Rapid fire pistol at the Olympics

The rapid fire pistol is the only shooting event on the current Olympic programme that dates back to 1896, since the removal of the men's free pistol. The current rapid fire pistol event is the ISSF 25 meter rapid fire pistol. The format and rules for the rapid fire pistol event changed widely in the early Olympics.[1] The event format has been largely standardized since 1924, though there have been significant rule changes since.

ISSF 25 meter rapid fire pistol
at the Olympic Games
2016 Olympic shooting range
Overview
SportShooting
GenderMen
Years heldMen: 1896, 1900, 19121924, 19322020
Reigning champion
Men Jean Quiquampoix (FRA)

There has never been a women's version of the rapid fire pistol event; the current programme pairs the men's rapid fire pistol with the women's free pistol for gender equality. The event was nominally open to women from 1968 to 1980, although very few women participated these years.[2]

A team event was held twice, in 1912 and 1920.

Variants edit

The early Games had a few variants of the event:

  • 1896: The event featured "muzzle-loading" pistols, which were required to be of .45 caliber. The distance was 25 metres, the current standard. As with other 1896 events, a multiplicative scoring system was used. Timing is unknown.[3][4]
  • 1900: This event was limited to professionals (a significant departure from the general amateurism principles of the time). Only six shots were fired per shooter. The pistols used are sometimes described as "military" pistols. Timing is unknown. Distance was 20 metres.
  • 1912: This was a "dueling pistols" event. The timing in this event involved single shots rather than true rapid fire, but the target would appear for only 3 seconds for each shot. A full silhouette target was used. Distance was 30 metres. Hits, rather than score, was used as the first criterion for ranking shooters; only those tied on hits were sorted by score.[5][6][7]
  • 1920: Like 1900, this is sometimes identified as a "military" pistols event. The distance was 30 metres. Shooters fired 30 shots each, with targets that had scoring circles up to 10 points apiece. Shooters had the option of using their team event score or shooting again for the individual match.
  • 1924–1936: These three Games used variations on a hit-or-miss theme. Shots were fired in series of 6 shots, each at 6 targets. The score for the series was how many targets were hit; there were no scoring rings. The initial round used 3 series (maximum score 18), while successive rounds of 1 series each were used to narrow the field from those who scored perfectly. In 1924, the first round had the targets available for 10 seconds, with all later rounds being 8 seconds; for the other two Games, the first round was 8 seconds and the later rounds got faster each round, down to 2 seconds in the fifth round.

Medals edit

Men edit

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1896 Athens
details
Ioannis Frangoudis
  Greece
Georgios Orphanidis
  Greece
Holger Nielsen
  Denmark
1900 Paris
details
Maurice Larrouy
  France
Léon Moreaux
  France
Eugène Balme
  France
1904 St. Louis Not held
1908 London Not held
1912 Stockholm
details
Alfred Lane
  United States
Paul Palén
  Sweden
Johan Hübner von Holst
  Sweden
1920 Antwerp
details
Guilherme Paraense
  Brazil
Raymond Bracken
  United States
Fritz Zulauf
  Switzerland
1924 Paris
details
Henry Bailey
  United States
Vilhelm Carlberg
  Sweden
Lennart Hannelius
  Finland
1928 Amsterdam Not held
1932 Los Angeles
details
Renzo Morigi
  Italy
Heinrich Hax
  Germany
Domenico Matteucci
  Italy
1936 Berlin
details
Cornelius van Oyen
  Germany
Heinrich Hax
  Germany
Torsten Ullman
  Sweden
1948 London
details
Károly Takács
  Hungary
Carlos Enrique Díaz Sáenz Valiente
  Argentina
Sven Lundquist
  Sweden
1952 Helsinki
details
Károly Takács
  Hungary
Szilárd Kun
  Hungary
Gheorghe Lichiardopol
  Romania
1956 Melbourne
details
Ștefan Petrescu
  Romania
Yevgeny Cherkasov
  Soviet Union
Gheorghe Lichiardopol
  Romania
1960 Rome
details
Bill McMillan
  United States
Pentti Linnosvuo
  Finland
Aleksandr Zabelin
  Soviet Union
1964 Tokyo
details
Pentti Linnosvuo
  Finland
Ion Tripșa
  Romania
Lubomír Nácovský
  Czechoslovakia
1968 Mexico City
details (mixed)
Józef Zapędzki
  Poland
Marcel Roșca
  Romania
Renart Suleymanov
  Soviet Union
1972 Munich
details (mixed)
Józef Zapędzki
  Poland
Ladislav Falta
  Czechoslovakia
Viktor Torshin
  Soviet Union
1976 Montreal
details (mixed)
Norbert Klaar
  East Germany
Jürgen Wiefel
  East Germany
Roberto Ferraris
  Italy
1980 Moscow
details (mixed)
Corneliu Ion
  Romania
Jürgen Wiefel
  East Germany
Gerhard Petritsch
  Austria
1984 Los Angeles
details
Takeo Kamachi
  Japan
Corneliu Ion
  Romania
Rauno Bies
  Finland
1988 Seoul
details
Afanasijs Kuzmins
  Soviet Union
Ralf Schumann
  East Germany
Zoltán Kovács
  Hungary
1992 Barcelona
details
Ralf Schumann
  Germany
Afanasijs Kuzmins
  Latvia
Vladimir Vokhmyanin
  Unified Team
1996 Atlanta
details
Ralf Schumann
  Germany
Emil Milev
  Bulgaria
Vladimir Vokhmyanin
  Kazakhstan
2000 Sydney
details
Sergei Alifirenko
  Russia
Michel Ansermet
  Switzerland
Iulian Raicea
  Romania
2004 Athens
details
Ralf Schumann
  Germany
Sergei Polyakov
  Russia
Sergei Alifirenko
  Russia
2008 Beijing
details
Oleksandr Petriv
  Ukraine
Ralf Schumann
  Germany
Christian Reitz
  Germany
2012 London
details
Leuris Pupo
  Cuba
Vijay Kumar
  India
Ding Feng
  China
2016 Rio de Janeiro
details
Christian Reitz
  Germany
Jean Quiquampoix
  France
Li Yuehong
  China
2020 Tokyo
details
Jean Quiquampoix
  France
Leuris Pupo
  Cuba
Li Yuehong
  China

Multiple medalists edit

Rank Gymnast Nation Olympics Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Ralf Schumann   East Germany (GDR)
  Germany (GER)
1988–1996, 2004–2008 3 2 0 5
2 Károly Takács   Hungary (HUN) 1948–1952 2 0 0 2
Józef Zapędzki   Poland (POL) 1968–1972 2 0 0 2
4 Pentti Linnosvuo   Finland (FIN) 1960–1964 1 1 0 2
Corneliu Ion   Romania (ROU) 1980–1984 1 1 0 2
Afanasijs Kuzmins   Soviet Union (URS)
  Latvia (LAT)
1988–1992 1 1 0 2
7 Sergei Alifirenko   Russia (RUS) 2000–2004 1 0 1 2
Christian Reitz   Germany (GER) 2008, 2016 1 0 1 2
9 Heinrich Hax   Germany (GER) 1932–1936 0 2 0 2
Jürgen Wiefel   East Germany (GDR) 1976–1980 0 2 0 2
11 Gheorghe Lichiardopol   Romania (ROU) 1952–1956 0 0 2 2
Vladimir Vokhmyanin   Unified Team (EUN)
  Kazakhstan (KAZ)
1992–1996 0 0 2 2

Medalists by nation edit

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Germany (GER)5319
2  United States (USA)3104
3  Romania (ROU)2338
4  France (FRA)2215
5  Hungary (HUN)2114
6  Poland (POL)2002
7  East Germany (GDR)1304
8  Soviet Union (URS)1135
9  Finland (FIN)1124
10  Russia (RUS)1113
11  Cuba (CUB)1102
  Greece (GRE)1102
13  Italy (ITA)1023
14  Brazil (BRA)1001
  Japan (JPN)1001
  Ukraine (UKR)1001
17  Sweden (SWE)0235
18  Czechoslovakia (TCH)0112
  Switzerland (SUI)0112
20  Argentina (ARG)0101
  Bulgaria (BUL)0101
  India (IND)0101
  Latvia (LAT)0101
24  China (CHN)0033
25  Austria (AUT)0011
  Denmark (DEN)0011
  Kazakhstan (KAZ)0011
  Unified Team at the Olympics (EUN)0011
Totals (28 entries)26262678

Team rapid fire pistol edit

Men edit

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1912 Stockholm
details
Eric Carlberg, Vilhelm Carlberg, Johan Hübner von Holst, Paul Palén
  Sweden
Amos Kash, Nikolai Melnitsky, Grigori Panteleimonov, Pavel Voyloshnikov
  Russia
Hugh Durant, Albert Kempster, Horatio Poulter, Charles Stewart
  Great Britain
1920 Antwerp
details
Louis Harant, Alfred Lane, Karl Frederick, James H. Snook, Michael Kelly
  United States
Alexandros Vrasivanopoulos, Georgios Moraitinis, Iason Sappas, Alexandros Theofilakis, Ioannis Theofilakis
  Greece
Fritz Zulauf, Joseph Jehle, Gustave Amoudruz, Hans Egli, Domenico Giambonini
  Switzerland

References edit

  1. ^ Not all sources include the first four appearances of the event (1896, 1900, 1912, and 1920) as rapid fire pistol events. 1980 Official Report, vol. 3, p. 531, lists the prior champions in the rapid fire pistol, including three of those events and indicating they are part of the rapid fire pistol series; the ISSF lists all four at its website.
  2. ^ https://www.olympedia.org/sports/SHO
  3. ^ "Muzzle-Loading Pistol, 25 metres, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 11 December 2020.
  4. ^ Official Report, part 2, p. 94.
  5. ^ "Muzzle-Loading Pistol, 25 metres, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 11 December 2020.
  6. ^ 1912 Official Report, p. 1062.
  7. ^ 1912 Official Report, p. 701.