ISSF 50 meter rifle prone

(Redirected from 50 metre rifle prone)

50 meter rifle prone (formerly known as one of four free rifle disciplines) is an International Shooting Sport Federation event consisting of 60 shots from the prone position with a .22 Long Rifle (5.6 mm) caliber rifle.

ISSF 50 meter rifle prone
Men
Number of shots60
Olympic Games1908–2016[1]
World ChampionshipsSince 1929
AbbreviationFR60PR
Women
Number of shots60
Olympic Games
World ChampionshipsSince 1966
AbbreviationSTR60PR
The target: total Ø = 154.4 mm. 4 ring Ø = 106.4 mm. 9 ring Ø = 26.4 mm. 10 ring Ø = 10.4 mm, height 0.75 m above the floor

The sport is based on the traditional "English Match" that also consisted of 60 shots in the prone position with a .22 rifle, but had varying distances between 45.7 meters (50.0 yd) and 100 meters (110 yd).

Since 2013 the time limit is 50 minutes for the match, preceded by 15 minutes of sighting and preparation time. If shooting on paper rather than electronic targets, 60 minutes is allowed for match firing.[2]

Before 2017, the men's event was included in the Olympic program but starting with the 2020 Olympics this event has been removed to promote equal gender in Olympic shooting sports. Mixed gender doubles events were introduced to replace this event and two other individual shooting events.[3] Now this event is contested in World Championships only. This includes a final for the top eight competitors. Beginning with the 2013 season, a new finals format was instituted, in which the qualification score is discarded, and the standings among the top eight shooters are determined by their finals scores alone. The course of fire was also changed significantly with the new rules, from the previous 10-shot and then 20-shots program into a 24-shot elimination format, with the lowest ranking shooter eliminated every two shots, starting from the completion of 12th shot.

The women's event has never been included in the Olympic program. It is included in both the ISSF and the CISM World Championships. Since the use of Olympic-style finals was discontinued in 2018, shooters with the same score are separated by a number of tie-breaking criteria, the first being the number of inner tens. Women's rifles may weigh up to 6.5 kilograms (14 lb), as opposed to 8.0 kilograms (17.6 lb) for men, but after the switch from standard rifles to sport rifles this is now the only difference in equipment.

World Championships, Men

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Year Place Gold Silver Bronze
1962   Cairo   Karl Wenk (FRG)   Vladimir Chuian (URS)   James Enoch Hill (USA)
1966   Wiesbaden   David Boyd (USA)   Jerzy Nowicki (POL)   Bill Krilling (USA)
1970   Phoenix   Manfred Fiess (RSA)   Esa Einari Kervinen (FIN)   Klaus Zähringer (FRG)
1974   Thun   Karel Bulan (TCH)   Helge Edvin Anshushaug (NOR)   Wolfram Waibel Sr. (AUT)
1978   Seoul   Alister Allan (GBR)   Lones Wigger (USA)   Lanny Bassham (USA)
1982   Caracas   Victor Daniltchenko (URS)   William Beard (USA)   Viktor Vlasov (URS)
1986   Suhl   Sandor Bereczky (HUN)   Gale Stewart (CAN)   Michael Heine (FRG)
1990   Moscow   Viatcheslav Botchkarev (URS)   Harald Stenvaag (NOR)   Tadeusz Czerwinski (POL)
1994   Milan   Wenjie Li (CHN)   Stevan Pletikosic (IOP)   Michel Bury (FRA)
1998   Barcelona   Thomas Tamas (USA)   Juha Hirvi (FIN)   Sergei Kovalenko (RUS)
2002   Lahti   Matthew Emmons (USA)   Rajmond Debevec (SLO)   Espen Berg-Knutsen (NOR)
2006   Zagreb   Sergei Martynov (BLR)   Jury Sukhorukov (UKR)   Marco de Nicolo (ITA)
2010   Munich   Sergei Martynov (BLR)   Valérian Sauveplane (FRA)   Matthew Emmons (USA)
2014   Granada   Warren Potent (AUS)   Daniel Brodmeier (GER)   Yury Shcherbatsevich (BLR)
2018   Changwon   Steffen Olsen (DEN)   Stian Bogar (NOR)   Thomas Mathis (AUT)
2022   New Administrative Capital   Jan Lochbihler (SUI)   Liu Yukun (CHN)   Zhao Zhonghao (CHN)

World Championships, Men Team

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Year Place Gold Silver Bronze
1962   Cairo   Sweden
Christer Gustafsson
Kurt Johansson
Jan Emil Poignant
Nils Johan Sundberg
  United States
Gary Anderson
James Enoch Hill
Presley Kendall
Verle Franklin Jun. Wright
  West Germany
Rudolf Bortz
Peter Kohnke
Karl Wenk
Klaus Zähringer
1966   Wiesbaden   United States
Donald Adams
David Boyd
Bill Krilling
Lones Wigger
  Poland
Janusz Kalmus
Stanislaw Marucha
Jerzy Nowicki
Andrzej Trajda
  Soviet Union
Vasily Borisov
Alexander Gerasimenok
Yuri Kudryashov
Marat Niyazov
1970   Phoenix   Italy
Giuseppe de Chirico
Franco Donna
Walter Frescura
Luigi Testarmata
  Romania
Marin Ferecatu
Ștefan Kaban
Gheorghe Vasilescu
Stefan Tamas
  Yugoslavia
Dusan Epifanic
Branislav Loncar
Zdravko Milutinovic
Miroslav Sipek
1974   Thun   Finland
Jouko Ilmari Hietalahti
Pauli Aapeli Janhonen
Esa Einari Kervinen
Leif Lajunen
  United States
Victor Auer
Presley Kendall
Margaret Murdock
Lones Wigger
  Czechoslovakia
Karel Bulan
Petr Kovářík
Karel Skyba
Jiri Vogler
1978   Seoul   United States
Lanny Bassham
John Comley
Boyd Goldsby
Lones Wigger
  West Germany
Kurt Hillenbrand
Ulrich Lind
Karlheinz Smieszek
Werner Seibold
  Switzerland
Hans Braem
Pierre-Alain Dufaux
Anton Mueller
Robert Weilenmann
1982   Caracas   Soviet Union
Victor Daniltchenko
Gennadi Lushikov
Alexander Mitrofanov
Viktor Vlasov
  West Germany
Hubert Bichler
Peter Heinz
Ulrich Lind
Werner Seibold
  Austria
Albert Deuring
Lothar Heinrich
Hannes Rainer
Wolfram Waibel Sr.
1986   Suhl   Australia
Donald Brook
Warren Potent
Alan Smith
  East Germany
Bernd Hartstein
Mario Gonsierowski
Hellfried Heilfort
  Sweden
Christian Heller
Stefan Lövbom
Hans Strand
1990   Moscow   Soviet Union
Viatcheslav Botchkarev
Gennadi Lushikov
Sergei Martynov
  Czechoslovakia
Jaromir Bures
Vaclav Becvar
Miroslav Varga
  Yugoslavia
Rajmond Debevec
Goran Maksimović
Nemanja Mirosavljev
1994   Milan   Ukraine
Artur Ayvazyan
Oleg Dementyev
Andriy Sheykin
  France
Jean-Pierre Amat
Michel Bury
Dominique Maquin
  Russia
Viatcheslav Botchkarev
Artem Khadjibekov
Sergei Schedrin
1998   Barcelona   United States
Thomas Tamas
Glenn Dubis
Lance Hopper
  Slovakia
Peter Bubernik
Miroslav Svorada
Jozef Gönci
  Italy
Roberto Vitobello
Marco de Nicolo
Roberto Facheris
2002   Lahti   Norway
Espen Berg-Knutsen
Vebjørn Berg
Harald Stenvaag
  Ukraine
Oleg Mykhaylov
Artur Ayvazyan
Jury Sukhorukov
  Russia
Konstantin Prikhodtchenko
Sergei Kovalenko
Artem Khadjibekov
2006   Zagreb   United States
Michael McPhail
Eric Uptagrafft
Matthew Emmons
  Austria
Mario Knögler
Christian Planer
Alexander Uhl
  Hungary
Péter Sidi
Tibor Gabor Mlinkovics
Szabolcs Herczegh
2010   Munich   United States
Michael McPhail
Eric Uptagrafft
Matthew Emmons
  South Korea
Han Jinseop
Kim Jonghyun
Kim Hakman
  Russia
Artem Khadjibekov
Konstantin Prikhodtchenko
Dmitry Ponomarev
2014   Granada  
Zhao Shengbo
Lan Xing
Liu Gang
  Belarus
Sergei Martynov
Yuri Shcherbatsevich
Vitali Bubnovich
  Serbia
Stevan Pletikosić
Milenko Sebić
Nemanja Mirosavljev
2018   Changwon  
Daniel Brodmeier
Christoph Kaulich
Maximilian Dallinger
  United States
Michael McPhail
Matthew Emmons
Lucas Kozeniesky
 
Zhao Zhonghao
Sun Jian
Liu Gang

World Championships, Women

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Year Place Gold Silver Bronze
1966   Wiesbaden   Eulalia Zakrzewska (POL)   Margaret Thompson (USA)   Ferencne Kun (HUN)
1970   Phoenix   Desanka Perović (YUG)   Ann de Vos (RSA)   Margareta Gustafsson (SWE)
1974   Thun   Margaret Murdock (USA)   Christina Gustafsson (SWE)   Nonka Shatarova (BUL)
1978   Seoul   Sue Ann Sandusky (USA)   Dominique Esnault (FRA)   Karen Monez (USA)
1982   Caracas   Sirpa Ylönen (FIN)   Yvonne Hill (AUS)   Svetlana Komaristova (URS)
1986   Suhl   Eva Forian (HUN)   Nonka Matova (BUL)   Roxana Lamasanu (ROM)
1990   Moscow   Iryna Shylava (URS)   Valentina Cherkasova (URS)   Lessia Leskiv (URS)
1994   Milan   Petra Horneber (GER)   Beth Herzman (USA)   Nieves Fernandez (ESP)
1998   Barcelona   Marina Bobkova (RUS)   Xian Wang (CHN)   Elizabeth Bourland (USA)
2002   Lahti   Olga Dovgun (KAZ)   Xian Wang (CHN)   Natallia Kalnysh (UKR)
2006   Zagreb   Olga Dovgun (KAZ)   Hanne Skarpodde (NOR)   Varvara Kovalenko (KAZ)
2010   Munich   Tejaswini Sawant (IND)   Joanna Nowakowska (POL)   Olga Dovgun (KAZ)
2014   Granada   Beate Gauss (GER)   Chen Dongqi (CHN)   Esmari Van Reenen (RSA)
2018   Changwon   Seonaid McIntosh (GBR)   Isabella Straub (GER)   Daniela Demjen Peskova (SVK)
2022   New Administrative Capital   Jolyn Beer (GER)   Sarina Hitz (SUI)   Mary Carolynn Tucker (USA)

World Championships, Women Team

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Year Place Gold Silver Bronze
1966   Wiesbaden   Poland
Barbara Kopyt
Bozena Wzietek
Eulalia Zakrzewska
  United States
Marianne Jensen
Patricia Kinsella
Margaret Thompson
  Hungary
Oszkarne Kellner
Lajosne Kisgyorgy
Ferencne Kun
1970   Phoenix   Yugoslavia
Magdalena Herold
Mirjana Masic
Desanka Perovic
  West Germany
Ingrid Kappes
Gerlinde Popp
Anneliese Rhomberg
  Soviet Union
Tamara Cherkasova
Lucia Fagereva
Tatiana Ratnikova
1974   Thun   United States
Schuyler Helbing
Margaret Murdock
Diana Zimmermann
  Yugoslavia
Mirjana Masic
Desanka Pesut
Valeria Sabatka
  Sweden
Margareta Gustafsson
Christina Gustafsson
Brita Raning
1978   Seoul   United States
Karen Monez
Wanda Oliver
Sue Ann Sandusky
  France
Yvette Courault
Dominique Esnault
Elisabeth Lesou
  Australia
Tricia van Nus
Sylvia Muehlberg
Tracey Smith
1982   Caracas   Australia
Yvonne Gowland
Yvonne Hill
Sylvia Muehlberg
  Soviet Union
Svetlana Komaristova
Lessia Leskiv
Tatiana Sytcheva
  France
Yvette Courault
Dominique Esnault
Isabelle Heberle
1986   Suhl   Yugoslavia
Vesna Domazet
Mirjana Jovovic
Biserka Vrbek
  Bulgaria
Petja Doudekova
Vesela Letcheva
Nonka Matova
  Sweden
Anette Andersson
Margareta Gustafsson
Christina Gustafsson
1990   Moscow   Soviet Union
Valentina Cherkasova
Lessia Leskiv
Iryna Shylava
  Bulgaria
Vesela Letcheva
Nonka Matova
Milena Spasova
  United States
Tammie Deangles
Launi Meili
Kristen Peterson
1994   Milan   Russia
Valentina Cherkasova
Irina Gerasimenok
Anna Maloukhina
  Norway
Lindy Hansen
Grethe Martinsen
Hanne Vataker
  Ukraine
Lessia Leskiv
Tatiana Nesterova
Olga Cheremska
1998   Barcelona   Russia
Marina Bobkova
Irina Gerasimenok
Tatiana Goldobina
 
Xian Wang
Yinghui Zhao
Hong Shan
  Ukraine
Lessia Leskiv
Olga Larina
Olena Davydova
2002   Lahti   Finland
Viivi Villa
Jenni Ranta
Helena Juppala
  Denmark
Pia Jakobsen
Anni Bissoe
Charlotte Jakobsen
 
Britta Grossecappenberg
Petra Horneber
Sonja Pfeilschifter
2006   Zagreb  
Sonja Pfeilschifter
Dorothee Bauer
Claudia Keck
  Kazakhstan
Galina Korchma
Olga Dovgun
Varvara Kovalenko
  Ukraine
Natallia Kalnysh
Olena Davydova
Lessia Leskiv
2010   Munich   Switzerland
Aurelie Grangier
Annik Marguet
Irene Beyeler
 
Eva Friedel
Sonja Pfeilschifter
Nicole Stenzenberger
  South Korea
Kim Yooyeon
Jeong Mira
Kwon Nara
2014   Granada  
Beate Gauss
Barbara Engleder
Isabella Straub
 
Chen Dongqi
Chang Jing
Yi Siling
  Ukraine
Lessia Leskiv
Natallia Kalnysh
Olga Golubchenko
2018   Changwon  
Jaqueline Orth
Isabella Straub
Amelie Kleinmanns
  Denmark
Stine Nielsen
Rikki Maeng Ibsen
Stephanie Laura Scurrah Grundsoee
  Great Britain
Seonaid McIntosh
Jennifer McIntosh
Zoe Anne Bruce

World Championships, Mixed Team

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Year Place Gold Silver Bronze
2022   New Administrative Capital   United States
Sagen Maddalena
Ivan Roe
  Ukraine
Daria Tykhova
Serhiy Kulish
  Germany
Jolyn Beer
Maximilian Dallinger

World Championships, total medals

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RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  United States117624
2  Soviet Union63514
3  Yugoslavia3227
4  Finland3205
5  Russia3036
6  Poland2215
7  Australia2114
  Kazakhstan2114
9  Hungary2035
10  Germany2013
11  Norway1416
12  West Germany1337
13  China1304
14  Ukraine1247
15  Sweden1146
16  Czechoslovakia1113
17  South Africa1102
18  Italy1023
19  Belarus1001
  Great Britain1001
21  France0325
22  Bulgaria0314
23  Austria0123
24  Romania0112
25  Canada0101
  Denmark0101
  East Germany0101
  Slovakia0101
  Slovenia0101
30  Spain0011
  Switzerland0011
Totals (31 entries)464646138

Current world records

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Pre 2013 World Records

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Pre 2013 world records in 50 meter rifle prone
Men
Final 705.5   Sergei Martynov (BLR) (600+105.5) 3 August 2012 London (UK) edit
Teams 1793   Austria (Knögler, Planer, Waibel) July 19, 2003 Plzeň (CZE)
Junior Men Individual 600   Stevan Pletikosić (YUG) August 29, 1991 Munich (GER) edit
Teams 1770   United Kingdom (Thomson, Parr, Phillips) July, 10 2006 Zagreb (CRO) Zagreb
Teams 1778   Germany (Boschenrieder, Hahn, Junghaenel) July 9, 2008 Plzeň (CZE)
Women Individual 597   Marina Bobkova (RUS)
  Olga Dovgun (KAZ)
  Olga Dovgun (KAZ)
  Olga Dovgun (KAZ)
July 19, 1998
July 4, 2002
October 4, 2002
July 29, 2006
Barcelona (ESP)
Lahti (FIN)
Busan (KOR)
Zagreb (CRO)
Teams 1786   Soviet Union (Cherkasova, Leskiv, Shylava) August 15, 1990 Moscow (URS)
Junior Women Individual 598   Katja Böttinger (GER) August 3, 2000 Plzeň (CZE)
Teams 1771   Sweden (Bengtsson, Karlsson, Säker) July 14, 2009 Osijek (CRO)

Current World Records

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Current world records in 50 meter rifle prone
Men Individual 633.0   Sergey Kamenskiy (RUS) July 21, 2015 Maribor (SLO)
Teams 1878.3   Poland (Majka, Bartnik, Romańczyk) September 16, 2019 Bologna (ITA)
Junior Men Individual 629.3   Christoph Kaulich (GER) September 16, 2014 Granada (ESP)
Teams 1865.6   Austria (Thum, Wadlegger, Diem) June 24, 2017 Suhl (GER)
Women (ISSF) Individual 628.5   Beate Gauss (GER) September 14, 2014 Granada (ESP)
Teams 1871.6   Russia (Zykova, Ivanova, Khorosheva) September 16, 2019 Bologna (ITA)
Women (CISM) Individual 625.5   Bae So-hee (KOR) 14 November 2016 Doha (QAT) edit
Teams 1861.0   China (Wan, Yin, Gao)
  Germany (Müller, Beer, Rachl)
14 November 2016
14 November 2016
Doha (QAT)
Doha (QAT)
edit
Junior Women Individual 627.9   Jeanette Hegg Duestad (NOR) July 14, 2019 Suhl (GER)
Teams 1865.5   Norway (Duestad, Stette, Engevik) July 14, 2019 Suhl (GER)

References

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  1. ^ "Historical Results". ISSF. Retrieved 12 December 2020.
  2. ^ Official Statues Rules and Regulations Edition 2013 first print table 7.9
  3. ^ "ISSF Meetings: Tokyo 2020 recommendation, Agenda 2020 implementations and Championships designation". ISSF Sports. February 23, 2017.