, how to figure out how many steps you need to take, which position is going to be the most efficient. We try to do all those things individually in training before we come out to one of these big matches. The team showed improvement in multiple divisions and we have a lot of top finishes, including a fourth place finish from Sergeant Gill. There's a lot more to shooting than slinging up on the 500 and the prone. What we're really trying to do is see what the best shooters in the world are doing and see how we can bring some of those training methodologies back to the Marine Corps and hopefully improve our partnership doctrine.