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Last year my friend Kyle and I scouted around for a third person and went to a 3-man paintball tournament in Mackinaw, Illinois. We had never played together as a team. Kyle wasn’t familiar with his new gun because he had just bought it a week before. It was Kyle and Brandon’s first tournament. All these things counted against us. We were the first team to arrive. We bought our paint and paid our entry fee and walked the field. The basic plan for the beginning of the game was that Kyle and I would move up opposite sidelines towards the other team as fast as we could, while Brandon would try to shoot people out from the break point. After that, we figured if we eliminated one person from the other team either me or Kyle would make a move for the center bunker, which is in the middle of the field. From there we could get the flag and score some major points. We lined Kyle up on the left side of the field. He would be the one to move toward the flag, depending on where the other team was concentrating their shots. I would move up the right side and crawl up the snake, which is a short bunker that zig-zags. The tactical advantage of taking opposite sides is to cross up your shooting with your partner. I’m on the right side and I’ll be far enough up the field to be almost parallel with the other team’s player that’s on the left side of the field, so I’ll shoot left while Kyle shoots the guy straight ahead of me, or at least keeps me covered long enough to shoot left.
Approximate Word count = 1032 Approximate Pages = 4.1 (250 words per page double spaced)
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