Photo of the Week

At Camp Perry Shawn Carpenter smiles at a 200-15X at 50 yards, his last card shot in his first 1600. Photo by Steve Rocketto.

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NJ: State Air Rifle Championship, Nov 27-28

Ridgewood Rifle Club in New Jersey will be hosting the 2010 Air Rifle State Championship on November 27-28. You can download the match program here: 2010-nj-air-state-champ-program (PDF, 8KB)

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2010 NRA National Rifle Championships Video

Steve Dulco and the multimedia crew at NRA Publications put together a nice video from highpower at Camp Perry  this past year. You can check it out below. (If you’re viewing this page from your iPhone, you can see the video on YouTube here.)

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Shooter Spotlight: Jacob Costa

The purpose of the “Shooter Spotlight” is to help shooters get to know their fellow competitors a little bit better. We cover a wide range of shooters from “Marksman to Master.” This is the 54th interview in the series.

Jacob Costa

Where do you call home?
Hamden, Connecticut

How long have you been shooting?
This fall will mark my seventh year shooting.

How did you get involved in shooting competitively?
Seven years ago I asked my father to bring me to a shooting range and we ended up at Blue Trail Range in Wallingford, Connecticut. There I met Dave Lyman, signed up for the junior rifle club program and have been competing ever since.

What is a little known fact about yourself that your fellow competitors might not know?
When I’m shooting during practice or a match I like to pretend that I’m Matt Emmons or Rajmond Debevec. It helps put me into the mindset of a professional and gives me that little extra bit of courage to go into a match head on and with confidence. I’m also a big Styx fan.

What do you consider your finest shooting achievement?
I try not to put too much emphasis on one particular victory or high score. I prefer to look at my career collectively as a whole instead of breaking it down into one individual achievement. If I had to, though, I’d say the 2009 Connecticut Outdoor 3-P State Championships. I won the match and set the Intermediate-Junior record for Conventional 3p in Iron-Sights. Making it on to West Point’s rifle team is pretty cool too.

What is your favorite pre-match meal?
Nature’s Valley granola bar

What is your favorite post match drink?
Diet Peach Snapple

Do you have a favorite shooting range?
Blue Trail Range. There’s no place like home.

Do you have any short term and/or long term goals?
I would really like make an impact on my new team, both in competition and within the team itself. A spot in the NCAA Championships wouldn’t be bad either.

What shooting skills are currently focusing your energy on?
Currently I’m focusing on developing my in-match mental composition. Being new to an NCAA team I’m going to be going into a lot more high-pressure matches and I want to be able to devote all of my energies towards shooting my best and not calming myself down because I’m nervous.

Thanks Jacob for sharing a little bit about yourself with the pronematch.com community!

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MA: 3P/Air Freedom Match, Nov 6

Taunton Rifle & Pistol Club will be hosting the 2010 Open Freedom Match (3P and Air) on November 6th. You can download the match program here: 2010-ma-freedom-match-program (PDF, 41KB)

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CT: Great Pumpkin Match, Oct 16-17

The 2010 Great Pumpkin Match is just around the corner on October 16th and 17th in Connecticut. This match is a metric 2400 and the match program can be downloaded here: 2010-ct-great-pumpkin-program (PDF, 94KB)

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NH: Isaac Wyman Prone Match, Oct 30

Cheshire County Fish & Game Club in New Hampshire will be hosting the 2010 Isaac Wyman Prone Match on October 30th. You can download the match program here: 2010-Isaac-Wyman-Prone-Program (PDF, 131KB)

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NJ: Indoor 3P State Championship, Oct 23-24

Ridgewood Rifle Club in New Jersey will be hosting the 2010 NJ 3-position Indoor State Championship on October 23-24. You can download the match program here: 2010-nj-3p-indoor-state-champ-program (PDF, 8KB)

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TCU Rifle Team at the White House

The Star Telegram had a nice article on Texas Christian University’s trip to the White House for a celebration of all NCAA sports champions. You can read the complete article here. You can also see the White House video of the President’s speech on YouTube here.

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Photo of the Week

A Bald Eagle lands down range at the National Matches, Camp Perry Ohio. The image was taken through a spotting scope. Photo by Erik Hoskins

Each Friday we publish a shooting related photograph we find interesting, amusing, compelling, or maybe a combination of all three. Some photos are old, some are new, but all of them tell story.

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NJ: Indoor International State Championship, Oct 9-10

The Ridgewood Rifle Club in New Jersey will host the 2010 Indoor International State Championship on October 9th and 10th. You can download the match program here: 2010-nj-indoor champ-program (PDF, 98KB)

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CT: Prone State Championship Results

results submitted by Chet Ruscio

Rich Duksa, 2010 CT State Prone Champion. Photo by Hap Rocketto

The Connecticut Outdoor Smallbore Prone Championship was held on September 12th at Blue Trail Range in Wallingford, CT. You can download the the complete match results here: 2010-ct-prone-outdoor-champ (PDF, 434KB)

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The National Matches: 1903-2003

The NRA is publishing a new historical book on the National matches.

from the NRA

The National Matches: 1903-2003 The First 100 Years.

Newly available for Winter 2010, prepare for a literary thrill ride through the annals of National Matches history!  The volume is a must have for every competitive shooting enthusiast.

This book is an outstanding example of NRA lore that offers readers a comprehensive history of the first 100 years of the National Matches, from the beginning at New Jersey’s Sea Girt, Creedmoor in New York, to the present day home on the shores of Lake Erie at the Camp Perry Training Site, Ohio. Readers will discover vivid descriptions and outstanding photographs throughout the pages of this conveniently organized volume.

Full of incredible characters, amazing athletic achievements, cutting-edge firearms technology, and, most of all, pure inspiration, The National Matches: 1903-2003 The First 100 Years. is an epic book loaded with National Match facts, notable shooter histories, and more.

For any shooter who has competed at the National Matches, or if you just have an interest in another fascinating look at NRA history, this book is an excellent addition to your home library.  The National Matches: 1903-2003 The First 100 Years. will soon be available for purchase from the NRA Program Materials Center.  Please ask for item # CC19740.

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Shooter Spotlight: Cara Madonna

The purpose of the “Shooter Spotlight” is to help shooters get to know their fellow competitors a little bit better. We cover a wide range of shooters from “Marksman to Master.” This is the 53rd interview in the series.

Cara Madonna

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Where do you call home?
Johnston, RI

How long have you been shooting?
This year is my fourth year.

How did you get involved in shooting competitively?
My dad is apart of the Smithfield Sportsmans Club and they have a Junior Rifle team there that meets Friday nights. Once the club finished their new indoor range, I began to shoot there competitively for my first time.

What is a little known fact about yourself that your fellow competitors might not know?
Even though I don’t come off as the competitive type, I push myself to be the best there is while still having fun and enjoying what I do.

What do you consider your finest shooting achievement.
Receiving the expert ranking. I was the first Junior Rifle shooter to achieve that award and I’m one of the few girls that shoot there competitvely so that adds to the acheivement.

What is your favorite pre-match meal?
My dad’s pasta.

What is your favorite post match drink?
Brisk lemon iced tea.

Do you have a favorite shooting range?
I’ve only shot at Smithfield Sportsmans Club, but I prefer the indoor range to the outdoor.

Do you have any short term and/or long term goals?
I’d like to go to college for medical sciences and continue shooting competitively through high school.

What shooting skill are currently focussing your energy on?
My breathing techniques.

Thanks Cara for sharing a little bit about yourself with the pronematch.com community!

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NJ: Upcoming Matches in New Jersey

A list of upcoming matches in the New Jersey (and surrounding) area can be downloaded here: 2010-nj-matches-list (PDF, 57KB)

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I Don’t Want to be Strung Along about Ammo

by Hap Rocketto, pmdc Staff

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Some times shooting advice comes from odd places and at odd times. One of the better internet shooting sites is moderated by my old, and I like to think, good friend German Salazar. Shootersjournal.com is advertised as “A scholarly discussion of the art and science of competitive shooting.” And so it is because the contributors are serious and German does not sufferer fools or yahoos lightly. Now that I am through dropping names and sucking up I’ll move on with my story.

One of the most recent threads has concerned 22 caliber match ammunition because there are two things that are not long for this world, dogs that chase cars and prone and bench rest shooters who can’t get hold of a good lot of ammunition. Those that use 22 rimfire are at the mercy of the manufacturers because it is not practical to hand load for the mouse gun. As a result there are more methods and theories on how to test ammunition then there are shooters.

Following the thread stirred a memory from my far distant past. My mother’s father, Grandpa Jack, was a Russian immigrant who had two passions outside of his family-good music and the Brooklyn Dodgers. It was his goal in life to see that he passed that fire onto his grandchildren, particularly his unwilling adolescent grandson. As a result one evening I found myself stuffed into a somber dark itchy wool suit sitting next to Grandpa Jack in Carnegie Hall. I could hardly feel the tie, drawn hangman’s noose tight about my neck, through the vise like starched collar.

The great violinist Itzhak Perlman soon entered. Stricken with polio as a child he wore braces on both legs and walked with the aid of two crutches. He moved painfully, yet majestically across the stage, until he reached his chair, sat, slowly put his crutches on the floor, and undid the clamps on his braces to arrange his legs in a comfortable position. He picked up his violin, placed the bow across the strings, nodded to the conductor and concertmaster, and commenced to play.

As he finished the first few bars, one of the strings on his violin snapped. It sounded like a .308 passing overhead in the pits at Perry. Grandpa Jack stifled a gasp. Perlman was faced with repeating his tortuous trek across the stage to find a new violin or replacement string or postponing the concert. Instead, he waited a moment, closed his eyes and then signaled the conductor to continue.

The orchestra resumed and Perlman played from where he had left off. Grandpa Jack whispered to me in astonishment that it is impossible to play a symphonic work with just three strings. Apparently everyone in the hall knew it, except two people, Perlman and me: Perlman because he is the master of his craft and me because I am the musical equivalent of the village idiot. When Perelman finished, there was a tremendous silence in the room. It was suddenly broken by thunderous applause as the audience rose as one. Well, all but one, until Grandpa Jack broke from his mad clapping and jerked me, his lout of a grandson, unceremoniously to my feet to pay my respects to the great violinist.

After the concert an awed Grandpa Jack took me to his favorite deli for the obligatory post concert seminar in classical music. He ordered for each of us a “bagel with a ‘schmear’ and lox”, hot chocolate with whipped cream for me, and he had a “glass” of tea with lemon. He drank his tea in the old country manner, holding a lump of sugar between his front teeth as he slurped the golden fluid through it.

As an aside The Old Man’s father, another Russian immigrant more formally known as Grandpa Rocketto, had a little drinking trick that fascinated me as much as Grandpa Jack’s tea drinking. Grandpa Rocketto would come home from work, sit down at the kitchen table with what looked like an eight ounce glass of water, and proceed to grind a little pepper onto the top of the liquid before he downed it in four or five draughts. It wasn’t until I was older that The Old Man told me his pop was downing potato vodka. He sprinkled the pepper onto the drink because he believed it drew off the impurities. As he drank all of it anyway, including the pepper, I like to think that he was not concerned about purity; he just liked the taste. Both my grandfathers drank but in their own ways.

To get back to the subject at hand Grandpa Jack told me that if watched closely you could almost see Perlman modulating, changing, and re-composing the piece in his head. At one point, said Grandpa Jack, it sounded like he de-tuned the strings to produce music that they had never made before. Most importantly he reminded me how, when finished playing, Perlman smiled, wiped the sweat from his brow, raised his bow for quiet, and modestly addressed the audience in a reflective tone, “You know, sometimes it is the artist’s task to find out how much music you can still make with what you have left.”

And that brings me back to the subject of 22 caliber rimfire match ammunition. We can moan all we want to about how great it was in the old days to get a wooden case of ammo containing 10,000 rounds mated to your rifle at the factory, not the paltry cardboard 5,000 round cases of today. We can groan that the “pasteboard” Eley of the 70s and 80s was so much better than the plastic boxed stuff of today. We can lament on the fact that Federal has dropped out of the match ammo market. Complain as we will, the situation is not going to change in the foreseeable future. Under these circumstances we have to follow Perelman’s example because you know, sometimes it is the rifleman’s task to find out how many Xs you can still shoot with the ammunition you have left.

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Shooter Spotlight: Tommy Steadman

The purpose of the “Shooter Spotlight” is to help shooters get to know their fellow competitors a little bit better. We cover a wide range of shooters from “Marksman to Master.” This is the 52nd interview in the series.

Tommy Steadman

Where do you call home?
My home is in Roswell, GA, a suburb just north of Atlanta.

How long have you been shooting?
I have been shooting since I was eight years old – 58 years – when my dad gave me a used Winchester Model 60 single shot bolt action rifle.

How did you get involved in shooting competitively?
A good friend, Gil Muñoz, asked me to serve as statistical officer at the NRA Conventional Outdoor Pistol (bullseye) Georgia State Championship in May 2000. What I saw at the match intrigued me and the following month I competed in my first bullseye pistol match. I was an avid bullseye pistol competitor until 2005 when Gil suggested that I try my hand at smallbore prone. My first match was the Dixieland Regional Championships in May 2005 and, ever since I took the first shot laying on my belly, I’ve been hopelessly hooked. Since then, I have focused most of my competitive efforts on NRA smallbore rifle prone but, thanks to the urging and encouragement of my good friends Jim Hardy and Wayne Forshee, I also began competing in NRA High Power Mid-range Prone in late 2008.

What is a little known fact about yourself that your fellow competitors might not know?
I am a native “Conch”, born and raised in Key West, Florida

What do you consider your finest shooting achievement?
Winning the NRA smallbore rifle prone Georgia state championship in 2008 and, with my shooting partner, Charlie Kemp, breaking the 2-man team conventional prone any sights outdoor 50 meter senior national record.

What is your favorite pre-match meal?
Scrambled eggs and whole wheat toast

What is your favorite post match drink?
Root beer or ginger ale

Do you have a favorite shooting range?
Camp Perry’s Rodgriguez Range

Do you have any short term and/or long term goals?
My primary short term goal is to earn an NRA master classification in conventional smallbore prone. I came within one point of earning a master classification in two consecutive years (2007 and 2008) and I am determined to correct that in the next twelve months. For my longer term personal shooting goal, I have my sights set on earning the NRA Distinguished Smallbore Rifleman Award. In addition, I am also involved in promoting and developing shooting sports in my club, River Bend Gun Club, and one of my broader long-term goals for the club is to establish a robust junior shooting program.

What shooting skills are currently focusing your energy on?
Over the past five years I’ve harvested the bulk of “low hanging fruit” and I was fortunate to have the resources needed to acquire top of the line match rifles, ammunition and shooting equipment. My scores have improved markedly but the downside is that performance improvement is now measured in terms of a point or two or a few x’s in 160 shots. Accordingly, my improvement efforts are now focused on developing my wind doping skills, refining my position and reducing inconsistency in shot execution. I am fortunate to belong to a great club with superb smallbore and 600 yard high power ranges and more than a dozen outstanding smallbore and high power prone shooters who are unselfishly willing share their skills and knowledge with me. I work on my wind doping skills at River Bend Gun Club but, for my position development and shot execution training, I rely primarily on my Anschutz 8002 air rifle in my 10-meter basement range.

Thanks Tommy for sharing a little bit about yourself with the pronematch.com community!

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A Short History of the Dewar International Postal Match

This article is only available for download in a printable PDF format by clicking here.

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September 2010 Issue of Shooting Sports USA

The latest issue of Shooting Sports USA is available here.

Want it on PDF format? You can download it here.

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GA: Champion of Champions Match, Oct 4-10

The USAMU will host the 2010 Champion of Champions Match October 4-10 at Fort Benning, GA. Shane Barnhart says “We will have nearly $25,000 in prizes.  Everything from guns, ammo, shooting supplies to clothing and camel backs.  Please come down if you can make it.  It’s a great match with great competition and great prizes!” You can download the match program here: 2010-ga-champion-of-champions-program (PDF, 266KB)

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He Ain’t Heavy

by Hap Rocketto, pmdc staff

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Everyone thinks that is easy being Hap Rocketto. The casual observer notices a fully retired fairly well preserved 60 year old, a remittance man depositing two pension checks a month with a third, Social Security, just a few years away, the father of two accomplished daughters who are away at college and out of the house, a wife still working, and a paid off mortgage. His gun safe bulges with tack driving rifles, his reloading bench is neat and well stocked, and his trophy case’s doors are sprung from the strain of trying to contain the myriad awards he has earned in over five decades of a virtuous shooting life. He is a nationally know author of shooting history and humor and often sought out as a Dewar coach. He has it made and his life seems perfect. But Gilbert and Sullivan described things more accurately when Little Buttercup and the captain sing, “Things are seldom what they seem, Skim milk masquerades as cream” in the light operetta HMS Pinafore

Author James Clavell also works his way into the busting of this myth. In his epic saga of Japan, Shogun, loosely based on the adventures of the 17th century English navigator William Adams, Clavell hits the nail on the head. Adams was known by the Japanese as Anjin, or pilot. Well, I am a pilot, though aircraft not nautical in nature, and I do show guns from time to time and one of the key lines in Clavell’s tale describes my life, as illustrated by the following story.

My brother Steve has a great heart and is generous with his spirit and treasure. He preaches to his students and fellow shooters his mantra of organization, attention to detail, and preventive maintenance. However, this is all lip service for behind this public facade of well managed performance lurks a soul disordered, absent minded, and all thumbs. He is the model of the absent minded professor.

After a summer’s shooting campaign it would seem all equipment issues would have been resolved and ammunition selection would be complete, so a relatively low key match such as the Rhode Island State Prone Championship would be a snap. That would be true if one did not have to factor in Steve’s fitting in a few high power matches, some pin shooting, and a 200 yard smallbore prone match in the interim. Having participated in the aforementioned shooting he had managed to move sights and scope around to different rifles to meet the needs of the various competitions. Imagine, if you will, a kind of shooter’s shell game with rifles and sights.

Arriving at the Newport Rifle Club, site of the championship, Steve carefully began assembling his gear for the metallic sight stage. Turning to me he asked,” Do I use this sight with a riser block, off of a rail, or right on the receiver?”

Trying to get my own act in order I shrugged my shoulders and replied, “How would I know? Why don’t you just check your notes?”

Rummaging through his shooting box he mused half aloud to himself, “Ah! I know I wrote it down on a piece of old target or something but I can’t find it. I must have stuck it in my shooting diary. But I left that at home. Oh, well, I’ll just slap the sights on as I’m pretty sure this is how I set it up.”

I was on the opposite relay and, when he popped off of the line after his first misplaced sighter shot on his first target of metallic sights, I grabbed my rifle and simply handed it to him without comment, after all, he ain’t heavy, he is my brother. We alternated using my rifle, just as Gil Boa and Gerry Ouelette had done at the 1956 Melbourne Olympics.

As we packed for the ride home Steve rounded on himself for his carelessness and like Lars Porsena of Closium, “By the Nine Gods he swore” that the foolishness of today would happen never more. By the Nine Gods he swore it, and in a thoughtful way, promised to organize his shooting array. Stop he would at the club on the way home, said he, to double check his scope and insure that it was zeroed in on the rifle.

The next day I was again on the opposite relay and, when he popped off of the line, after his first misplaced sighter on his first target of any sights, I grabbed my rifle and handed it to him it to him without comment, after all, he ain’t heavy he is my brother.

When we were exchanging the rifle a relay or two later I asked him what had happened. Did he drop the scope or something since he checked it out last night? “

“Check out the scope! Oh, that what I meant to do on the way home. It slipped my mind. You see I had been planning dinner and stopped by the market to pick up a nice thick pork chop to stuff and sort of got distracted” he sheepishly replied.

“How was the pork chop?” I asked dryly.

“Great, nice and moist!” he proudly shot back, “I made two extra so that we can have dinner together when you come over the day after tomorrow to help me zero in my scope.”

As I implied, it is not easy being Hap Rocketto. Welcome to my world where Clavell’s key line, “A man’s fate is a man’s fate and life is but an illusion” just seems to fit like a glove.

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