Why breathing matters more than you think
Your chest and diaphragm move a lot more than most shooters realise. Every inhale lifts your ribcage, shifts your centre of gravity slightly upward, and changes the pressure on your shooting jacket and sling. Every exhale does the opposite. If your trigger finger breaks a shot mid-breath, that movement transfers straight into the rifle and lands somewhere on the target you did not plan for.
In 10m air rifle, where a single point can separate first place from tenth, that kind of uncontrolled movement is expensive. The solution is not to stop breathing altogether. That approach creates its own problems: rising blood CO2, muscle tension, and a racing heart rate. Instead, the goal is to synchronise each shot with the natural respiratory pause (NRP), the brief still point that occurs at the end of a normal exhale.
What the natural respiratory pause actually is
After you exhale normally, there is a short window, usually between four and eight seconds, where your body does not automatically start the next inhale. Your diaphragm is relaxed, your chest is at its lowest position, and your heart rate settles slightly. This is the NRP.
During this window, your hold reaches its steadiest state. The rifle sits more quietly in your shoulder, your sight picture drifts less, and your trigger finger can operate with minimal disturbance. The entire ISSF standing position is built around exploiting this pause for every single shot.
The key word there is natural. You are not forcing your breath to stop. You are simply riding the pause that your body creates on its own. The moment you start clenching your throat or consciously fighting the urge to breathe, you have already lost the stillness you were trying to find.
The breathing sequence for each shot
Here is the rhythm most competitive air rifle shooters use, broken down into steps:
- Inhale normally through your nose while raising the rifle into position. This takes about two seconds.
- Exhale slowly through your mouth or nose as you settle into your stance and align the sights. Let the air out in a steady stream, not a rush.
- Let the pause arrive. Do not force it. When the exhale finishes naturally, simply wait. Your body will give you a few seconds of stillness.
- Confirm the sight picture during the pause. If the front sight is drifting outside the scoring ring, do not force the shot. Lower the rifle, breathe, and start again.
- Release the trigger with a smooth, continuous pressure while the hold is steady. If the pause is ending and you have not fired, stop. Let the shot go and start the cycle over.
Step five is where a lot of shooters make an expensive mistake. They feel the pause ending, panic, and snatch the trigger to get the shot off before they have to breathe again. That rushed release almost always lands worse than a deliberate abort and retry.
Common breathing mistakes
Holding your breath too long
Some shooters treat the NRP like a breath-hold contest. They clamp down and try to stretch the pause to ten seconds or more. The problem is that CO2 builds up quickly, your pulse accelerates, and fine motor control deteriorates. If you cannot release the shot within about eight seconds, break off, take a recovery breath, and rebuild.
Shooting during the inhale
This typically happens when a shooter is rushing between shots, perhaps trying to make up time in competition. The chest is expanding, the ribs are lifting, and the rifle is moving. Shots fired on the inhale tend to group high and erratically on the target.
Breathing too shallowly
New shooters sometimes try to minimise chest movement by taking tiny, sips of air. This never works because shallow breathing keeps your diaphragm partially engaged, which means it never fully relaxes. A full, normal breath cycle gives you a cleaner, deeper pause at the bottom.
Tensing your abdomen
As you exhale, some shooters pull their stomach in forcefully. This creates tension through the core and into the shooting hand. Let the exhale be passive. Your abdominal muscles should be relaxed, not flexed.
Dry-fire drills for breathing
You do not need a range or even a rifle to improve your breathing rhythm. These drills work at home:
The ten-pause drill. Sit in a chair with your eyes closed. Inhale for two seconds, exhale for three seconds, then hold the pause for as long as it feels comfortable. Count each pause. Aim for ten consecutive pauses without forcing any of them. If you lose count or feel tension, reset.
The mirror drill. Stand in front of a mirror in your shooting stance, even without a rifle. Watch your shoulders and chest as you go through the full breathing cycle. You should see a smooth rise on the inhale, a smooth fall on the exhale, and then visible stillness during the pause. If your shoulders creep up before you fire, your breathing is off.
The timed abort drill. Dry-fire with your air rifle. As you enter the pause, start an internal count. If you reach "seven" without releasing the shot, deliberately lower the rifle, take two recovery breaths, and rebuild. This trains the discipline of aborting bad shots instead of forcing them.
All three of these drills take under ten minutes and cost nothing. For tracking your progress over time, TargetLog can record your dry-fire sessions and show you whether your groups tighten as your breathing improves.
How TargetLog helps you see the difference
When you photograph a target and let TargetLog analyse it, the scoring results tell a clear story about your breathing consistency. Shooters with solid breath control tend to produce tight groups with a consistent point of impact. Shooters whose breathing is erratic often show a pattern of shots scattered in two clusters, one slightly higher than the other. That bimodal spread is a classic sign of firing on both the inhale and the pause.
Over a few sessions, you can compare your average score on days when you focused on breathing drills versus days when you skipped them. The data does not lie. Most shooters see a measurable improvement within two to three weeks of dedicated breathing practice.
For more on reading your targets and spotting these patterns, check out our post on how to read your target and fix common shot grouping problems.
Breathing and competition psychology
There is another benefit to a consistent breathing routine that has nothing to do with physiology. A familiar rhythm acts as an anchor. When competition nerves spike and your heart is pounding, falling back on a practiced breathing sequence gives your mind something concrete to focus on instead of the score.
Many top-level shooters use a slightly exaggerated breathing pattern in competition, taking an extra second on the exhale to slow their heart rate deliberately. This is not a performance hack; it is just an extension of the same rhythm they use in training. The more automatic the pattern becomes in practice, the more reliable it is under pressure.
If you are preparing for your first competition, pairing breathing work with the mental preparation tips in our guide on surviving your first ISSF competition will give you a solid foundation.
Getting started today
Pick just one drill from this post, ideally the ten-pause drill, and do it for five minutes before your next training session. Add the mirror drill the following week. Within a month, the breathing rhythm will start to feel automatic, and your hold will be noticeably steadier.
The best part about breathing training is that it requires zero equipment upgrades. No new rifle, no better pellets, no expensive jacket. Just a few minutes of focused practice and the willingness to abort a shot when the pause does not cooperate.