Shooting at the 1980 Summer Olympics – Mixed 25 metre rapid fire pistol

The mixed ISSF 25 meter rapid fire pistol shooting competition at the 1980 Summer Olympics was held on 25 July at the Dynamo Shooting Range in Moscow, USSR.[1] There were 40 competitors from 25 nations.[2] Nations had been limited to two shooters each since the 1952 Games. The event was won by Corneliu Ion of Romania, the nation's first victory in the event since 1956 and second overall (tying Poland and Hungary for second-most all-time, behind the United States with 3). East German Jürgen Wiefel repeated as silver medalist, becoming the sixth man to win multiple medals in the event. Austria earned its first rapid fire pistol medal with Gerhard Petritsch's bronze.

25 metre rapid fire pistol
at the Games of the XXII Olympiad
Corneliu Ion
VenueDynamo Shooting Range
Date25 July 1980
Competitors40 from 25 nations
Winning score596
Medalists
Corneliu Ion
 Romania
Jürgen Wiefel
 East Germany
Gerhard Petritsch
 Austria

As with all shooting events from 1968 to 1980, this event was open to both men and women.

Background

This was the 16th appearance of what had been standardised in 1948 as the men's ISSF 25 meter rapid fire pistol event, the only event on the 2020 programme that traces back to 1896.[2] The event has been held at every Summer Olympics except 1904 and 1928 (when no shooting events were held) and 1908; it was open to women from 1968 to 1980.[3] The first five events were quite different, with some level of consistency finally beginning with the 1932 event—which, though it had differences from the 1924 competition, was roughly similar. The 1936 competition followed the 1932 one quite closely.[4] The post-World War II event substantially altered the competition once again.[5]

Six of the top 10 shooters from 1976 returned: silver medalist Jürgen Wiefel of East Germany, bronze medalist Roberto Ferraris of Italy, fourth-place finisher Afanasijs Kuzmins of the Soviet Union, fifth-place finisher Corneliu Ion of Romania, seventh-place finisher Gerhard Petritsch of Austria, and eighth-place finisher Marin Stan of Romania. Ove Gunnarsson of Sweden was the reigning (1978); the runner-up (West German Werner Beier) was absent due to the American-led boycott. Petritsch had finished third at worlds.

Costa Rica, Ireland, Laos, and Zimbabwe each made their debut in the event. Italy made its 12th appearance, most of any competing nation and second-most of all nations behind the boycotting United States at 13.

Competition format

The competition format followed the 1948 format, now very close to the modern rapid fire pistol competition after significant variation before World War II. Each shooter fired 60 shots. These were done in two courses of 30; each course consisted of two stages of 15; each stage consisted of three series of 5. In each stage, the time limit for each series was 8 seconds for the first, 6 seconds for the second, and 4 seconds for the third. Ties for medals were broken via shoot-off, with each shoot-off round consisting of 3 series of 5 shots.

A holdover from the previous Games was that silhouettes, rather than round targets, continued to be used; however, scoring rings had been added so that now each shot was scored up to 10 rather than being strictly hit or miss.

One change from 1948–1956 was that hits were no longer the primary measurement of success. As in 1960–1976, ranking was done by score, regardless of hits.[2][6]

Records

Prior to the competition, the existing world and Olympic records were as follows.

World record'
Olympic record Norbert Klaar (GDR)597Montreal, Canada22–23 July 1976

No new world or Olympic records were set during the competition.

Schedule

Date Time Round
Thursday, 24 July 1980Course 1
Friday, 25 July 1980Course 2

Results

RankShooterNationCourse 1Course 2TotalNotes
1Corneliu Ion Romania 299297596Q
Jürgen Wiefel East Germany 299297596Q
Gerhard Petritsch Austria 297299596Q
4Vladas Turla Soviet Union 296299595
5Roberto Ferraris Italy 296299595
6Afanasijs Kuzmins Soviet Union 297298595
7Marin Stan Romania 298297595
8Rafael Rodríguez Cuba 297297594
9So Gil-San North Korea 298296594
10László Orbán Hungary 294299593
11Andreas Franke East Germany 297296593
12Ivan Mandov Bulgaria 297295592
Gianfranco Mantelli Italy 295297592
14Andrzej Macur Poland 296295591
Józef Zapędzki Poland 295296591
16Ove Gunnarsson Sweden 297293590
Todor Stoimenov Bulgaria 294296590
18Wibout Jolles Netherlands 292297589
19Fernando Gomes Brazil 293295588
Hermann Sailer Austria 293295588
Yun Chang-Ho North Korea 292296588
22Jaime González Spain 293293586
23Nguyễn Quốc Cường Vietnam 292293585
Franc Petemel Yugoslavia 290295585
25Pedro García Jr. Peru 292292584
26Vladimír Hurt Czechoslovakia 285298583
Nguyễn Đức Uýnh Vietnam 292291583
Juan Seguí Spain 294289583
29Olavi Heikkinen Finland 295287582
30Gábor Plank Hungary 295285580
31Marco Hidalgo Costa Rica 289290579
Ragnar Skanåker Sweden 292287579
33Christian Raynaud Belgium 290286576
Ian Redmond Zimbabwe 287289576
Ken Stanford Ireland 288288576
36Roberto Tamagnini San Marino 287285572
37Bruno Morri San Marino 280290570
38David Westerhout Zimbabwe 271258529
39Khamsing Laos 258241499
40Khamphanh Laos 243210453
Shoot-off
RankShooterNationRound 1Round 2Round 3
Corneliu Ion Romania 148147148
Jürgen Wiefel East Germany 148147147
Gerhard Petritsch Austria 146

References

  1. "Shooting at the 1980 Moscow Summer Games: Mixed Rapid-Fire Pistol, 25 metres". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 10 February 2020.
  2. "Rapid-Fire Pistol, 25 metres, Open". Olympedia. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  3. "Muzzle-Loading Pistol, 25 metres, Men (1896)". Olympedia. Retrieved 11 December 2020.
  4. "Rapid-Fire Pistol, 25 metres, Men (1936)". Olympedia. Retrieved 11 December 2020.
  5. "Rapid-Fire Pistol, 25 metres, Men (1948)". Olympedia. Retrieved 11 December 2020.
  6. Official Report, vol. 3, p. 539.
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