N.C. Youth Shooters Win Championship Medals

North Carolina youth shooters joined teams from 14 other states that won medals at the Scholastic Clay Target Program (SCTP) Skeet and Sporting Clays National Championships in Sparta, Il.

SPARTA, IL- Youth shooting teams from 15 states captured medals and national honors during the weekend at the Scholastic Clay Target Program (SCTP) Skeet and Sporting Clays National Championships, with shooters from N.C. capturing 1 gold and 1 silver.

Competition was held in five divisions Aug. 1-2 at the World Shooting and Recreational Complex in Sparta, Ill.

Medals by State:
North Carolina—2 medals: 1 gold, 1 silver
South Carolina—4 medals: 2 gold, 1 silver, 1 bronzee
Arizona—5 medals: 2 gold, 1 silver, 2 bronze
Nebraska—3 medals: 2 silver, 1 bronze
Texas—3 medals: 1 gold, 1 silver, 1 bronze
Georgia—2 medals: 2 bronze
Indiana—2 medals: 1 gold, 1 bronze
Virginia—2 medals: 1 gold, 1 silver
California—1 medal: silver
Louisiana—1 medal: silver
Michigan—1 medal: gold
Minnesota—1 medal: silver
Mississippi—1 medal: gold
Pennsylvania—1 medal: bronze
Tennessee—1 medal: bronze

The World Shooting and Recreational Complex next hosts the SCTP national championships for trap, Aug. 4-5, 2008.

SCTP is managed by the National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF) in partnership with USA Shooting and other governing bodies for shooting sports. Across 41 states in 2008, 9,135 youths competed and 1,562 adults volunteered as coaches and directors—both new records for the program.

“The anticipation and excitement of the Olympics and two SCTP alumni competing in Beijing appeared to drive interest in our program this year. And the quality of shooting—not to mentioned the quality of character—among the young people at this event leaves little doubt that we’ll see more Olympians coming out of SCTP in the future,” said Steve Sanetti, NSSF president.

North Carolina teams won two medals. One of those was a gold medal for skeet in the Intermediate Entry Division. The Morgantown Clay Shooters scored 556 thanks to good shooting by Andrew Burgess of Morgantown, Matthew Pearson of Conover and William Rigdon of Morgantown.

Coach John Clark, Morgantown, N.C., described the win as, “Just a wonderful experience. It’s our first time at an SCTP shoot. We’ll be back next year. Had a kid that started shooting in April of this year and he shot in the 90s all week long. I’m proud of him, proud of each and every one of them. They’ve all worked really hard to get to this point. We started the program with three kids around Christmas last year and ended up with 22 kids. Out of those, we brought 12 here. We’re really proud of that. It’s an accomplishment.”

The total number of competitors in skeet was 356; sporting clays drew 338.

SCTP was launched by NSSF in 2000 to offer students in grades 12 and under an opportunity to compete as a team in trap, skeet, sporting clays and the international versions of trap and skeet. Program partners include the national governing bodies for each shotgun discipline: Amateur Trapshooting Association, National Skeet Shooting Association, National Sporting Clays Association and USA Shooting. The ultimate goal is instilling in young participants a commitment to safe firearm handling, teamwork and leadership.

Many SCTP shooters go on to compete at the collegiate level. Olympians are more rare, but former SCTP stars Corey Cogdell and Vincent Hancock will represent the U.S. in Beijing in women’s trap and men’s skeet, respectively.

For more information, visit www.nssf.org/sctp.

SKEET RESULTS

Varsity Division (grades 9-12)
1. Indiana—Hoosier Gun Swingers, 585 out of 600 targets (Tanner Brooks of Walkerton, Timothy Baker of Laporte, Daniel Borton of North Liberty).
2. Virginia—Old Dominion 4-H Shur Shots, 583 (Taylor Ricketts of Manakin, Rooster Watson of Blackstone, Jacob Hughes of Quinton).
3. Texas—The Alpine 3, 579 (Kyler Ford of Burleson, J. William Henderson of Mansfield, John Howard Kane of Fort Worth).

Junior Varsity Division (grades 9-12)
1. Arizona—Red Mountain Target Terminators, 570 (Wesley Borie of Phoenix, Luke McCabe-O’Donnell of Phoenix, Kyle Johnson of Phoenix).
2. California—Sharpshooters, 560 (Parker Downs of Browns Valley, Brooke Shuford of Bakersfield, Logan Brinkley of Apple Valley).
3. Georgia—Harris County Shotgun Team, 555 (Jess Harless of Columbus, Hughston Hodges of Hamilton, Cody Bentley of Hamilton).

Intermediate Advanced Division (grades 6-8)
1. Arizona—Ben Avery Clay Crushers, 567 out of 600 targets (Tanner Bissell of Desert Hills, Perry Miller of Goodyear, Holden Huff of Scottsdale).
2. Nebraska—One Box Rock Crushers, 553 (Bryan O’Conner of Greeley, Dalton O’Connell of Ansley, Austin Svoboda of Burwell).
3. Arizona—Ben Avery Clay Crushers IA2, 552 (Shelby Shank of Phoenix, Austin Elbert of Waddell, Chase Karvanek of Anthem).

Intermediate Entry Division (grades 6-8)
1. North Carolina—Morgantown Clay Shooters, 556 out of 600 targets (Andrew Burgess of Morganton, Matthew Pearson of Conover, William Rigdon of Morganton).
2. Arizona—Red Mountain Target Terminators, 553 (Stephen Fuller of Phoenix, Kent Everett Thomas of Mesa, Eric Fleming of Chandler).
3. Tennessee—3AT8, 551 (Hayden Stewart of Columbia, Colin King of Mt. Pleasant, Bret Boatright of Pulaski).

Rookie Division (grades 5 and under)
1. Michigan—Crunch Bunch, 515 out of 600 targets (Jeffrey Rimer of Woodhaven, Trent Olson of New Boston, Michael Matney of Taylor).
2. North Carolina—Morgantown Clay Shooters, 494 (Noah Clark of Morganton, Hunter Drum of Hickory, Andrew Roland of Lenoir).
3. Indiana—Hoosier Daddys, 474 (Jared Davenport of Franklin, Paul Driver of Franklin, Tristan Shelley of Mooresville).

SPORTING CLAYS RESULTS

Varsity Division (grades 9-12)
1. Virginia—Charity Hill Claybusters, 554 out of 600 (Christopher Smith of Ruther Glen, Daniel Foster of Drakes Branch, William Jacob Lawson of Skipwith).
2. Texas—The Alpine 3, 547 (Kyler Ford of Burleson, J. William Henderson of Mansfield, John Howard Kane of Fort Worth).
3. Nebraska—One Box Rock Crushers, 536 (Brody Sikes of Broken Bow, Logan Spanel of Broken Bow, Print Zutavern of Broken Bow).

Junior Varsity Division (grades 9-12)
1. South Carolina—TKA Lions, 518 out of 600 targets (Kenneth Braxton Ivey of Florence, Austin Mogy of Florence, Richmond Wilhoit of Florence).
2. Minnesota—Clay Crashers, 510 (Joe Will of Jordan, Drew Benson of Cottage Grove, Nick Slipek of St. Paul).
3. South Carolina—Hammond School, 478 (Wesley Dasher of Elgin, Kristian Simmons of Columbia, Parker Dukes of Columbia).

Intermediate Advanced Division (grades 6-8)
1. Texas—The Three Stooges, 506 out of 600 targets (Garrett Fairbanks of Mansfield, Hunter Milligan of Fort Worth, Will Roberts of Haslet).
2. Nebraska—One Box Rock Crushers, 481 (Garrett Irvine of Ravenna, Dalton O’Connell of Ansley, Austin Svoboda of Burwell).
3. Pennsylvania—Crushers, 468 (Michael Magee of Dover, Chip Johnson of Westminster, Nathaniel Jensen of Mechanicsburg).

Intermediate Entry Division (grades 6-8)
1. South Carolina—King Academy Sporting Clays, 448 out of 600 targets (Tripp Amick of Batesburg, Austin Bartley of Saluda, Justyn Fox of Batesburg).
2. Louisiana—Northwest Louisiana 4-H Clay Busters, 415 (Jacob Johnson of Castor, Colton Madden of Benton, Kyle Peterson of Minden).
3. Georgia—Brush Creek, 414 (Trapper Franklin of Dacula, Madison Hinton of Dacula, Will Hinton of Dacula).

Rookie Division (grades 5 and under)
1. Mississippi—Pontotoc Ridge Rangers, 363 out of 600 targets (Will Howard of Pontotoc, Bailey McBrayer of Ecru, Brady Sullivan of Pontotoc).
2. South Carolina—Rocky Creek Clay Dusters, 358 (George Hutchison of Rock Hill, Seth Roddey of Rock Hill, Jeffery Eberspeaker of Rock Hill).
3. Arizona—Ben Avery Clay Crushers, 350 (Casey Coleman of Peoria, Mitchell Jones of Glendale, Tyler Sims of Dewey).

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