YOU need to do a push/plunk&spin test to determine your maximum OAL for that bullet. Then knock .010 - .015 off that max for your working OAL. If you don't know how to do that, there's a stickie at the top of this AMMO subforum titled "How to determine MAX OAL for you CZ pistol". If you load longer than your pistol's max, which will vary from bullet to bullet, you will have failures to go into battery (at best). We don't want to talk about what happens at worst.
YOU determine your OAL. Load data is not a recipe. It's a report. YOU determine what OAL you will load your ammo at for a particular pistol.
Many here have found, as Painter said, 1.000 to be the minimum before you are guaranteed to find feeding problems. I don't think I've loaded shorter than 1.06 myself with 9mm, though that's only because I've never had the need to. I have loaded quite a few different bullets, however, between 1.060 and 1.070, including the only plated flatpoint I've loaded, which was at 1.065.
There are other minimum OALs, however, that you need to consider. With some longer/heavier bullets, you need to calculate how deeply the bullet is seated into the case, and make an effort not to seat deeper than .300. This most often comes into play with 147gr bullets. Another minimum OAL, more common with lighter bullets, is making sure the shoulder (the point where the bullet transitions from the straight barrel/shank/bearing surface part of the bullet to the angled or arching ogive) -- making sure the shoulder isn't seated into/below the case mouth. You want the bullet striking the ramp/barrel/chamber as the cartridge is driven into battery, not the sharp edge of the case mouth, and to make sure of that, the shoulder has to be at least a hair above the mouth.
What brand of bullet are you using? You have given us weight, profile, and construction, but not brand.