S-RAS FIREARMS TRAINING
About
17 years experience as a Marksmanship Trainer, Training Manager, Training Controller, & Training Coordinator; California Dep't. of Justice P.O.S.T. certified Firearms Trainer; FBI Certified Firearms Instructor, Competitive Marksmanship Coach - 7 national championship wins. U.S. Army Distinguished Shooter.
That's a quick bullet list of some of my highlights. I have trained over 10,000 Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, Marines, & Police. Most U.S. military marksmanship training is extremely poor, the same can be said about law enforcement. Both set a very low goal and achive it.
Instead, my goal is to develop outstanding, uncommon, shooting skill in my clients, by providing a well prepared learning environment. That begins with a discussion. One I'm happy to have with you.
Highlights
Payment methods
Specialties
Student age(s)
Number of students
Any previous experience
Type of training
Type of firearm
Reason for training
Own a firearm
Photos and videos
No reviews (yet)
Frequently asked questions
What is your typical process for working with a new student?
Explain, Demonstrate, Imitate, Perform.
Each block of learning follows that basic process. Lessons cover a variety of topics, beginning and ending with safety.
Assessments begin after safe weapons handling is demonstrably consistent.
From assessment results we determine a training plan, and work that plan, building skill through discussion, drills, simulators, live fire, and timed live fire.
Physical exertion is often an integral part of training. Come prepared. Students may train under exertion, to experience and improve performance under duress.
My additional trainers are military or former military champions. Over the years my shooters have beat teams from all over the Army and Marines to include FORSCOM, USASOC SFAUC committees, and MARSOC Cadre, most recently in 2021.
What education and/or training do you have that relates to your work?
12 years experience producing Army shooting champions.
California P.O.S.T. Certification
California D.O.J. Certification
U.S. DOJ FBI Certified Fireams Instructor.US Army Instructor; Observer Controller Trainer; and Adaptive Leader Certified.
US Army Designated Marksman Instructor
Graduate: Combat Application Marksmanship Course. Combat Applications Pistol Course. AWG Adaptive Leader Course.
US Army Distinguished Pistol Shot.
Do you have a standard pricing system for your lessons? If so, please share the details here.
How did you get started teaching?
I attended the US Army Designated Marksman Course, I realized that after 10 years in the Army I didn't really know all that much about shooting until I passed that course. Afterwards I went on a crusade to spread the gospel so to speak.
The reality is that most Soldiers and Police are really terrible shooters. Not everyone cares to put in the work to go next level.
It takes real WORK to be a good shooter. Most people don't have the space in their lives to set aside time and effort necessary for skill development. It's definitelya commitment.
There are many millions of trigger pullers, but just thousands of shooters.
What types of students have you worked with?
Short, tall, thin, fat, brown, white, Asian, black, native English speakers, speakers whose mother tongue isn't English, incredibly smart, cognitively challenged, women, men, able bodied and reasonably educated, from ages 16 to 70.
What advice would you give a student looking to hire a teacher in your area of expertise?
Avoid controversial figures. Ask for references. Ask for certification documents.
Know what your desired outcome is. Be sure your desired outcome is what the instructors desired outcome is: so that you both share the same understanding of why you're training and what your hard earned money is going to get you.
Ask about safety plans, risk assessments, and emergency medical training of staff.
Ask about student vetting criteria.
Ask about range facility rules and guidelines for use.
What questions should students think through before talking to teachers about their needs?
What is your budget?
How much consistent practice are you willing and able to invest in skill maintenance?
What is your intended application of skill? Target shooting, competitive marksmanship, operational skill, or self defense?
GUNS: I'm often asked to recommend a firearm. 1st thing to say about that is a rifle always trumps a pistol. As far as pistols: Choose a make & model that is in service with the US Military. They literally spend hundreds of millions of dollars to choose extremely reliable combat pistols. Once selected these pistols are produced in the hundreds of thousands . Accessories and parts are high quality, readily available, & reasonably prices. I recommend the Sig Sauer M18 pistol for self defense and concealed carry. This pistol features a thumb safety. I prefer this safety feature. If you want to choose another pistol stick with Sig Sauer or Glock brands, make your life easy. If you have some other brand, sell it or trade it in. I don't keep a variety of models & brands for my own use. Stick with one brand and model and train with it till it becomes an appendage. With guns, cheaper is always a very bad idea, as are sub compact back up guns. Stay away from those subcompact pistols, especially if you're a new shooter. Big heavy guns work. Comfort doesn't factor into my self defense decision making, reliability is job number one. HOLSTERS: For concealed carry: TENICOR. Cheap holsters are cheap for a reason. Reliability is key. For open carry, sport or competition, stick with Safariland brand, can't beat their service, warranty, quality, reliability and the prolific number of them out in the world.