16-year-old
Hancock Wins World
Championship in Men’s Skeet

LONATO,
Italy – Sixteen-year-old
Vincent Hancock (Eatonton, Ga.) continued his domination in the
world of international skeet shooting, Monday, with a gold medal
win at his World Championship debut, in Lonato, Italy. Hancock
won with a 148 total score, just one target ahead of Ennio Falco,
of Italy. Vincent
Uses a Beretta, out-of the box, DT10 Trident.
Sgt.
First Class Todd Graves, of the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit (USAMU)
took third with a 146 total score and an impressive 26 in the
tie-breaker to beat out Abdullah Alrashidi, of Kuwait, for a
spot on the medal stand. The U.S. men’s
skeet team finished second in the team standings with a 355 total
team score, losing in the tiebreaking procedure to Norway. The
U.S. team was made up of Hancock, Graves and Staff Sgt. Mark Weeks,
also of the USAMU.
Skeet
shooter J.P. Gougler (College Station, Texas) just missed the
medal stand for the U.S. in the junior category. Gougler hit
a 117 to tie for third, but couldn’t hold on for the bronze,
as he hit a three in tiebreaker and lost to Germany’s Frank
Dittmer, who hit a four. Gougler led the U.S. junior team to a fourth
place finish in the team standings, with Mark Muzyka (Dover, Mass.)
and Kent Vail (Colorado Springs, Colo.) rounding out the team members.
Italy, France and Finland made up the first, second and third place
team medalists, respectively, in this event.
In
women’s skeet, which finished up on Sunday, 20-year-old
Haley Dunn (Eddyville, Iowa) just missed the final round, finishing
with a score of 69. Dunn was able to get the U.S. team up to the
medal stand for the bronze medal in the women’s skeet team
event, though, with two-time Olympian Connie Smotek (Lyons, Texas)
and Brandie Neal (Spencer, Ind.) shooting for that U.S. team.
Sgt.
First Class Theresa DeWitt (Smiths Station, Ala.) did not have
the same luck, however. Although, she only missed the finals
by one shot, shooting a 67 in women’s trap. The U.S. women’s
trap team, comprised of Emma Simpson (Hartsfield, Ga.) and Amanda
Dorman (Colorado Springs, Colo.), just couldn’t find the medal
stand, as they finished sixth overall with a 194 team score.
The
U.S. did make the medal stand in junior women’s trap,
with Susan Sledge (El Cajon, Calif.) winning the bronze at her first
World Championships, and finishing with a 62. Mimi Wilfong (Malakoff,
Texas) was right at the cut-off for a medal, hitting a 61 and finishing
in fourth. There were no team awards for this event, though, due
to the lack of numbers competing.
For more information or full results from the ISSF World Championships
in Lonato, Italy, please log on to www.issf-shooting.org.
For more information on the U.S. World Championship Team, please
log on to www.usashooting.org,
or email Sara Greenlee at sara.greenlee@usashooting.org.
USA Shooting is recognized
by the U.S. Olympic Committee (USOC) and the International
Shooting Sport Federation (ISSF) as the national governing
body for the Olympic and international shooting sports in the
United States. International shooting includes fifteen events
that are currently part of the Olympic shooting sports program,
in three different disciplines—rifle, pistol and shotgun.
USA Shooting trains and selects the USA Shooting Team, which represents
the United States throughout the year in numerous
major international competitions worldwide including the Olympic
Games, World Championships, Pan American Games, Championships of
the Americas and at ISSF World
Cups.
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