HISTORY OF SHOOTING PARA SPORT

Shooting is the ultimate test of accuracy and control and in shooting Para sport events, athletes with physical impairments compete in riflepistol and trap events.

Shooting Para Sport has featured at every Paralympic Games since 1976 and is today practised in more than 75 countries.

In this precision sport, athletes use focus and controlled breathing to reduce their heart rates and improve stability and high performance. This ability to steady hand and mind to deliver a sequence of shots requires well-developed powers of concentration and emotional control.

Athletes compete in events from distances of 10m, 25m and 50m in men’s, women’s and mixed competition events.

Of the 13 Paralympic shooting events, seven are open to both women and men, three are open to women only and three are open to men only.

World Shooting Para Sport recently adopted the discipline of Para trap and new classes for Para trap and vision impaired (VI) shooting

The sport is governed by the IPC and co-ordinated by the World Shooting Para Sport Technical Committee and Management team.

The sport follows rules of the International Shooting Sport Federation (ISSF) in conjunction with its own World Shooting Para Sport Technical Rules and Regulations, which take into account considerations for Para athletes in shooting sport.

In 2010 the IPC and the ISSF signed a Memorandum of Understanding to cooperate and work together in developing shooting sport; the agreement covers several areas including management, promotion of competitions and events, knowledge exchange, and education of technical officials.


COMPETITION FORMAT

The competition format is very similar to that of able-bodied shooting sport - the goal of shooting is to place a series of shots inside the centre ring (‘bullseye’) of the target. The target is comprised of 10 concentric scoring rings with a score grade of 1 to 10; the central ring giving 10 points.

In many events - to showcase the athletes' skill and accuracy - the scoring rings are each further subdivided into a further 10 scoring zones to give decimal scoring system, with 10.9 being the very centre of the target and the highest possible score per shot. To give you an idea of the level of the accuracy required, in air rifle events athletes fire at a bulls-eye which is only 0.05cm wide - which is as big as a full-stop on a printed page!

Shooting competitions are divided into two disciplines: rifle and pistol, with competitions at three distances: 10m, 25m and 50m.

The rules (including the number of shots and the time limit) depend on the firearm (.177 air or .22 smallbore calibre), the distance, the target, or the shooting position.

Scores for each shot in the qualification round are accumulated to give the athlete a total score.

The top eight athletes in the qualification round qualify for the final, however qualification scores are not carried over into the final, meaning each finalist starts from zero. In an exciting test of nerves, skill and focus, athletes with the lowest scores are eliminated over the course of a final, until a duel between the two remaining athletes for gold and silver medals ensues.

GROWTH OF SHOOTING AT THE PARALYMPIC GAMES

Year Countries Medal events Male Female Total top 3 countries
1976 10 3 35 3 39* 1. CAN  2. AUS 3. ISR
1980 15 11 50 3 59** 1. AUT 2. AUS 3. DEN
1984 20 29 94 20 114 1. AUS 2. NZL 3. FRA
1988 22 23 111 28 139 1. KOR 2. ITA 3. FRG
1992 26 16 100 31 131 1. GER 2. SWE 3. IPP
1996 32 15 101 32 133 1. SWE 2. KOR 3. RUS
2000 36 12 107 32 139 1. KOR 2. SWE 3. CHN
2004 35 12 101 41 142 1. SWE 2. KOR 3. GER
2008 44 12 96 44 140 1. KOR 2. SWE 3. RUS
2012 44 12 99 41 140 1. CHN 2. KOR 3. FRA
2016 42 12 97 50 147 1. CHN 2. SVK 3. IRI

*one athlete unknown **six athletes unknown

OVERALL PARALYMPIC SHOOTING MEDAL TABLE

RANK COUNTRY GOLD SILVER BRONZE TOTAL
1 South Korea 23 18 13 54
2 Sweden 23 10 16 49
3 Australia 15 7 3 25
4 China 13 9 7 29
5 Great Britain 8 9 11 28


TOP 5 FEMALE PARALYMPIC MEDALLISTS

RANK ATHLETE YEARS COMPETING GOLD  SILVER BRONZE TOTAL
1 Elizabeth Kosmala (AUS) 1976-1988 9 3 0 12
2 Imyeon Kim (KOR) 1992-2008 5 3 1 9
3 Barbara Caspers (AUS) 1980-1984 5 1 1 7
4 Cuiping Zhang (CHN) 2008-present 4 3 2 9
5 Deanna Coates (GBR) 1984-2000 3 3 2 8


TOP 5 MALE PARALYMPIC MEDALLISTS

RANK ATHLETE YEARS COMPETING GOLD  SILVER BRONZE TOTAL
1 Jonas Jacobsson (SWE) 1980-2012 17 4 9 30
2 Thomas Johansson (SWE) 1996-2004 5 1 0 6
3 Siegmar Henker (GER) 1984-1992 5 0 1 6
4 Santo Mangano (ITA) 1988-1996 4 1 2 7
5 Andrey Lebendinskiy (RUS) 1996-2008 4 0 3 7

 

STRATEGIC PLAN