I was browsing YouTube one day, looking for more shooting drills to try out. I stumbled upon Tom Givens’ channel, and found the Rangemaster Baseline Assessment Drill. This drill looked appealing, so I bookmarked it, and gave it a try. I enjoy low round count drills that stress skills well, so this was eye catching. What is the Baseline Assessment Drill, and what skills do you build using it?
Rangemaster Firearms Training Services LLC is a traveling training organization. Founded in 1996 by Tom Givens, Rangemaster has taught thousands of students over the years. Dan has taken three courses from them, the Instructor Development Course, the Advanced Instructor Course, and the Master Instructor Course.
The Baseline Assessment Drill (B.A.D., unfortunate acronym) is a 20 round drill, devised to check skill with a lower round count. It’s shot on a single B-8 target, or an equivalent target. You’ll need a handgun, a concealment holster, and a timer. This drill features a reload, so you may want a mag pouch, however, I know a lot of folks carry their spares in a pant pocket.
We’ve got 5 strings of fire in the B.A.D., at 3 different distances:
After the 5th string of fire, the drill is concluded. Scoring is simple, as passing is a score of 190/200 or higher, and shot under par time.
What’s the TL;DR?
THE RANGEMASTER BASELINE ASSESSMENT DRILL
Here’s an example of a recent Baseline Assessment Drill that I shot:
The B.A.D. stresses the following skills:
With the first string of fire, we are testing our draw, presentation, and 3 handgun shooting fundamentals. 5 rounds at 5 yards in 5 seconds might not seem difficult, but we’re trying to shoot a perfect score here. We can’t take forever, but we can’t rush it and toss a shot either.
With the second and third strings, we are working on one handed, and off-handed shooting. This is one of the skills that most people tend to sleep on, but it is important. There are a million instances where you may need to take a one handed shot, and this drill makes you test that out.
On the fourth string , we are getting the fundamentals of shooting in again, but with factoring in a reload. Much like previous drills I’ve covered, when you factor in a timed reload, this is where you see the wheels come off. Maybe you find out that the snazzy mag carrier sucks, or that your magwell is hard to quickly cram mags into. Once we reload, we’ve got to have 3 more accurate shots, so we get to work in target reacquisition.
For the final string, it’s all about accuracy and speed. 10 yard shooting isn’t that far, but when you are trying to be precise, every extra yard starts to add up.
I think that for 20 rounds, this is an excellent value to shoot.
For me, this drill is not an exceptionally hard one to shoot. I’ve been pretty hardcore into handgun shooting over the last few years, and have really grown as a shooter. However, this drill is meant to be a baseline qualifier, and to test important handgun skills with a low round count. With that, I really enjoy this drill. Even though ammo prices have dipped a bit, it still isn’t like the pre-COVID days with $.15 CPR 9mm. A drill that can integrate in a wide range of shooting with just 2/5 of a box of ammo is pretty great, and I can dig that.
The B.A.D. is intended to show you what you need to work on. If you lack skill in one of the areas of the drill, you’ll find out when shooting it. With that, you can then go practice more on that specific chunk. For me, I know I could always work on non-dominant handed shooting, and this drill gets me to practice it more.
Tom’s idea for this drill is that you shoot it every so often, to see how you’ve improved, or to see where you need to improve. This isn’t meant to be shot consecutively, as that loses the point of it being a baseline or benchmark drill. I also appreciate that, as I’ve been trying to vary what drills I shoot, to make sure I’m not just drilling what I’ve already gotten great at. I would say that this drill is excellent for people that have broken past the “beginner” phase of handgun shooting, and are working up to, or past the “advanced” phase. All in all, I dig the Rangemaster Baseline Assessment Drill.
Check out our other shooting drills >>>here<<<.
For specific drills that I enjoy, check out the “Devil Drill” and the “Wilson Combat Comprehensive Handgun Proficiency Drill“. These two drills are also fairly low round count, but work your skills quite well.
For other Rangemaster drills, Dan covered the Bullseye Course last year.
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