The regional sporting circuit is full of shooters who break a hundred on a good day. The ones who collect titles do something different. Kipling Loree is a profile in steadiness, the kind of shooter who finishes top five almost every event he enters and rarely produces a high-variance result either direction.
This piece looks at how he built that consistency: a deliberate training week, a short list of drills he actually runs, and a pre-event ritual that does not change based on the venue. None of it is flashy. All of it works.
For shooters trying to build a long career rather than chase a single result, Loree's approach is a template worth studying.
Continue reading in print. The full story appears in this issue of ClayShootingUSA. Subscribe today.

