Shooting: Finger on trigger, eye on legacy at Rio
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[July 29, 2016]
By Amlan Chakraborty
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Cementing legacy
will be on the mind of a select group of Olympic shooters, including
an American trio, when they arrive at next month's Rio de Janeiro
Games with all guns blazing.
Californian shotgun shooter Kim Rhode, who boasts a collection of
over 5,000 first-edition children's books, has a similar appetite
for Olympic medals.
The 37-year-old has already established herself the most successful
female shooter in Olympic history with three golds and five medals
in total.
A serious hip injury has meant lighter training but Rhode is
shrugging it off as she heads into her sixth Games.
"I'm not quite there, but I'm getting there," said Rhode, who won
double trap golds at Atlanta (1996) and Athens (2004) and topped
women's skeet in London four years ago.
Compatriot Vincent Hancock, winner of the men's skeet at the last
two Games, will also hope to maintain his golden streak.
Hancock loves to win in style -- he set a new Olympic record at
Beijing and bettered it at London -- and recent form favors the
27-year-old to complete a golden hat-trick at the Shooting Centre in
the Olympic Deodoro complex.
"In the grand scheme of things, there is only one match that I look
for every four years and it's the Olympics," Hancock told the
International Shooting Sport Federation website.
South Korean Jin Jong-oh will also aim for his slice of history at
the Rio Games.
The 36-year-old is one of the Olympics' most decorated pistol
shooters, having won the 50 meter titles at Beijing and London and
also the 10m air pistol event four years ago.
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Shooting athlete Kim Rhode poses for a portrait during the 2012 U.S.
Olympic Team Media Summit in Dallas, Texas May 14, 2012.
REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo
American Matt Emmons is another to watch and boasts a colorful
record of achievement.
The 35-year-old rifle shooter won the 50m rifle prone gold at the
2004 Games with a borrowed weapon and famously hit a wrong target in
an adjoining lane to miss out on the 50m three positions gold in
Athens.
He returned in Beijing to take the 50m prone silver and picked up
the three positions bronze in London. He remains on track to clinch
a fourth Olympic medal.
China's women have shown hot hands at Olympic shooting and will be
spearheaded by Guo Wenjun, who will seek her third Olympic gold in
the 10m air pistol.
Compatriot Yi Siling eyes a second 10m air rifle gold.
(Editing by Ian Ransom)
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