Pistols of FP finalists 2012 London Olympics
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- Freepistol
- Posts: 773
- Joined: Sun Feb 10, 2008 5:52 pm
- Location: Berwick, PA
Great observation. Looks like every one has the grip past the wrist.Freepistol wrote:Have the rules changed? The grips on Andrija, Choi, Leonid, and Zhinei, all look like they extend past the wrist and onto their forearms.
What is the interpretation of the wrist rule? Grip cannot pass the wrist? Wrist must be exposed? Or grip cannot be used to support wrist?
If it is the latter, then I think no rules are broken, however if it is the first two, it is another matter.
I watched Neustrev shoot a 100 99 100 in dress shoes that he walk in to the range wearing during a WC practice session.
I do think the Koreans know something and it's called training, it's not about the shoes the gun, the pellets, it's about spending hours a day at the range actually shooting and working on perfecting skills (not shooting the crap with your friends).
One other thing Adidas are built on a very narrow last so if you have even slightly wide feet I'd forget about them. At $170 (for Jin's) they really aren't any cheaper than the actually shooting offerings. They do make a fashion statement though.
I do think the Koreans know something and it's called training, it's not about the shoes the gun, the pellets, it's about spending hours a day at the range actually shooting and working on perfecting skills (not shooting the crap with your friends).
One other thing Adidas are built on a very narrow last so if you have even slightly wide feet I'd forget about them. At $170 (for Jin's) they really aren't any cheaper than the actually shooting offerings. They do make a fashion statement though.
The wrist rule
"8.6.1.1 The shooter must stand free, without support, with both feet and/or
shoes completely within the firing point. The pistol must be held
and fired with one hand only. The wrist must be visibly free of
support."
The position of the wrist is very open, even to the medical profession.
A general check is to put the pistol in the shooting hand and if the wrist is rotated, the pistol should move around in a circular motion (above and below, left and right ) of the shooting position, ie "free of support".
Their is no barrel line rule in 50m Pistol, the pistol is open in design. Must fire .22LR, open sights and no release triggers.
"8.6.1.1 The shooter must stand free, without support, with both feet and/or
shoes completely within the firing point. The pistol must be held
and fired with one hand only. The wrist must be visibly free of
support."
The position of the wrist is very open, even to the medical profession.
A general check is to put the pistol in the shooting hand and if the wrist is rotated, the pistol should move around in a circular motion (above and below, left and right ) of the shooting position, ie "free of support".
Their is no barrel line rule in 50m Pistol, the pistol is open in design. Must fire .22LR, open sights and no release triggers.
-
- Posts: 49
- Joined: Sat May 05, 2012 8:21 am
Or just addicted to sniffing cordite :DTycho wrote:I believe he is blowing warm air at his hand. Explains the "glove", too. Venue didn't look warm, Hoang was actually shooting in a winter jacket :-)What a beautiful photo of Christian Reitz. I wonder how many of you would do the same thing...kissing your own beloved pistol.
Richard H wrote:
"I do think the Koreans know something and it's called training, it's not about the shoes the gun, the pellets, it's about spending hours a day at the range actually shooting and working on perfecting skills (not shooting the crap with your friends). "
I will continue this list of items about training:
Reading something and understanding something sometimes are two different things.
"I do think the Koreans know something and it's called training, it's not about the shoes the gun, the pellets, it's about spending hours a day at the range actually shooting and working on perfecting skills (not shooting the crap with your friends). "
I will continue this list of items about training:
Reading something and understanding something sometimes are two different things.
-
- Posts: 1364
- Joined: Mon Jan 28, 2008 7:19 pm
- Location: Wyoming
Money's gotta be the shoes!Isabel1130 wrote:"How rigid is the sole compare with shooting shoes like Corami or Sauer? The Korean team must have figured something out by using these shoes."
It's NOT the gun, and it's NOT the shoes..... :-)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vkLeQYvtYeI
:-)
-trinity
At most world cups I've been too as long as you can break your wrist up and down no seems to care. I haven't seen the photos but sometimes the angle makes things look worse than it really is. I've seen the same stuff with the soft neoprene visors touching the rifle sight at World Cups and Olympics they don't seem to care but go to a little local match and they go ape shit. i guess it makes them feel important.
Have a look at every photo on the first page of this topic blow up the pics and have a look where the grip finishes. Every one is past the bottom of the wrist. If I went to any comp in aus with that longer grip I'd get canned for it. I've Ben asked on the line before to demonstrate that I can move my pistol uo bad down and I don't have anywhere near that much on the bottom of my gripj-team wrote:Ditto. Can someone translate that for us?Spencer wrote:?Muffo wrote:So has anyone done any research on how all the people in the fp finall had the grip hoping way coast their wrist