With Precedent Set, Double Trap Shooters Glenn Eller & Josh Richmond Aim for More

USA Shooting
USA Shooting

Colorado Springs, CO -(AmmoLand.com)- With Kim Rhode and Vincent Hancock having set the precedent with two gold medals and four Olympic records, Team USA will send double trap specialists Glenn Eller (USAMU/Katy, Texas) and Josh Richmond (USAMU/Hillsgrove, Pa.) to the line Thursday at the Royal Artillery Barracks shooting range.

Expectations couldn’t be higher, for these Army Marksmanship Unit teammates given the success they’ve showcased in the sport in recent years.

Eller, a four-time Olympian, is the defending gold medalist in the event and as he looks to fight off the competition hungry for his prize tomorrow, he need look no further than the guy he’s beside trained with the past couple years. Competing in his first Olympic Games, Richmond will have a target on his back as well as the world’s No.1 ranked double trap shooter. The Pennsylvania native has dominated the field since 2008, winning a World Championship in 2010 to go along with seven World Cup medals including two in events earlier this year.

The three-time Olympian Eller admits his focus hasn’t been the same since his gold-medal triumph and the results have shown with no World Cup medals compared to the eight he earned during the 2004-08 quad. He does own a World Championships medals from 2011 and a newfound comfort level with his replacement Beretta, compliments of his Olympic gun never turning up during a trip to Chile.

Josh Richmond (right) and Glenn Eller
Josh Richmond (right) and Glenn Eller are set to try and more hardware to Team USA’s great start in the shooting shotgun events.

Format: On a shooter’s command, two targets are released simultaneously within a period of zero to one second from trap machines in the center of the bunker. The two targets travel at different heights and angles and a round consist of 25 doubles.

Rapid Fire pistol begins Thursday as well and presents the best hopes for a pistol medal for Team USA.

Keith Sanderson (Colorado Springs, Colo.) has waited four anxious years for the right to undo a bad finals experience at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing. He missed the medal stand by 2.8 points despite setting an Olympic record in qualifying and entering as the event leader.

1996 Men’s Rapid Fire Pistol Olympic silver medalist Emil Milev (Tampa, Fla.) brings the experience of four Olympic Games, previously shooting for Bulgaria. For this physical education teacher, another Olympic Games wasn’t something he planned on when he moved to the USA in 2003.

“I was thinking after 2007, I will stop (shooting) and this will be it,” said Milev. “But I like shooting and I kept coming to Nationals and kept practicing from time to time and slowly my results improved and it all just happened.”

Format: Qualification consists of two stages of 30 shots each, and each stage consists of two series of five shots fired in eight, six and four seconds, fired at five separate targets, 75cm apart, at a distance of 25m. In the finals, the best six shooters compete in a knockout by firing, in turn, at groups of five electronically simulated falling targets (similar to those used in biathlon events). Shooters fire series of five shots in four seconds, one shot at each of the five standard rapid fire targets. However, the electronic display of the results shows a ‘hit’ (white) or a ‘miss’ (black) for each of five simulated targets.

Women’s 25m Sport Pistol Results:

First-time Olympian Sandra Uptagrafft (Phenix City, Ala.) finished competition at the 2012 Olympic Games by shooting the Sport Pistol event at Royal Artillery Barracks. A 286/300 in the precision pistol followed by a 290/300 in the rapid fire portion gave her a total score of 576, good enough for 28th place.

Republic of Korea teenager Kim Jangmi beat reigning Olympic champion Chen Ying of China with her final round to win gold in the women’s 25m Air Pistol. The 19-year-old showed her liking for the Royal Artillery Barracks by setting an Olympic record in qualifying with a 591.

Then in the final, she rattled off a five-shot final round of 51.8, including a perfect bullseye of 10.9, to leapfrog Beijing winner Chen in the end. Olena Kostevych, of Ukraine, took the bronze medal.

Sandra will now get the chance to relax, enjoy her Olympic experience and cheer on her husband Eric in the Men’s Prone Rifle event on Friday.

Reaction of Skeet Double Penetrates Industry:

There have been a lot of descriptors surrounding the skeet double gold performance laid down by Kim Rhode (El Monte, Calif.) and Vincent Hancock (USAMU/Eatonton, Ga.) who’ve won seven Olympic medals together. But, perhaps the best comes from Paul Erhardt, Editor, of the Outdoor Wire Digital Network:

“Kim Rhode and Vincent Hancock have given Team USA, and the U.S. shooting community, great individual accomplishments and historic achievements. But together, they have given us something far more valuable. They have instilled in us a wellspring of pride in shooting that knows no limits. In Kim Rhode and Vincent Hancock we have two names, two shooters, whose Olympic Gold medal performances will fuel endless discussions with those that know nothing about shooting but who understand the importance of the Olympics. And that gives us a great deal of common ground to share with people who don’t think they like guns very much.”

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