Category Archives: Rio 2016 Olympic Trials

Daniel Lowe Only One to Move into Olympic Spot on Findal Day of Air Shooting Olympic Trials

The men’s rifle competition didn’t see much drama at the top as Lucas Kozeniesky cruised to the first of two qualifying spots with the top qualifying score (627.4) and a second place finish in the final. His final margin of 18.6 over second place showed there was no real drama for him on Sunday. But drama was plentiful in the race for second. Ivan Roe had been in second going into the day but had a disaster shooting a 617.5 and not making the final. He held on to second place before the final but it was only by a tenth of a point over Daniel Lowe so there was no way he could stay in front and his Rio hopes were over. Lowe wasn’t guaranteed the spot though. Bryant Wallizer came from nowhere to pull a point behind Lowe after a big time qualifying round and Dempster Christenson had rallied from a first day missed final to sit just 1.3 behind Lowe. Wallizer ended up being the first man out in the final narrowing the race for the final Olympic spot to Lowe and Christenson. Those two became part of the final three but Christenson was knocked out first and finished in sixth, clinching the spot for Lowe. In the end Lowe finished with a 3.3 point lead over Christenson.

Jason Turner put himself in position to challenge Will Brown for the Olympic berth in the men’s air pistol during Sunday’s final but was unable to take advantage as a last place finish cost him any hopes of going to Rio and saw Brown rise to the occasion with fourth place finish that was plenty good enough. Turner had been one of four shooters (though the only one in occasion) to post a qualifying high 575 to start the day, one better than Brown’s score, but he needed to finish ahead of Brown in the final to overcome his one point deficit and when he was the first one knocked out Brown had locked up a spot in Rio. Brown finished with a 1746 total, five ahead of Turner, while Alexander Chichkov won the final to lock up third, 11 points behind Brown.

Sarah Scherer had no easy path on Sunday as she won the women’s air rifle competition with a second place finish in the final. Sagen Maddalena closed to within 3.2 points with Elizabeth Gratz just 1.1 behind her after both topped Scherer in qualifying where Gratz had a qualifying high 417.5. Scherer would be fine as long as she finished in the top half and did more than that as she outlasted both Maddalena (who finished fourth) and Gratz (who finished sixth) en route to a second place finish. Scherer’s final margin was 5.2 over Maddalena with Gratz another 3.1 back.

Lydia Paterson grabbed her spot with ease in the women’s air pistol as she posted the best qualifying score of the day (a 381) and won the final for the third straight day. Her final margin of victory was a whopping 24 points over Alexis Lagan with Courtney Anthony and Sandra Uptagrafft both finishing 28 points back in third. Paterson may or may not be a medal contender in Rio but she’s clearly the best the US has to send.

In the end all five shooters who held the Olympic spots after day one ending up securing them, with only Lowe losing his hold on the spot on Saturday evening.

With the US Olympic team finalized the attention turns to two separate events that will attract US shooters later in June. The Rifle and Pistol National Championships will take place in Ft. Benning, Georgia June 22nd-29th while from June 20th-29th in Baku, Azerbaijan there will be an ISSF World Cup event featuring rifle, pistol, and shotgun events.

Previous US Air Shooting Olympic Trials Coverage:
Preview
Friday Update
Saturday Update

Crazy Events Shakeup Field in Men’s Rifle at Air Shooting Olympic Trials

The most dramatic event on Saturday at the Air Shooting Olympic Trials might be one where an Olympic spot is all but locked in. Lucas Kozeniesky has seemingly locked up one of the two spots available in the men’s rifle competition as he had the top qualifying score of 626.5 and finished second in the final to open up a 9.6 point lead over second place and a seemingly insurmountable 18 point lead over third place. I say seemingly because the events of Saturday’s competition show you almost anything is possible. Daniel Lowe had held the second qualifying spot after day one but was way off the pace in qualifying and missed out on the final by 2.2 points. Ivan Roe took advantage with a solid qualifying score and a fourth place finish (nothing spectacular) and went from 0.3 behind Lowe to a big 8.9 point lead. Matthew Rawlings moved into third but after finishing last in the final he is well behind Roe and would need a big final day to get into second. Dempster Christenson is in the same boat but won the final to at least keep himself afloat just a tenth of a point behind Rawlings. One this is certain, Rawlings, Christenson, and Lowe will all be hoping Roe has the same misfortune in his qualifying round that Lowe did on Saturday to open the door for others to move into contention.

Things also continue to remain tight in the men’s air pistol where Jason Turner posted a qualifying best 281 to bring himself level with Will Brown going into the final on day two. Brown won the final to stay in first overall with Turner finishing third and ending the day two points behind Brown, right where he started it. Miscues by James Hall (an eighth place finish in the final), Alexander Chichkov (a 571 in qualifying), and Nickolaus Mowrer (a 575 in qualifying and a sixth place finish in the final) mean third place Chichkov and Hall are now 10 points behind second. This one seems like it’ll come down to the final on Sunday to determine if Turner or Brown is going to Rio.

Lydia Paterson pulled away in the women’s air pistol as she was within a point of the top score in qualifying (a 381 by Alexis Lagan) and then won the final for the second straight day to extend her lead from 10 points to 20 over Lagan. Brenda Silva is now third but 23 points back. Paterson seems to have this one in the bag barring an absolute collapse on the final day of the trials.

Sagen Maddalena posted a phenomenal 418 in qualifying, 1.9 points better than anyone else in the field, but finished fourth in the final to miss an opportunity to put some real pressure on Sarah Scherer going into the final day of the women’s air rifle competition. Scherer was fairly average in qualifying, leaving the door open to competitors, but slammed it shut with a win in the final to grow her lead to four points going into the final day. With Rhiann Travis and Amy Sowash faltering (Travis with a 411.5 and Sowash with a 412.5 in qualifying as both missed the final) Elizabeth Gratz took advantage with a second place finish in the final to move into third, six points back.

Previous US Air Shooting Olympic Trials Coverage:
Preview
Friday Update

Leaders Established on First Day of Air Shooting Olympic Trials

Leaders emerged in all four competitions after the first day of the Air Shooting Olympic Trials but none stood out more than Lydia Paterson in women’s air pistol. Paterson dominated the field shooting a 387, nine better than anyone else, and then went on to win the final to end the day up 10 points on Courtney AnthonyAlexis Lagan is 15 points back in third.

The closest competition comes in the men’s air pistol where Will Brown had the top score in qualifying with a 574 but came in third in the final and only leads James Hall and Jason Turner by two points. Alexander Chichkov is well within striking range three points back as is Nickolaus Mowrer who is four back.

In the women’s air rifle Sarah Scherer was the only one of the three Americans with top 15 world cup finishes this year to really shine on day one. Scherer had the top qualifying score of 417.3 and finished second in the final to hold a 2.9 point lead. Sarah Beard was within 1.5 of Scherer in qualifying but finished last in the final and is over seven points back. Emily Holsopple was further back than Beard in qualifying and her second to last place finish in the final has her over eight points back. Scherer does have some competition however from Rhiann Travis, who is in second after winning the final, Amy Sowash, who was third in the final after a solid qualifying round, and Elizabeth Gratz, who sits 4.9 points back in fourth.

In the men’s rifle competition, where two spots are up for grabs, Lucas Kozeniesky posted the top qualifying score of 628.5 and finished third in the final to finish in front after the first day by 3.4 points. Daniel Lowe is in second after posting the second best qualifying score and finishing fourth in the final. Ivan Roe won the final to make up for a weaker qualifying score and is in third just 0.3 behind the second qualifying spot. Matthew Rawlings makes it one more in contention as he sits 4.9 behind Lowe in fourth place. Dempster Christenson had a disappointing day with a qualifying score that missed out on the final by 0.8 and he is now 12.5 points out of qualifying position, a real uphill challenge.

Previous US Air Shooting Olympic Trials Coverage:
Preview

Final Five Olympic Spots to be Determined This Weekend at Air Shooting Olympic Trials

There are only five spots still available on the US Olympic Shooting team for Rio and after this weekend we’ll know who will fill those spots. Competitions in women’s air rifle and pistol along with men’s pistol are awarding an Olympic spot to the top finisher this weekend while the top two in men’s rifle will get Olympic berths. Unlike competitions for other Olympic berths all of the shooters enter this event with clean slates.

In the women’s air rifle Emily Holsopple was 15th in Bangkok, Sarah Beard was eighth in Rio, and Sarah Scherer was eighth in Bangkok providing the US three with some strong international finishes who will be competing this weekend. In men’s air rifle Lucas Kozeniesky was 21st in Bangkok, Dempster Christenson was 26th in Rio, and Ivan Roe was 16th in Bangkok.

The women’s air pistol competitors have not had a ton of success in world cup events this year but Lydia Paterson did just finish 31st in Munich last month. On the men’s side Will Brown will be the heavy favorite with his silver from Bangkok and fifth place finish in Rio. Nickolaus Mowrer has also been competitive with a 16th place finish in Bangkok.

In all four competitions there will be three days of qualifying + eight-person finals with the overall combined scores determining the winners.

Previous US Shooting Olympic Trials Coverage:
Shotgun Recap

No Changes to Olympic Qualifying Spots on Final Day of US Olympic Archery Trials

There was no change to the Olympic qualifying spots on Monday at the Olympic Archery Trials as the four athletes who were in position to make the team did. Brady Ellison went 6-1 and had the top average score as he finished with a total of 170 for the competition. Zachary Garrett didn’t have as strong a day as he went 4-3 but his average was the second best and he finished second with 148.5. Jake Kaminski also went 4-3 which was more than enough to lock down the third spot as he finished with 110.5 points. Dan McLaughlin did make a nice run with a 6-1 day to finish in fourth place with 99.5 points.

On the women’s side Mackenzie Brown went 6-1 and had the top score as she finished easily in the #1 spot and qualified for the Olympics with a 157 total points. Far behind her in second was Hye Youn Park with 127.5 points and Khatuna Lorig was third with 125.75 points. They will team with Brown at the next Archery World Cup event to try to qualify the US for the team competition in the Olympics which would give the US three spots and thus Park and Lorig would be in the Olympics. They will need to finish among the top three countries who have yet to qualify a team for the Olympics. Lanola Pritchard finished fourth with 103.5 points.

That Archery World Cup event begins June 12th in Antalya, Turkey.

Previous Olympic Archery Trials Coverage:
Preview
Sunday Update

Favorites Consolidate Lead at US Olympic Archery Trials

The competition on Sunday in the Olympic Archery Trials helped some of the contenders lock down their Olympic spot and for others it put it in peril. The first part of the competition, a qualifying round, didn’t change the order of the standings at all but did allow those currently in Olympic positions to solidify their leads. Brady Ellison and Zachary Garrett went 1-2 on the men’s side as Garrett’s lead over third grew from 12 points to 22. Colin Klimitchek was the third best in qualifying and closed to within a half point of third place where Jake Kaminski sits. On the women’s side Mackenzie Brown added six points to her lead over Hye Youn Park. Park was then 15 points clear of fourth place Ariel GibilaroLanola Pritchard still sat in third but Khatuna Lorig moved two points closer to third.

In the second portion elimination round Ellison and Garrett again went 1-2, this time with Garrett winning, and opened up even larger leads on third place. The gap grew to 28 points over Kaminski who finished ahead of Klimitchek and grew his lead over third to 2.5 points. The other four competitors were over 15 points back. Lorig pulled off a big win in the women’s competition and with the other two main contenders for third finishing outside the top four. This gave her a 12-point gain over them and she vaulted from fifth to third and a 4.25 point lead over fourth. With Park and Brown finishing second and third they continued to pull away.

Finally in the team simulation Ellison and Garrett again went 1-2 so the focus was all on the race for third. Kaminski finished ahead of Klimitchek and holds a 4.5 point lead for the final spot going into the final day of the trials. Brown won the women’s simulation and has a big 13.5 point lead for the only guaranteed Olympic spot on the women’s side. Park seems locked into one of the two spots that will try to qualify after finishing third and the real contest is for the third spot. Lorig has the inside track after finishing second in the simulation and now leads Pritchard by 10.25 points.

Monday will wrap the competition up with head-to-head matches three points to the winner of each match means everyone has the shot at earning 21 points there and an additional 16 depending on the ranking of their average scores.

Previous Olympic Archery Trials Coverage:
Preview

Final US Archery Olympic Trials Competition Starts Sunday in Newberry, Florida

Eight men and eight women are still competing for spots on the US Olympic Archery team and their fate will be decided over the next two days in Newberry, Florida. The men are competing for three spots on the team while only one woman is guaranteed a spot. The second and third place finishers will join the top finisher in attempting to qualify at the next Archery World Cup event.

Brady Ellison looks to be in great shape as he leads going in with 86 points and Zachary Garrett sits second with 74.5. Third place currently belongs to Jake Kaminski with 62.5 points and then things get more crowded with four competitors sitting with between 56 and 51.5 points. There are a lot of points at stake in the next two days so while a good day may not be enough to jump too far in the standings a poor day from a leader could certainly be trouble.

On the women’s side Mackenzie Brown leads with 77 points and Hye Youn Park is second with 69.5. Lanola Pritchard sits third with 64.5 points. The rest of the archers are more spread out than their male counterparts with Ariel Gibilaro is fourth with 60.5 and Khatuna Lorig fifth with 54.75 points.

Sunday will feature a 72-arrow ranking round with 16 points available to the winner and up to six bonus points available for the actual scores. There will also be an elimination round competition with 16 points again available to the winner. Finally there will be a team simulation where again, you guessed it, 16 points are available to the winner.

Previous Olympic Archery Trials Coverage:
Second Round Recap

Corey Cogdell Grabs Olympic Spot in Trap at Shotgun Olympic Trials

2012 Olympian Corey Cogdell will be heading back to the Olympics in Rio after winning the trap spot at the Olympic Trials on Wednesday. Cogdell already had an eight point lead on Ashley Carroll so she really only needed a solid day to lock up the Olympic spot. She had more than a solid day scoring a 49 while Carroll shot a 44 and posting a final score of 474 with Carroll in second at 459.

In the non-Olympic qualifying men’s trap competition Ryne Barfield opened the day with a 46, two better than Christopher Haire, who shot a 44, to take the lead going into the final. Casey Wallace also scored a 46 and trailed Barfield by a point. Myles Walker shot a 47 and within four points had an outside shot at moving to the top. In the final Barfield posted the top score with a 14 and when Wallace missed out on the gold medal final after losing a tiebreaker after shooting a 13 Barfield had clinched the title. Barfield ended with a 470 and Wallace finished in second with a 467. Casey Weitfedt won the final and jumped into third with a 466.

The US team isn’t quite complete for Rio with the final spots to be determined in the air shooting trials in Ft. Benning, Georgia from June 1st-8th. For the shotgun athletes the next big event is the world cup event in San Marino starting on June 1st.

Previous US Shotgun Olympic Trials Coverage:
Event II Preview
Tuesday Update
Wednesday Update
Thursday Update
Friday Update
Sunday Update
Monday Update
Tuesday Update

Corey Cogdell Pulling Away in Trap at Shotgun Olympic Trials

2012 Olympian Corey Cogdell seized firm control of the women’s trap competition scoring a 72 while her competitors faltered to take an eight point lead over Ashley Carroll going into the final day of competition. Carroll shot a 67 which was not good but actually two points better than Janessa Beaman who had been within two points of Cogdell. Even with the final being a variable if Cogdell has a solid day she will be going back to the Olympics.

In the non-Olympic qualifying men’s trap competition Dustin McGowen shot a 66 fell off the pace set by Christopher Haire, who shot a 70. McGowen is now four points back of Haire. Haire didn’t end up with the solo lead though as Ryne Barfield scored a 73 and is now tied with Haire. Casey Wallace scored a 72 and only trails Haire and Barfield by a point. Myles Walker shot a 70 and remains five points back in fifth.

Previous US Shotgun Olympic Trials Coverage:
Event II Preview
Tuesday Update
Wednesday Update
Thursday Update
Friday Update
Sunday Update
Monday Update

Corey Cogdell Takes Trap Lead at Shotgun Olympic Trials

Reaching the halfway point of the second trap Shotgun Olympic Trials 2012 Olympian Corey Cogdell took the lead from Janessa Beaman. Cogdell shot a 45 to Beaman’s 44 to pull within a point going into Monday’s final. The final went poorly for Beaman as she got only one point to Cogdell’s four as Cogdell took a two point lead. Ashley Carroll shot a 46 and then won the final and pulled within three points of Cogdell. While Cogdell may have the edge for the Olympic spot there’s no doubt Beaman and Carroll both have a shot at this.

In the non-Olympic qualifying men’s trap competition Dustin McGowen shot a 47 and Christopher Haire shot a 46. Both struggled in the final with McGowen grabbing just one point and Haire two. They finish day two with 350 points and a three point lead over two people who made a move on Monday. Casey Wallace was five points back and Ryne Barfield was six points back but Wallace scored a 49 and Barfield came in second in the final to move to 347.

Previous US Shotgun Olympic Trials Coverage:
Event II Preview
Tuesday Update
Wednesday Update
Thursday Update
Friday Update
Sunday Update