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Regardless of where you are in your shooting game, the Ashes can help you bring it to the next level. Whether you shoot sporting clays, trap, skeet, or hunt birds, the OSP method will show you how!
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Optimum Shotgun Performance  

Recent Posts

Sticking with Your System

Author: Gil Ash
Posted on November 2, 2016

When we don’t perform well, we typically focus on our mechanical performance. But the mental mistake that may have contributed to the poor shots is too often overlooked.The game within the game is to stick with your system, even though it is not producing the results you want or expected. You can’t focus on what you are doing if you are worried about how things are going.This is why “same speed at the end” is so powerf... Read more…

Better Visualizations

Author: Gil Ash
Posted on October 25, 2016

After you miss, you can't alter what has happened. But you can influence what will happen next.Get in the Knowledge Vault and watch the Kill Shot Reviews. You will better be able to visualize how the shot comes together. Read more…

Controlling Your Reactions to Your Mistakes

Author: Gil Ash
Posted on October 19, 2016

The key to success is not to eliminate mistakes. Mistakes are going to happen for everyone.The key is in controlling our reactions to those mistakes. The most destructive force you can unleash on the course is anger.An impulsive reaction against a perceived injustice is never prudent behavior!Anger makes us stupid. Read more…

When Expectation Equals Ability

Author: Gil Ash
Posted on October 17, 2016

When expectation is equal to your ability, great things happen. That would be where confidence comes from.This begins with competence. And eventually, you become what you remember! Read more…

It’s Not About Center Vision

Author: Gil Ash
Posted on October 12, 2016

It occurred to me today that it is not about training your center vision to stay on the target. It is about training your periphery to accept the gun and, through minimum movement, not switch primary to it.We are wired to see movement in our periphery. In turn, it directs the primary vision to the movement.Our center vision obviously must stay on the target, but it is our periphery that must be trained to do the opposi... Read more…