Mike,
I got curious, and worried I might be speaking incorrectly, and wanted to ask someone else that would know. So, I emailed a longtime Trad Ganger and longbow world champion the following about the term 'snap shooting' back in the day. He's about the same age as the guy I spoke of earlier.
Here's what I emailed him....
'The guy that taught me to shoot long ago when I was 8 is about your age.......he relayed to me that HH was a snap shooter.....and that 'back in the day' snap shooter meant a person that shot quick. He also said that snap shooting did not have a negative term like today, and that negative term came about by those that suffered from target panic........I've also heard other 'old duffers' refer to snap shooters, and they weren't making a negative statement either.
Do you agree?
What's your take?
Thanks,
Terry'
Here's his reply.......
'I agree, snap shooting back then meant shoot quickly as soon as you touched anchor and a lot of people shot that way. I once heard Fred Bear refer to his shooting style as snap shooting. He said, "I'm a shap shooter, I release as soon as I hit my anchor" That's why Fred couldn't shoot a compound, the let off messed up his fluid style.
Fred Asbell is a snap shooter but it's very controled and he hits his anchor before he releases.
I think where the snap shooting style got a bad rap was when people with target panic who released before they hit anchor were put on the same list. That kind of shooting doesn't compare to those who snap shoot in a controlled manner.
If it wasn't for all of those years shooting target archery where the accepted form was to anchor and hold, I'd probably be a "snap shooter" too :~)
The guy that taught you knew what he was talking about.'