I'm waving my white handkerchief on the end of a stick. I meant no harm or disrespect to your leader. I don't need to see the results from last Saturday's match, but I thought there might be some participants that would want to use the results as the highly effective training tool that they are. Finding out where you landed in an activity sooner rather than later allows one to adjust their training so as to improve and further develop certain skills. No one gets significantly better by just being told they're doing good...people need to see their results, relative to others. That is a proven fact in sports, business, military, etc. One only gets better at anything when they know they're training or competing with people that have a greater skill set. This is true with any activity, whether it be a shooting match, trying out for Seal Team 6, trying out for an athletic event or team, taking SAT tests, working to earn that year-end bonus that's given to the top salesperson, even knowing your credit score, and the examples are endless. At Thirteen years old in 1981 I trained with Mickey Fowler, John Shaw, Mike Plaxco, and Mark Duncan. Fast forward 38 years, and I now have the benefit of shooting USPSA, IPSC, and IDPA with and around several current National and World Champions. Seeing where I land in relation to their performance is very humbling, and many times embarrassing, but I use the experience to adjust my training so as to make me a better shooter and competitor. I want to shoot with and around people that are better than me. That does not intimidate or discourage me. Put me in the ocean as a gold fish, and with time I'll breach the surface as a shark. Timely Feedback is a critical training tool, and is just as much a part of a match or training session as any one stage within the match or training session. Whether you see yourself as a competitor, an operator, or both...you're not finished until you shoot the last stage or immobilize the last assailant...and the Match or Encounter isn't over when you get in your vehicle to drive home. It's only completed when the participants have received and reviewed the results. So to "SnowDogs" people do need scores (you just may not want them); and to Wynn and Dan, you nailed it on the head...there's NO meaningful money to be won at any shooting match at any level...the only take away are the scores/results and an occasional pat on the back. Over the last 39 years I've shot approximately 700 matches (local, regional & national) and I've not been able quit my job. Let me be clear...No one was questioning anyone's amount of labor, love or character...just simply and politely inquired about the results...not so much for myself, but on behalf of others that might have a desire to train harder and improve. To anyone that doesn't care about scores/results...you should start. God Bless...and MAGA!