Rather than hijack that thread, I thought I'd start a new one....Sounds like a good time to remember that Cooper's Four Rules apply 100% of the time...
RULE 3: KEEP YOUR FINGER OFF THE TRIGGER TIL YOUR SIGHTS ARE ON THE TARGET
This we call the Golden Rule because its violation is responsible for about 80 percent of the firearms disasters we read about.
The four rules are what I teach without hesitation to new shooters. They are absolutely correct for anyone who is of a defensive mindset or may ever need to be. They are the perfect starting point and I freely acknowledge that the overwhelming majority of shooters have no need to ever grow past that starting point.
However, I never see it acknowledged that they were solely designed around combat shooting and training for combat shooting and codified by a man who viewed handguns as weapons, period, full stop. In fact, there's a nearby thread with 120 posts and not one person who posted there has thought deeply enough into the topic to realize that maybe, just maybe, there are times when firearms are used for something other than combat or training for combat.
Precision pistol shooting is completely different.
You align iron sights on the target differently. You hold the gun differently. And for most of those games, Rule 3 sure as heck DOES NOT apply. If you're going to win anything major on the pistol line at Camp Perry at any time in the future, you sure as heck will put that finger on the trigger LONG before the sights are on the target. Beyond NRA Conventional Pistol, if you shoot any of the ISSF games that can get you to a World Cup or the Olympics then the same thing is true. Fingers, quite properly, go on triggers long before the sights are on target. I don't know a single high-level coach for Conventional Pistol or for (say) Free Pistol who doesn't teach that the occasional early shot that hits the ground halfway to the target or the occasional early shot that goes completely over the target isn't simply a part of the learning process. It's no big deal; it's part of the game and part of the learning process. There are limits, of course; put a round through the firing table at a Conventional Pistol match and you'll quite likely be asked to leave. :-)
I guess this is just a personal pet peeve of mine. Far too many people tend to think their little world is the whole world and never give any consideration to the notion that there are other worlds out there where things are correctly done in a different way.
Thus, these infinite re-statements of Rule 3 as Unchallengeable Holy Writ From On High eventually begin to grate on the nerves of people with a little broader range of experience.
Just my thoughts. Nomex on. Flame away.