Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Shooting at the 2011 Pan American Games – Men's trap

The men's trap shooting event at the 2011 Pan American Games was on October 18 and 19 at the Jalisco Hunting Club in Guadalajara.[1] The defending Pan American Games champion is Juan Dasque of the Argentina.

Shooting – Men's trap at the 2011 Pan American Games
VenueJalisco Hunting Club
DatesOctober 18–19
Competitors28 from 17 nations
Medalists
Gold medal   Guatemala
Silver medal   Colombia
Bronze medal   Brazil
«2007
2015»

The event consisted of two rounds: a qualifier and a final. In the qualifier, each shooter fired 5 sets of 25 shots in trap shooting.

The top 6 shooters in the qualifying round moved on to the final round. There, they fired one additional round of 25. The total score from all 150 shots was used to determine final ranking. Ties are broken using a shoot-off; additional shots are fired one pair at a time until there is no longer a tie.

Schedule

edit

All times are Central Standard Time (UTC-6).

Date Time Round
October 18, 2011 9:30 Qualification Day 1
October 19, 2011 9:00 Qualification Day 2
October 19, 2011 14:00 Final

Records

edit

The existing world and Pan American Games records were as follows.

Qualification records
World record   Giovanni Pellielo (ITA)
  Ray Ycong (USA)
  Marcello Tittarelli (ITA)
  Lance Bade (USA)
  Pavel Gurkin (RUS)
  David Kostelecký (CZE)
  Massimo Fabbrizi (ITA)
125 Nicosia, Cyprus
Lahti, Finland
Suhl, Germany
Barcelona, Spain
Americana, Brazil
Granada, Spain
Munich, Germany
1 April 1994
9 June 1995
11 June 1996
23 July 1998
10 August 2005
5 October 2006
15 May 2009
Pan American record   Rodrigo Bastos (BRA) 124 Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic August 3, 2003
Final records
World record   Karsten Bindrich (GER) 149 (124+25) Nicosia, Cyprus 10 July 2008
Pan American record   Juan Dasque (ARG) 138 (114+24) Rio de Janeiro, Brazil July 15, 2007

Results

edit

28 athletes from 17 countries competed.[2]

Qualification

edit
Rank Athlete Country 1 2 3 4 5 Total[3] Notes
1 Jean Pierre Brol   Guatemala 25 24 25 25 25 124 Q, EPR
2 Danilo Caro   Colombia 25 25 23 25 25 123 Q
3 Matthew Gossett   United States 23 25 24 24 25 121 Q
4 Roberto Schmits   Brazil 25 25 23 24 23 120 Q
5 Eduardo Lorenzo   Dominican Republic 24 24 23 23 25 119 Q
6 Sergio Piñero   Dominican Republic 24 25 25 23 22 119 Q
7 Juan Carlos Perez   Bolivia 23 25 22 24 24 118
8 Jacob Henry Turner   United States 23 25 23 23 24 118
9 Asier Cilloniz   Peru 23 25 23 23 23 117
10 Rodrigo Bastos   Brazil 24 24 24 23 22 117
11 Carlos Belletini   Argentina 20 25 25 24 22 116
12 Robert John Auerbach   Trinidad and Tobago 22 23 25 24 22 116
13 Leonel Martinez   Venezuela 25 24 23 22 22 116
14 Ian Shaw   Canada 24 23 23 24 21 115
15 Juan Zanella   Mexico 23 21 22 24 24 114
16 Ramon Toca   Mexico 24 23 21 22 24 114
17 Mario Soarez   Venezuela 24 19 23 22 25 113
18 Gianluca Agostino Dapelo   Chile 24 24 22 22 21 113
19 Fernando Borello   Argentina 24 23 22 20 21 110
20 Cesar Menacho   Bolivia 22 24 19 21 23 109
21 Michel Daou   Netherlands Antilles 22 22 25 19 21 109
22 Alvaro Enrique Rodriguez   Guatemala 20 20 21 24 23 108
23 Paul Shaw   Canada 23 21 23 20 21 108
24 Christopher Thomas Jackson   Cayman Islands 20 24 20 20 23 107
25 Alessandro De Souza Ferreira   Peru 23 21 24 16 22 106
26 Claudio Cesar Vergara   Chile 19 24 21 21 21 106
27 Shaun Barnes   Jamaica 23 21 20 16 21 101
28 Eduardo Elias Taylor   Panama 19 20 20 20 20 99

Final

edit

[4]

Rank Athlete Country Qual Final Total Notes
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Jean Pierre Brol   Guatemala 124 22 146 FPR
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Danilo Caro   Colombia 123 22 145
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Roberto Schmits   Brazil 120 23 143
4 Matthew Gossett   United States 121 21 142
5 Eduardo Lorenzo   Dominican Republic 119 21 140
6 Sergio Piñero   Dominican Republic 119 20 139

References

edit