The 2012 World FITASC Championship at Northbrook Sports Club
Transcription
The 2012 World FITASC Championship at Northbrook Sports Club
SHOOTREPORT 2012 10 WORLD FITASC DANA FARRELL REPORTS FROM NORTHBROOK SPORTS CLUB CHAMPIONSHIP S hooters from 53 Nations gathered August 13-19 at Northbrook Sports Club in Hainesville, Illinois, to celebrate the 34th Annual World FITASC Championship. Last held in the United States back in 2006, expectations were understandably high – and Northbrook did not disappoint, as over 900 shooters who shot the Main Event will certainly attest. It takes an unimaginable amount of hard work to pull off a Championship of this magnitude. Northbrook demonstrated that not only are they capable of successfully organizing such a world class event, but are now TEAM USA. CLAYSHOOTINGUSA among the top tier sporting clays facilities in the country. Immediately upon pulling onto the grounds, the time and effort spent to make the visitor experience as pleasant as possible was clearly evident. An army of workers buzzed in every area of the club – from the front gate guards, to the shuttle drivers in the parking lots, to the trappers and referees. Competitors from across the world were busy taking advantage of the practice Parcours that lined the driveway leading from the newly erected iron entrance gate to the clubhouse parking lot. The feeling was that nothing had been left to chance. The grounds looked SHOOTREPORT PICTURE CREDIT: DON BRUNT 11 manicured, the buildings neat and the signage was thorough and well thought out. This event would ultimately prove to live up to its storied legacy as the annual pinnacle of sporting – shooters who made the trip were in for a remarkable and memorable week of shooting. Blessed with great weather, with the exception of a rousing rainstorm Thursday morning that delayed the start of the Main Event by one hour, shooters were spared the hot, humid weather that is so typical of the Midwest this time of year. Temperatures topped out in the mid 70s with low humidity – absolutely beautiful shooting conditions. After Thursday’s gray weather, skies were a pleasant mix of sun and clouds, albeit with constantly changing light conditions as the clouds moved against the sky. Neighboring Campbell Airport, abutting Northbrook, lent a runway for parking and rental cart staging area, with shuttles running non-stop to all areas of the CLAYSHOOTINGUSA SHOOTREPORT 12 CONNECTICUT SHOTGUN SHOWROOM. JIM MOSES Opening Gala grounds. An open, grassy area on the approach to the clubhouse was home for the Beretta, Krieghoff, Caesar Guerini and Connecticut Shotgun mobile showrooms where customers could handle guns and accessories and chat with company representatives. Vendors also shared the cover of the main vendor tent, set up in the clubhouse parking lot, while yet others with mobile shops set up off to one side. Business was brisk, with Frank Robertson of Shooting Glasses Specialists, a Randolph Engineering distributor, reporting a record setting sales week. The scene was like an amusement park VENDORS HAD A BUSY WEEK. CLAYSHOOTINGUSA for shotgunners – with a huge selection of products available to hold, demo and bargain for. Major event sponsors Blaser, Beretta, Promatic and Exchange Porsche had their banners flying along the thoroughfare. 800 registered targets were on the schedule, starting with Monday’s 100 bird Cheddite Cup English Sporting and 50 target Beretta Prelim FITASC events, and running through Sunday with the finish of the FITASC World Championship. Northbrook staff and equipment was supported by six mechanics from Promatic, led by Jim Moses, and 200 traps. The official Opening Ceremony took place at 6PM Wednesday, presided over by FITASC President Jean-Francois Palinkas and FITASC Vice President for America, Joe Cantey. A grand covered stage was set up with bleachers and folding chairs for the audience. Everyone stood as American Legion Color Guards presented Colors before a procession of the national teams made their way, one by one, from the clubhouse, up the center walkway, to take their allotted spot. The teams formed a semi-circle, with Team USA taking their place CELTIC PIPERS. front and center amid thunderous applause. As a nod to Chicago’s immigrant roots, a Celtic piper band marched onto the yard and played. Dignitaries were introduced to the audience, including Palinkas, Shoot Chairman Brett Seibert, Northbrook President Dr. John Estep and Hainesville Mayor Linda Soto. Three bi-planes, one each of red, white and blue, made fly-by passes leaving trails of smoke against the evening sky. Upon completion of the ceremony, B&P sponsored a cocktail party at which shooters picked up their shooting schedule from the distribution points on the adjacent skeet fields. The excitement was palpable – the event was now officially underway! FLY-BY. SHOOTREPORT 14 Northbrook Facts Northbrook Sports Club sits on more than 600 acres of Northern Illinois property, just 20 miles south of the Wisconsin State line and one hour north of downtown Chicago. With a footprint just shy of one square mile, the grounds have been enhanced with a series of large berms, augmenting naturally occurring subtle changes in elevation. Three virgin areas were used for the World event, with several others opened up that hadn’t seen use in many years. Terrain is a mix of park-like areas of large, strategically thinned hardwoods, gently rolling prairie hills, cornfields, marshland and river bottoms – all integrated with well-built shooting platforms and trap towers. Home to registered skeet tournaments and NSCA events, Northbrook has held their fair share of major events, including the UK/US Masters, Pro-Am Top 40 and numerous State sporting clays and skeet championships. They have ten combination skeet/trap fields and a two level enclosed, heated and lighted 5-Stand for winter shooting. The North American FITASC Championship is scheduled there next year, with Regional and US Open events likely in the not too distant future. Side Events Galore The Cheddite Cup English Sporting (175 entries), set by Steve Knoll of Wisconsin, ran Monday and Tuesday and was won by English shooter Graham Stirzaker, followed by runner-up Jari Rajala of Finland, both on 96. Americans Jon Kruger (95) and Zach Kienbaum (94) were close behind, taking M1 and M2. CLAYSHOOTINGUSA CHEDDITE CUP ENGLISH SPORTING CH RU M1 AA1 A1 B1 C1 D1 E1 LADY SUB JR JR VET SUP VET GRAHAM STIRZAKER JARI RAJALA JON KRUGER LARRY JONES TIM HUBNER MANUEL TAMAYO LARRY SHAKINOVSKY RODOLFO DE ANDREIS ANGEL RAMOS HALEY DUNN AUSTIN HEFFNER ABEL SPIRE GRAHAM STIRZAKER BOB PERIGO KOLAR CUP 96 96 95 88 87 82 76 81 76 89 82 94 96 85 The Beretta Prelim FITASC (370 entries) was a 50 bird race shot new style, with targets set by David Fiedler, that ran MondayWednesday. It ended in a six-way tie for first place – all on 49. It was decisively won by Joe Mezatasta of Ohio, by way of a dramatic shootoff Saturday evening, with Gebben Miles as runner-up followed by Brian DuQuesnay (M1) and England’s Mark Marshall (M2). BERETTA FITASC PRELIM CH RU M1 AA1 A1 B1 C1 D1 E1 LADY JR VET SUP VET JOE MEZATASTA GEBBEN MILES BRIAN DuQUESNAY JEREMY KENT STUART HART MATTEO CICOGNANI NICOLAS VANIER BERNHARD SCHOENACHER ANGEL RAMOS DIANE SORANTINO MICHAEL EVERSON BRIAN DuQUESNAY BOB MAPLES 49 49 49 48 46 45 44 45 41 47 49 49 47 The Kolar Cup English Sporting (315 entries) ran Tuesday and Wednesday, featuring targets set by Tim Miles. All American Will Fennell handily walked away with the win with his 96, followed by Gebben Miles on 93. Paul Lovick of England placed M1 with his 92, followed by Bill McGuire (M2) also on 92. CH RU M1 AA1 A1 B1 C1 D1 E1 LADY SUB JR JR VET SUP VET SR SUP VET WILL FENNELL GEBBEN MILES PAUL LOVICK ROGER JARNALD TIM HUBNER KENNETH BENNETT ALEXEI SOKOLOV VICTOR SILVA ANGEL RAMOS RENAE BIRGAN VICTOR SILVA JR. MICHAEL EVERSON ROBERT CATALFANO RICHARD GEMINSKI GEORGE EDDY 96 93 92 88 90 83 79 77 72 85 78 91 91 82 59 Two 5-Stand competitions were offered, both sponsored by Browning – the 50 bird Prelim 5-Stand (208 entries) ran Tuesday through Thursday and the 100 Bird Main 5-Stand (176 entries) was on Friday and Saturday. Both events featured targets set by Ed Prechel. Californian turned Texan, Zach Kienbaum, duked it out in a PRELIM 5-STAND CH RU M1 AA1 A1 B1 C1 D1 E1 LADY SUB JR JR VET SUP VET ZACHARY KIENBAUM DAMIEN BIRGAN JON KRUGER ROSS CLANCY MICHELE CICOGNANI JEFF BONE LOGAN KILLAM MOISES BARBOSA ANNA WEBBER STEFANIE STEINKRAUS MATTHEW YARESH DREW BENSON GRAHAM STIRZAKER STEVEN FISCHER 48 48 46 46 43 41 36 37 17 45 44 45 46 41 5-STAND SHOOT-OFF COMPETITORS. Saturday night shoot-off with the 2009 World FITASC Champion, Damien Birgan (Australia) for the Prelim 5-Stand title, both on 48. Kienbaum emerged the winner. Jon Kruger and Graham Stirzaker placed M1 and M2, both on 46. Gebben Miles took the Browning Main 5-Stand with a 98, but seven shooters turned in 96s and had to shot-off for the runnerup spot. Out of the six who showed up, Pat Lieske was most impressive as he smoked three difficult pairs to secure runner-up. Jon Kruger finished M1 with Derrick Mein M2. Knowing that international shooters don’t usually get the opportunity to shoot side events during a major championship, Shoot Chairman, Brett Seibert, was gratified to see that, “a ton of the international shooters shot the added events – everyone said they wouldn’t.” BROWNING 5-STAND MAIN CH RU M1 AA1 A1 B1 C1 D1 LADY SUB JR JR VET SUP VET GEBBEN MILES PAT LIESKE JON KRUGER NIGEL HART STUART HART LARRY BROWN LOGAN KILLAM JOSH LANOYE DESIRAE EDMUNDS MATTHEW YARESH HUNTER MILLIGAN BEN JENSEN BOB DAVIS 98 96 96 92 85 83 81 65 88 87 96 90 90 SHOOTREPORT Red,White and Blue Sporting The most significant of the side events was the 200 bird Exchange English Sporting (363 entries) that ran Thursday, Friday and Saturday over courses of 66, 68 and 66 birds. Red, White and Blue courses each had a different target setter. Steve Knoll (Red), Tim Miles (White) and Steve Schultz (Blue) ensured each course had its own ‘personality’. Red was a 66 bird fairly shooter-friendly course with an interesting mix of presentations that wound through a wooded area, with targets that were fully visible and out in the open. No short windows. The White course was unanimously considered the toughest of the three – and maybe most infamously featured a true pair on station 10 that generated quite a buzz among the shooters. Both targets were thrown quartering away, left to right – a long, ripping fast chandelle of medium height, along with a high, standard target that was easily 55 yards away, and curling, by the time the chandelle was taken. This course was a ‘reality check’ for many, with no ‘warm and fuzzies’. The Blue course was set along the edge of a large, open area – a former cornfield, maybe a half-mile square, that several years ago was BILL McGUIRE CLAYSHOOTINGUSA The most significant of the side events was the 200 bird Exchange English Sporting dramatically enhanced by adding tons and tons of fill dirt to create a series of hills. Edged on two sides by stands of hardwoods, it has grown back to its prairie-like state and is shot towards the center from all four sides. The targets here were of moderate difficulty – and very enjoyable. Bill McGuire ran away with the Exchange English Sporting HOA title with his score of 193, the next highest scores being two 181s shot by Zach Kienbaum (RU) and Jon Kruger (M1). McGuire said later he thought the targets were nicely mixed and felt that the White course was definitely the hardest of the three. When the point was raised that he was a dozen targets ahead of the field, in his easy, Southern style, he humbly replied, “I got lucky on the White course.” It was an understated, gracious response from one of the consummate gentlemen of our sport. EXCHANGE SPORTING MAIN CH RU 3RD M1 AA1 A1 B1 C1 D1 E1 LADY SUB JR JR VET SUP VET SR SUP VET BILL MCGUIRE ZACHARY KIENBAUM JON KRUGER DAVID KELLEY DUSTIN SOULEK JOHN HOWLAND ANSSI VIRTANEN LOGAN KILLAM BERNHARD SCHOENACHER JOYCE HOUTTEMAN JANET McDOUGALL WILL HINTON DREW LIESKE CURTIS LESSEL BOB DAVIS RONALD SHAFER 193 181 181 180 165 157 146 156 144 90 168 176 174 174 163 163 World Championship All eyes were glued to the television early Thursday morning, as weather forecasters predicted storms sweeping through the area. With skies darkening, shooters gathered near the clubhouse in preparation of the first flights of the FITASC World Championship. Eight squads were scheduled to start at 8:30AM, one on the first peg of each Parcour. The schedule allowed twelve minutes between pegs, with new shooters rotating in as the pegs cleared. There were a total of 160 squads, most with six shooters each – if delayed, this had the potential to get ugly in a hurry. The rain rolled in a little before 8AM, along with strong winds. This wasn’t your garden variety, gentle, steady rain, but a violent downpour that had everyone running for cover and wondering what the scheduling ramifications would be. As shooters huddled under the vendor tent, it was announced over the loudspeaker that all flights would be delayed, effectively moving all events, including the English Sporting, back an hour. The rain eased after 45 minutes and was only misting slightly by the time the first flights hit the pegs around 9:30AM. Skies were gray, but would slowly lighten throughout the day, eventually becoming partly sunny by day’s end. BERETTA PARCOUR. Thursday Parcours were shot new style over four pegs – three pegs of six targets, with one of seven for a total of twenty five birds each Parcour. There were eight Parcours with each shooter taking on two per day over four days. This allowed shooters to PICTURE CREDIT: DON BRUNT 16 SHOOTREPORT 17 PICTURE CREDIT: DON BRUNT PROMATIC PEG 1. PART OF THE WINCHESTER PARCOUR. PICTURE CREDIT: DON BRUNT PICTURE CREDIT: DON BRUNT REMINGTON PEG 1. CAESAR GUERINI PEG 4. CAESAR GUERINI TOWER. PRELIM EVENTS WERE WELL SUPPORTED. CLAYSHOOTINGUSA SHOOTREPORT 18 compete in the other side events each day. There was a fair share of scheduling conflicts, but Lois and Casey, who were responsible for squadding the added events, were very accommodating and worked hard to make adjustments. Targets for this 200 bird FITASC World Championship were set by David Fiedler, Tim Miles, Steve Schultz and Brett Seibert. The varied terrain provided the perfect backdrop for eight entertaining Parcours – each with its own challenges. The breakdown of target types included 151 standard targets, 29 Midis, 13 Battues and 7 Rabbits. As regards degree of target difficulty, FITASC rates targets as ‘A’ (the easiest of targets that can be hit by the average shooter 80% of the time), ‘B’ (targets that can be hit 60-80% of the time) and ‘C’ targets (the hardest – hit 40-60% of the time). For this Championship, there were 24s. Average scores (across all competitors) on each Parcour are shown in the table below. SHOOT AVERAGE SCORES 74 x A, 86 x B and 40 x C targets. While target types and their A, B, C target difficulty levels are intended to ensure consistent levels of difficulty across each Parcour, additional factors such as the terrain, target speed and the weather all impact on the average scores coming off each Parcour. Of all the Parcours, Winchester proved to be the most shooter-friendly with 31 straights posted – Caesar Guerini gave up only two straights while the highest scores on Beretta were five WINCHESTER 20.2 BLASER 20.2 PROMATIC 20.1 CONNECTICUT 19.9 KRIEGHOFF 18.8 REMINGTON 17.5 CAESAR GUERINI 16.8 BERETTA 16.4 The upside to the varying levels of difficulty on each Parcour was that there was no runaway winner and the Champion would not be decided until the last day of competition – now that’s exciting! Edgar Bosch Tufet of Spain and Hungarian Andras Szerdahelyi both posted perfect scores of 50 on Day 1, with Zach Kienbaum, Gebben Miles and Jari Rajala of Finland all turning in 49s. NO OTHER DEALER OFFERS THE PURCHASE OPTIONS AVAILABLE FROM ALAMO SPORTING ARMS WWW.ALAMOSPORTINGARMS.COM TEL: (210) 829-0297 SHOOTREPORT Giuseppe Calo of Italy and Ben Husthwaite of Britain, both of whom would figure in a big way later, stood on 48, as did Will Fennell and about a dozen others. It was too early in the game for speculation, particularly when word spread fast that Caesar Guerini (Parcour 4) and Beretta (Parcour 5), both set by Steve Schultz, were shaping up to be the two hardest layouts. Friday Day 2 brought sunny skies and comfortable temperatures in the mid-70s. First flights were launched at 8:30AM and the shoot was now in full swing. Gebben Miles shot Promatic (Parcour 2) and Winchester (Parcour 3) on Friday, again only dropping one bird. This put him in the lead with 98, but Jari Rajala, Giuseppe Calo and Edgar Bosch were only one bird back. 19 Mark Marshall, Wendell Cherry and Derrick Mein were all on 96 while Will Fennell and Ben Husthwaite were back one more at 95. Shooters tended to congregate under the beer tent after shooting, which served a good variety of beer and wines. Along with the adjacent food pavilion, the beer garden served as a central gathering place all week – and many a lament was recited before the week came to a close. With two days and 100 targets to go, things were beginning to get interesting. Saturday Gebben Miles shot Parcours 4 (Guerini) and 5 (Beretta), the hardest layouts, posting a 22 and 23 for a score of 143 – two birds back of leader Jari Rajala, who had yet to shoot Parcours 4 and 5. Giuseppe Calo was on 144, having shot a good score (22) on Guerini FACTORY AUTHORIZED BLASER SALES AND SERVICE CENTER. – but he had the Beretta to shoot, along with Remington on Sunday. Ben Husthwaite and Mark Marshall were tied with Miles on 143. Marshall was on the same schedule as Rajala – he had the two hardest Parcours yet to go. Husthwaite had shot an outstanding 23 on Guerini, but still had to tackle Beretta on Sunday. Saturday evening featured side event shoot-offs, held on the covered stage that had served as the center of the opening ceremony. There was celebration in the air as shooters crowded the huge stage, along with target setters, scorers and photographers. The side events shoot-offs saw minimal SHOOTREPORT international participation other than Graham Stirzaker and Damien Birgan. A cocktail party sponsored by the Illinois Sporting Clays Association followed the shoot-offs and wrapped up the third day of the Main Event. Anticipation was high going into the last day. Sunday Jari Rajala turned in a 19 on Caesar Guerini and a 21 on Beretta, giving him a 185 for the event and effectively knocking him out of the running for HOA. It was a great score, but the toughest two Parcours of the event proved to be his undoing. Ben Husthwaite (England) and Giuseppe Calo (Italy) both shot Beretta and Remington on the final day, with Husthwaite turning in 24, 23 and Calo going 22, 24. This meant that the one bird advantage over the Brit that Calo brought into the final day had evaporated, leaving them both tied on 190. A shoot-off ultimately settled the score, with Husthwaite taking the Silver medal, knocking Calo into third place for the Bronze. Gebben Miles, who began the day tied with Husthwaite on 143, dropped only one bird on each of his last Parcours (Remington and Connecticut Shotgun) giving the 2009 NSCA National Sporting Clays Champion a one bird edge over his two closest opponents to take the 2012 World FITASC Championship. With a stellar 191, the 27 year old Arizonian became only the second American in the 34 year history of the event to win the World FITASC Gold medal (Minnesota’s Gregg Wolf won the title back in 2004 in Signes, France). Miles, on cloud nine Sunday evening, took time for a post event interview. “It feels phenomenal – this is one of the biggest achievements of my shooting career.” He said the Caesar Guerini and Beretta Parcours were, “Just crazy hard. I shot decent on them (22, 23) but I really didn’t think that was going to be enough. I shot great the first two days – the Blazer, Promatic and Winchester layouts were a little more straightforward than Steve’s (Schultz) layouts. He clearly turned up the heat on two of his three layouts and I was fortunate to just shoot well enough on the others.” Miles’ ascent to World Champion comes as no surprise to those watching the steady climb of this 27 year old’s shooting career. It was evident last year that we were witnessing something special after his amazing performance in the FITASC Super Final of the Triple Classic was acclaimed by George Digweed to be “maybe the best piece of shooting I’ve ever seen.” Truly one of the ‘good guys’ of our game, Miles was quick to credit the help of others and to thank God for his good fortune. The PICTURE CREDIT: GREEN GIRL PHOTOS L TO R: BEN HUSTHWAITE (RU), GEBBEN MILES (WORLD FITASC CHAMPION) AND GIUSEPPE CALO (ITALY) WHO WAS THIRD. SHOOTREPORT timing couldn’t have been better from a business standpoint, for the recent release of his shooting instruction DVD “Quiet Dust” will likely see a healthy uptick in sales after this amazing World Championship win. It couldn’t have happened to a more deserving person. ■ WORLD FITASC OPEN CH RU 3RD 4TH 5TH AA1 A1 B1 C1 D1 E1 LADY JR VET SUP VET GEBBEN MILES BEN HUSTHWAITE GIUSEPPE CALO WILL FENNELL ZACHARY KIENBAUM RON RHOOK TIM HUBNER DAVID HALLETT LOGAN KILLAM JOHN TORRESAN ANGEL RAMOS MARTINA MARUZZO DAVID RADULOVICH GRAHAM STIRZAKER JOHN HACKETHORN 191 190 190 189 189 179 183 170 164 167 133 176 185 183 170 TEAM USA JON KRUGER DAVID RADULOVICH WENDELL CHERRY GEBBEN MILES TEAM ITALY TEAM SPAIN 747 185 185 186 191 727 720 TEAM AUSTRALIA V JOHNSTONE KELLY NORRIS RENAE BIRGAN TEAM ITALY TEAM GREAT BRITAIN 495 154 167 174 492 488 TEAM USA HUNTER MILLIGAN ROSS NESKORA ABEL SPIRE TEAM SPAIN TEAM AUSTRALIA 536 176 179 181 530 517 TEAMS SENIOR CH RU 3RD LADY CH RU 3RD JUNIOR CH RU 3RD VETERAN CH TEAM USA BRIAN DuQUESNAY JOHN WOOLLEY GARY WALSTROM RU TEAM GREAT BRITAIN 3RD TEAM AUSTRALIA 533 175 179 179 524 509 SUP VET CH 506 166 170 170 478 472 RU 3RD TEAM USA MICHAEL TAYLOR GEORGE BOGNER CURTIS ANDERSON TEAM FRANCE TEAM ITALY 21 Notable Quotes Brett Seibert: “American shooting talent has dramatically improved. Five or eight years ago there were always 10 guys who could win a major championship on any given day – it’s more like 30 or 40 now, they’ve gotten so much better. If you set targets to keep those guys’ scores down, you just kill everybody else.” Steve Schultz: “The Beretta layout had an English estate type terrain and I tried to throw targets like you’d see in Great Britain. Guerini had more of a Texas flavor and I got to use lifts. For the Remington layout I had woods – it challenged me to make sure each layout had its own character. It was fun because the terrain was outstanding.” Gebben Miles: “I’d like to keep on progressing… even though I’ve now won the National Sporting and World FITASC Championships, I know I can still improve in certain areas and I’m going to keep at it because there’s no substitute for hard work.” Ben Husthwaite: “These were probably the hardest targets we’ve had at a FITASC World Championship in maybe 8 years. They were hard technically – not pure distance and speed.” George Digweed: “The standard of refereeing (over 40 FITASC judges, including six from the UK, led by Scott Williams and Hugh Smith) has been absolutely first class. The targets were perfect for a World Championship. It was a great event – well run, and I’d certainly come back if it was ever here again.” Damien Birgan: “I thought the targets couldn’t be better – a perfect variety of presentations for every level of shooter.” Curtis Anderson: “They had a great balance of targets. There were Parcours where if you just kept your head down and focused, you’d do alright. Then there were some that would stretch your imagination. You’ve got to have something for everybody at a World event – and they did.” CLAYSHOOTINGUSA