Matt Emmons Places Fourth in Men’s 3 Position Rifle

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USA Shooting

Matt Emmons Places Fourth in Men’s 3 Position Rifle

Post by USA Shooting »

BEIJING, China (August 17, 2008) – The shooting competition at the 2008 Olympic Games concluded today at the Beijing Shooting Range with Matt Emmons (Browns Mills, N.J.) finishing in fourth place in the Men’s 50m 3 Position Rifle event.



Emmons, who won the silver medal in men’s prone this past Friday was competing in his second event at the Beijing Games. In the qualification round, Emmons shot an excellent score of 399 in prone, 389 standing and 387 kneeling, which put him in second place at 1175 going into the final. Emmons was right behind 2000 Olympic gold medalist Rajmond Debeve of Slovenia, who had a qualification score of 1176.



Reminiscent of the final shot in the same event in Athens when Emmons was on his way to a gold medal, then cross-fired finishing in eighth place, he was once again in the same situation. Heading into the final shot standing comfortably in first place by 3.3 points, Emmons accidentally hit the trigger prematurely with his finger and fired a disappointing 4.4 to finish in fourth place.



“I didn’t feel my finger shaking, but I guess it was,” Emmons said after his match. “I realized it went off and I hoped it made it into the black. I call it a freak of nature; I felt normal in this match, maybe just a little bit more nervous. If it had made it to the bullseye, it would have been great.”



Emmons had an excellent final, shooting seven 10s in a row, but the 4.4 on his last shot just wasn’t enough to keep him in medal contention. “In an Olympic final to shoot that many 10s in a row, that’s as good as it gets and I am happy with it. I would love to have a medal around my neck right now, but I had 129 really good shots today and a phenomenal final, so I really can’t complain. I don’t know why I am not supposed to win this event, but everything happens for a reason and it will be good motivation for me for the next four years.”



The gold medal went to Qiu Jian of China who shot a total score of 1272.5. The silver medal was claimed by Jury Sukhorukov of the Ukraine with a 1272.4, while Slovenia's Rajmond Debevec won the bronze medal with a score of 1271.7.



U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit (USAMU) member and two-time Olympian Jason Parker (Omaha, Neb.), who was be competing in his second event of the Beijing Games finished in 22nd place with a prone score of 393, a standing score of 384 and a kneeling of 387 for a total of 1164 points.



For Complete results, please visit the following link on the official website of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games: http://results.beijing2008.cn/WRM/ENG/S ... 8-17.shtml
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Jordan F.
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Joined: Thu Jun 07, 2007 10:03 am
Location: British Columbia, Canada

Post by Jordan F. »

I do feal real sorry for Matt but I am glad to see he is in good spirits about it.

Congrats to Qiu Jian!

I had the same thing happen to me at the nationals here in Canada. A 4 in kneeling where I accidentily bumped the trigger.
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WarWagon
Posts: 271
Joined: Mon Dec 31, 2007 11:09 pm

Post by WarWagon »

Oh man, I can't even imagine what it must be like to go through something like that twice. My heart goes out to Matt.
TCGun
Posts: 2
Joined: Wed Feb 08, 2006 6:12 pm

Well at least his wife doesn't have the itchy trigger finger

Post by TCGun »

Since she won the first Gold Medal in the Beijing Games... 10M Air Rifle, no less...
Another guess

Matt proved he isn't as good as he thought he is

Post by Another guess »

Wow! This is almost the same thing that happened to Matt Emmons in the 2004 Olympics. He choked and a chinese shooter took the gold. Matt proved he isn't as good as he thought he is. I wish he stop telling us he is. The U.S. media didn't even give him much coverage after this 3-Pos rifle match, unlike in 2004.
Guest

Re: Matt proved he isn't as good as he thought he is

Post by Guest »

Another guess wrote:Wow! This is almost the same thing that happened to Matt Emmons in the 2004 Olympics. He choked and a chinese shooter took the gold. Matt proved he isn't as good as he thought he is. I wish he stop telling us he is. The U.S. media didn't even give him much coverage after this 3-Pos rifle match, unlike in 2004.
Let's not feed this troll.

Alternate phrasing: Don't wrestle with this pig. The pig likes it, and you get dirty.
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Richard H
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Post by Richard H »

I don't agree with the poor sportsmanship of some of Matt's supporters, but it definately should not reflect on Matt. Matt is a great shooter and is probably one of the most humble guys I've met.
Another Guess

Do not be too harsh in Judging others

Post by Another Guess »

I thought you all maybe interested in this aticle

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/stor ... d=93697472

Here's part of the article...
"This new acceptance of human frailty has helped failed shooter Du. She had clearly been expecting condemnation, but instead she found widespread sympathy. Then four days later, much to fans' delight, she redeemed herself by winning gold at the 50-meter rifle, setting a new Olympic record. "

The unsophisticated Chinese (as oppose to us sophisticated Americans) people understood human frailty, and their compassion for Du enables her to win a gold medal.
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