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

Shooting – Men's double trap at the XVI Pan American Games
Venue Jalisco Hunting Club
Dates October 20
Competitors 17 from 11 nations
Medalists
   United States
   Puerto Rico
   Brazil
«2007
2015»
Shooting at the
2011 Pan American Games
Rifle
50 m rifle three positions men women
50 m rifle prone men
10 m air rifle   men   women
Pistol
50 m pistol men
25 m pistol women
25 m rapid fire pistol men
10 m air pistol men women
Shotgun
Trap men women
Double trap men
Skeet men women

The nen's double trap shooting event at the 2011 Pan American Games was on October 18 at the Jalisco Hunting Club in Guadalajara.[1] The defending Pan American Games champion is Joshua Richmond of the United States.

The event consisted of two rounds: a qualifier and a final. In the qualifier, each shooter fired 3 sets of 50 shots in trap shooting. Shots were paired, with two targets being launched at a time.

The top 6 shooters in the qualifying round moved on to the final round. There, they fired one additional round of 50. The total score from all 200 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

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

Date Time Round
October 20, 2011 9:00 Qualification
October 20, 2011 14:00 Final

Records

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

Qualification records
World record  Vitaly Fokeev (RUS) 148 Concepción, Chile March 3, 2011
Pan American record  Lance Bade (USA)
 Charles Redding (USA)
 Josh Richmond (USA)
138 Winnipeg, Canada
Winnipeg, Canada
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
July 30, 1999
July 30, 1999
July 18, 2007
Final records
World record  Hu Binyuan (CHN) 196 Minsk, Belarus June 10, 2009
Pan American record  Lance Bade (USA) 187 Winnipeg, Canada July 30, 1999

Results

17 athletes from 11 countries competed.[2]

Qualification

Rank Athlete Country 1 2 3 Total[3] Notes
1 Walton Eller United States 49 50 48 147 Q PR
2 Jose Torres Puerto Rico 43 45 48 136 Q
3 Henry Tejeda Dominican Republic 46 43 47 136 Q
4 Herbert Brol Guatemala 43 48 42 133 Q,
5 Luiz Da Graca Brazil 43 43 46 132 Q
6 Fernando Brol Guatemala 44 43 45 132 Q
7 Danilo Caro Colombia 46 42 43 131
8 Manuel Morales Dominican Republic 45 44 40 129
9 Lucas Bennazar Puerto Rico 42 43 42 128
10 Filipe Fuzaro Brazil 45 41 41 127
11 Adolfo Valdez Mexico 40 45 40 125
12 Paul Shaw Canada 40 41 43 124
13 Mario Soarez Venezuela 46 40 38 124
14 Franco Di Mauro Venezuela 46 37 39 122
15 Asier Cilloniz Peru 34 44 41 119
16 Michael Daou Netherlands Antilles 40 36 40 116
Jeffrey Holguin United States DSQ

Final

[4]

Rank Athlete Qual Final Total Notes
1st, gold medalist(s)  Walton Eller (USA) 147 48 195 FPR
2nd, silver medalist(s)  Jose Torres (PUR) 136 49 185
3rd, bronze medalist(s)  Luis Da Graca (BRA) 132 50 182
4  Fernando Brol (GUA) 132 48 180
5  Herbert Brol (GUA) 133 46 179
5  Henry Tejeda (DOM) 136 43 179

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.