Shoot To Win – Tips, Tactics, and Techniques to Help You Shoot Like a Pro By Chris Cheng

by
posted on June 17, 2015
** When you buy products through the links on our site, we may earn a commission that supports NRA's mission to protect, preserve and defend the Second Amendment. **
cheng.jpg
null
null
Chris Cheng won the season 4 title of “Top Shot,” in the History Channel’s Top Shot television series. To win the title, which includes a $100,000 cash prize and a professional marksman contract with Bass Pro Shops, contestants must beat military veterans, law enforcement officers and pro shooters. Each season puts the competitors through a series of shooting challenges involving modern and antique rifles and pistols, as well as “alternative” weapons systems such as atlatls, slingshots, blowguns and even rocks. The show is a lot of fun to watch, and anyone who wins has certainly proven his or her mettle as a competitive shooter.

Now here’s the weird part: until his victory on the series, Cheng was a tech support guy and trainer for Google. If you have a mental construct that “computer guys don’t become champion shooters,” well Cheng destroys that stereotype to smithereens.

The subtitle of Shoot To Win is “Tips, Tactics and Techniques to Help You Shoot Like a Pro,” but the best clue to what this book is all about can be found on the inside front flap: “A beginner’s guide to shooting from the Top Shot season 4 champion.”

As a beginner’s guide, this book succeeds very well. It is divided into five parts: Shoot to win in life and beyond, pistols, rifles, shotguns, and putting it all together. There are 26 chapters, ranging from “Setting yourself up for success,” “The four rules of firearms safety,” “Why learn to shoot,” to “Pistol marksmanship fundamentals,” and “Rifle ammunition and sights.”

Shoot To Win is profusely illustrated with color photographs and it’s easy to read. The focus is clearly on the beginner, and a lot of good information is presented. Unlike many beginner’s books, which are often “a mile wide and an inch deep,” Shoot To Win presents enough depth of information that a beginner could get started with a pistol, rifle, or shotgun and have a good grasp of the fundamentals.

But even seasoned shooters will find nuggets of useful information scattered throughout the book. For example, the chapter on “Diagnosing pistol accuracy problems and malfunctions” treats these issues in a very straightforward, analytical and useful way. If your target shows your shots group low and to the left, the problem is that you are jerking the trigger, and the solution is to concentrate on slowly squeezing the trigger and letting the shot surprise you. I find Cheng’s “symptom, problem, solution” approach particularly helpful. Throughout Shoot To Win, readers will also find personal anecdotes from Cheng that highlight his personal enthusiasm for shooting sports.

In the end, I would recommend Shoot To Win for beginners. I think they will enjoy and learn from it, and seasoned shooters will find some useful information as well.

Latest

Treasury
Treasury

Five Classic Competitive Shooting Books to Sharpen Your Skills

Five essential books packed with tips, techniques and wisdom for competition shooters who want to level up.

New: Beretta AX800 Suprema

Beretta’s AX800 Suprema for waterfowl hunting features advanced gas cycling and tough Steelium Pro barrels built for the harshest conditions.

Understanding Ogive Jive

Explains bullet ogive shapes—tangent, secant and hybrid—how geometry affects aerodynamics, seating depth sensitivity, twist rates and real-world accuracy for precision shooters.

Remembering The 2014 NRA Open Air Gun Nationals

From the vault: Our coverage of the 2014 Open Air Gun Nationals, which allowed air gun competitors to participate at one of 15 locations around the country.

New: Cabot Guns Rebellion MAX

Cabot Guns’ new Rebellion MAX is a 28-ounce double-stack 1911 with a $6,295 starting price.

2025 Marty Brown Memorial Invitational

This two-day rifle match at Camp Atterbury honored Marty Brown by blending marksmanship and fundraising for ovarian cancer awareness.

Interests



Get the best of Shooting Sports USA delivered to your inbox.