ISSF_Olympic_skeet

ISSF Olympic skeet

ISSF Olympic skeet

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Olympic Skeet is a variant of skeet shooting, and the specific variant used in the Olympic Games. The discipline is sanctioned by the International Shooting Sport Federation. Two throwing machines at different heights launch a series of 25 targets in a specific order, some as singles and some as doubles, with the shooter having a fixed position between them. Both men's and women's competitions consist of five such series. The top six competitors shoot an additional series as a final round, on targets filled with special powder to show hits more clearly to the audience. The competitors use shotguns of 12 bore or smaller. allowed are all actions, including double barrel breech loaders, semi-automatic or others, but not pump action guns.

Quick Facts Men, Number of targets ...

[1]

History

Unlike English Skeet, participants shooting Olympic Skeet must call for the clays with their gun off the shoulder, with the stock positioned level with the hip. There is also a delay switch incorporated within the clay trap, meaning the clays might be released immediately, or up to three seconds after the clay is called by the shooter. Under no circumstances must the gun be moved until the clay is released, or the shooter will face disqualification.

The event was introduced in 1968, and until 1992 both men and women were allowed to participate. But in 1996 the event was limited to men only, which was somewhat controversial because the 1992 Olympic Champion was a woman, Shan Zhang of China. In 2000, a female skeet event was introduced.

25 Shot Sequence

Diagram of a Skeet range layout
Station 1
  • Single from the High House
  • Pair: High House target to be shot first
Station 2
  • Single from the High House
  • Pair: High House target to be shot first
Station 3
  • Single from the High House
  • Pair: High House target to be shot first
Station 4 (Part 1)
  • Single from the High House
  • Single from the Low House
Station 5
  • Single from the Low House
  • Pair: Low House target to be shot first
Station 6
  • Single from the Low House
  • Pair: Low House target to be shot first
Station 7
  • Pair: Low House target to be shot first
Station 4 (Part 2)
  • Pair: High House target to be shot first
  • Pair: Low House target to be shot first
Station 8
  • Single from the High House
  • Single from the Low House

Olympic Games

Mixed / Men's skeet

Women's skeet

World Championships, Men

More information Year, Place ...

World Championships, Men Team

More information Year, Place ...

World Championships, Women

More information Year, Place ...

World Championships, Women Team

More information Year, Place ...

World Championships, total medals

More information Rank, Nation ...

Current world records

More information Current world records in skeet as of March 10, 2020 ...

See also


References

  1. "ISSF General Regulations" (PDF). issf-sports.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 June 2020. Retrieved 15 June 2020.

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This article uses material from the Wikipedia article ISSF_Olympic_skeet, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.