TMAC Strike Face
Pat McNamara Trapezoid Steel Target
The Pat McNamara Trapezoid Steel Target is the exclusive steel plate designed by Pat McNamara, a recognized marksman with 22 years of Special Operations experience. Built from his real‑world background, this target supports the same demanding standards he teaches to shooters of every skill level.
The unique trapezoid shape forces the shooter to focus on the shots that count by compressing the effective hit zone into a tapered scoring area. The top measures 6 5/8″ wide, the bottom measures 11 1/2″ wide, and the overall length is 18″, creating a profile that rewards clean fundamentals and punishes sloppy shot placement.
Whether you are running Pat’s own drills or adapting the plate to your training program, this target is purpose‑built for tactical courses, accountability work, and performance under pressure. There is no one that trains like Pat McNamara—and this target is meant for shooters who want to train that way.
Technical Specifications
| Specification | Detail |
|---|---|
| Designer | Pat McNamara, 22‑year U.S. Special Operations veteran and tactical instructor |
| Target Style & Size | Trapezoid steel target, 18″ long; 6 5/8″ wide at the top and 11 1/2″ wide at the bottom |
| Use Case | Tactical training courses, accountability drills, and precision‑focused performance work |
| Training Focus | Forces the shooter to prioritize accurate, high‑value hits over low‑percentage shots |
Built Around Real‑World Experience
Pat designed this target to support the same drills and standards he runs on the range, from fundamentals to advanced movement and problem‑solving. The geometry of the plate encourages you to clean up your mechanics, manage recoil, and deliver repeatable hits in a compressed scoring zone.
A Target That Raises the Bar
The trapezoid profile makes lazy shot placement obvious, turning every string of fire into meaningful feedback instead of noise. It is an excellent fit for shooters who want to hold themselves to higher standards and bring more intent to every repetition—because there is no one that trains like Pat McNamara.