Wanna be fast? Practice slow. Wanna be accurate? Practice good form. Wanna win a fight? Throw the damn clock away, and work on your mind set.
I don't condemn IDPA or any of the other "sports". But you can't pack competition into a real fight, when it comes to realism. Only an armed and determined opponent can really tell you if you can keep a clear head, and "WILL" stand and fight. And WILL YOU STAND AND FIGHT is the crux of the matter. I sat in some ready rooms and listened to some tuff men talk fight and actually "long for one", that froze on the street when reality got them by the butt.
This accident to me is no more than a carpet burn or broke neck in the NFL, a broke nose in the NHL, or a torn ligament in the NBA. You keep petting a mean dog and he will eventually bite you. This guy got bit. Lucky the dog didn't bite anyone else. JMO
I have watched some of these "shootists" on TV, that teach fighting but, I haven't seen ANY of their "graveyards". Technique is a valuable thing, but reality is not a game, and this man's Technique though allowed in the competition game "sucked".
The front serrations on my 1911 are for the most part IGNORED, other than producing DRAG, in a draw, and unnecessary holster wear. However SHOOTALL, to loop one's fore finger under the front of the slide is to me EQUALLY FOOLISH. One can use the "REAR SERATTIONS" for what they were intended for. Checking the chamber, and or emptying it. With the serrations and the off hand, one can break the slide open slightly for a peek, "without risk" of loss of the fore finger or a powder burn. It is the common sense of experience, but does not have much camera appeal. No offense intended sir, but this was never condoned or allowed on my range, as I have seen the fruits of the folly.
I also once viewed the end results of one of these EXPERTS, demonstrating that if you jam the palm of your hand against the muzzle of an auto pistol causing the slide to slightly break open, the hammer would not hit the firing pin, which would give this genius time to disarm his opponent. He demonstrated with a LOADED PISTOL (not on my range). I asked the now "left handed" EXPERT if a sweeping motion would not accomplish the same thing with more POSITIVE results. He embarrassingly concurred that it would, and quite possibly, with much less pain.