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22nd Ladies Charity Skeet Classic and Last in Virginia

June 22, 2016 By Sherry Kerr


On April 8 — 10, Fairfax Rod & Gun Club, Inc. in Manassas, Virginia, welcomed 65 lady shooters, 30 of whom were novices, to compete, introduce new ladies to skeet shooting, and raise money for the Fisher House Foundation. We are proud to announce that we raised a total of $22,000 this year, which is a $1,000 for each year of the shoot’s existence.

Overcast, chilly weather for April in Virginia and seven coaches welcomed an all-time record number of 30 novice shooters to two hours of an introduction to skeet shooting via our Krieghoff International Novice Team Event on Friday morning. Following a few hours of instruction, the seven Novice Teams, including the coaches shooting a regular round with the .410, competed in a one-box modified round of skeet.

Team DeFrancesco, composed of Denise Loring, Diane Murtha, Mary Pat Hennigan, Linda Tucker, and Jenna Fees, took first place. Following in second place was Team Key: Annette Spetallieri, Anita Kane, Suzanne Rosenberg, and Annmarie Trost. Third place honors went to Team Gormish: Kirstin Knott, Sandra Miller, Shawna Wood, and Alicia Williams. Fourth place was Team Gamble: Linda Fortunato, Jessica Fortunato, Barbara Heffernan, Lana Vu, and Ann Cliburn. Thanks to the generosity of Krieghoff International, each of the lady novices in the first through fourth place teams received either a Krieghoff shooting pouch or hat.

Our other three teams were: Meg Hennigan, Ruth Tucker, Stefanie Portugallo, and Cassandra Ruark, coached by Dale Cox; Mary Williams-Lynch, Loretta Lynch, Connie Buckley, and Joy Schaya, coached by David Latimer; and Kelly Sanborn, Betsy

Hennigan, Bonnie Camp, and Kathie Jordan, coached by Karen Ruddle.

Novice Sandra Miller then proceeded to shoot her very first NSSA-sanctioned targets at the 2016 Ladies Charity Skeet Classic in the Murrell Smith 12-gauge event. Welcome to NSSA registered shooting, Sandra! Two of our Novices from 2015, Theresa Buonocore and Sydney McWilliams, also shot the Ladies again this year. We hope this will be the start of long shooting careers for all three of you. A number of this year’s class also asked how to take it forward from here and we have set them up with local coaches to continue shooting. Hopefully we’ll have a few more shooters join the NSSA ranks from our efforts here.

Baker and Bill Wise worked registering the ladies for the NSSA sanctioned competition by noon on Friday down in the Vince Marcum Skeet Pavilion. Each lady shooter, Novices and Registered alike, received a handsome burgundy attache case embroidered with the LCSC logo and filled with handmade gifts from Brenda Bangert and David Latimer. Babette Burley, Peggy Meunier, and our wounded shooter, Winnie Tucker, sold raffle tickets and LCSC shirts. A great job all weekend, can’t thank all of you enough!

The John Haugh Doubles event got underway Friday afternoon concluding with a wine and cheese tasting social. John Waters presented gorgeous engraved Salisbury bright-pewter trophies, which each of the six event sponsorships allowed us to purchase. Alyssa Gormish took the Doubles Champion with a 93, followed closely by RU Debra Perry and third place went to Marina Pakis with 92’s after a shoot-off that went four stations. Class 1st winners were presented with pewter coin jiggers with second and third place class winners going home with an engraved LCSC enameled pin.

Despite the challenging weather conditions of snow and wind on Saturday, the ladies posted good scores in the Murrell Smith 12-gauge event with the standouts of 98 for Champ Vicky Stellato, 97 for RU Debra Perry, and 96 for Third Christina MacMillan. The longest shoot-off was to determine Lady Group I-3- 7. Five ladies with 95’s battled for several stations with Alyssa Gormish and Holly Paul taking it to the seventh station before Holly emerged victorious.

Scores were only a little bit lower for the John Waters 28-gauge event. Holly Paul’s 95 earned her the Championship bowl, followed by Alyssa Gormish with a 94. A shoot-off was needed between Mary DeFrancesco, Susan Huszai, and Colleen Berg to decide third with Mary as victor.

Grill Master Bobby Defrancesco and Greg Buonocore grilled the big New York strip steaks to order for the chilled and hungry shooters and volunteer workers. Baked potatoes, salad, rolls, and two of Kathie Latimer’s famous caramel chocolate cakes waited inside. Thanks to Lynn Gormish for heading up a crew of volunteers to get everything set out prior to the shoot-off’s and award presentations.

Thirteen men participated in a .410 competition on Friday & Saturday shooting two regular rounds and two rounds of doubles. The proud and humbled winners of the engraved pewter mugs were Dan Felton, with an impressive 93 as Champion, edging out RU Ray Gilbert by one bird, and John Snyder as third. Four shooters competed in the 5-stand event. Clay Gormish was Champ, with TW Williams RU and Dan Felton third. Congratulations to them all. Both their sportsmanship and their entry fees were appreciated.

As the sounds of eating died down, Becky Myers presented winners of the men’s event specially engraved trophies, announced the results of the Wi$he$ for Warriors program, and thanked our many sponsors, shooters, donors, and volunteers by group. Wi$he$ for Warriors is a contest where ladies collect cash donations throughout the year for the charity and bring it to the shoot. Susan Huszai again volunteered to administer the program and with eight lady shooters participating this year, they collected a total of $3,273.00 for the Fisher House Foundation. Sue again took first place and Theresa Buonocore was the second highest Wi$he$ for Warriors money raiser. Both received an engraved silver-plate Revere Bowl and sincere thanks for their efforts. Mary B. Considine, Chief of Staff of the Fisher House Foundation, spoke about the mission of the foundation and awarded a special military Challenge coin to the Event Champions determined so far, to the volunteers who have been especially helpful over the past five years, and to three of the Ladies Shoot Foremothers who were present this year: Winne Tucker, Mary Beverly Gamble, and Carolyn Lause. Following Alyssa Gormish’s able demonstration of the secret handshake method of receiving the coin, Mary successfully transferred all the coins to the remaining recipients.

Blue cup drawings preceded the auction with winners of the BIG items including: Debra Perry, who won the Mini World entry; Christine Wittington, who won the Main World entry donated by NSSA; and Christine Fox who will shoot the 2017 LCSC for free.

The evening’s entertainment was then turned over to showman T.W. Williams, who ably conducted our live auction. Overall, there were seven items for auction which included a quilt made by Susan Huszai, an exotic wood & “ammo” pen made by Club member Chris Jabbs, an Italian crinkled leather shooting pouch & belt from Donny Weaver, three state product baskets containing a variety of state products including shoot entries, a Remington wooden ammo box containing ball caps signed by Wayne Mayes & Al Magyar, and a scratch box turkey call. Our thanks to the auctioneer Col. USA Ret., T.W. Williams for another spectacular job, to the contributors and especially to the bidders. My personal thanks to John Waters, who after bidding $500 to win Sue’s quilt, gave it to me as a thank you for my work in keeping the Ladies shoot going for the past five years.

We again delayed the raffle drawings to allow dinner guests time to buy tickets and to choose items. Then, after dinner and the disappearance of most of the dinner guests, a volunteer crew of Babette Burley, Mary Alice Defrancesco, and Susan Huszai conducted the drawings so that participants could pick up their winnings before they left on Sunday.

Sunday brought bright sunshine, but was still a bit chilly. We started with the Bozard Ford 20- gauge event, followed by the Kolar Arms USA .410 Bore event, concluding with the Haugh/Smith/Waters HOA event. Scores were high in the 20-gauge Champion Susan Huszai’s 100, RU Alyssa Gormish’s 99, and third Christina MacMillan’s 98. The Kolar Arms .410 Bore event was won by Debra Perry’s 97, followed closely by Vicky Stellato’s 96, and Maria Pakis 95.

Finally, the Haugh/Smith/Waters HOA trophies, which were re-named this year to honor the three individuals who sponsored gun events every year of the last five years, were presented to: Champion Debra Perry (381), RU Vicky Stellato (380), and third Holly Paul (379). Debra, a Lady

All American team member, was also presented the All American HOA Crystal vase which is a tradition started by former NSSA President, Louise Terry, when the shoot was held in Memphis, TN. John Waters presented the trophies for all the Sunday events.

As always, we want to thank our referees who donated their pay to the charity and to Greg Huzsai for the wonderful photos including this year some awesome photos of snow shooting.

Thanks again to the tireless work of Club Facilities Manager, Jamie Martin; his assistant, Oscar Lechuga; the members of Fairfax Rod & Gun Club; and to the Board of Directors, who have hosted this event for the past five years.

We ended our five-year run here with the best participation ever. A special thanks to the event sponsors who stuck with us though-out the run: Krieghoff International, Kolar Arms, John Haugh, Murrell Smith, John Waters, and Alamo Sporting Arms and Bozard Ford. Without your continued support we would not be able to hold this event nor be as successful in our fundraising.

We hope to see even more shooters next year as the shoot returns to Memphis, TN under the chairmanship of Barry & Dayna Rich. The weekend in April will be announced as soon as Barry can work out the scheduling with the Memphis Sports, watch our website

www.ladiescharityshootclassic.org.

– Contributed by Rebecca Myers

Filed Under: Clay Target Nation - ARTICLES

Old Pueblo Open

May 24, 2016 By Sherry Kerr

I’ll admit, I struggled writing this article. I wanted to provide an unbiased opinion of the shoot and the club to convince those who’ve never been to come next year. But I can’t do that. I can’t be unbiased, for several reasons. One, I grew up going to Tucson Trap and Skeet; it’s my home club and will always hold a special place in my heart. Two, the 40th Old Pueblo Shoot organizer, Larry Blount, is my dad; of course I’m going to think he did a wonderful job. And three, I happened to win the shoot this year with a personal best score, so naturally it was a great shoot. Having said all that, I’m going to provide you my opinion, and you be the judge on whether it convinces you to come next year. I’ll definitely be there.

In case it’s been awhile since you’ve been to the TT&S club, there are a multitude of changes that have happened in the past couple years. It has expanded and grown in all ways: more skeet and trap fields, more sporting clays courses, updated target machines, more RV facilities, and improvements to the grounds which were exceptionally clean since the walls and houses were recently power washed. The referees and maintenance crews did an exceptional job before and during the shoot. Every time I come back, there’s something new. It truly is an outstanding place for shooting.

Early spring is an undeniably beautiful time of year in Tucson and the TT&S club is an oasis from the foul weather across the country. The Old Pueblo Open was uniquely situated to allow for a shoot-to-shoot three week tour of the southwest. Many of the shooters traveled from the Copper State Open hosted by Clay Busters of Arizona in Phoenix, AZ at the end of February, down to Tucson for the Old Pueblo Midweek and the Main, and finished with the Comstock Open hosted by the Vegas Skeet Association the weekend after the Old Pueblo. That’s a lot of targets!

This year was the special 40th anniversary of the Old Pueblo Open, and shoot organizers wanted to make it grand. Extra prizes were donated, including shoot bags donated by Pacific Sporting Arms and once-in-a-lifetime money clips by Briley Manufacturing. A generous donation by John Waters paid for the all junior entry fees for the 28 gauge event. And to top it all, extra money was added thanks to Bill and LeAnn Martin, to the tune of $10,000 spread across all classes and events!

A relatively chill clear Friday morning greeted shooters as they headed to their fields for the first two events of the Old Pueblo. Shooters that participated in the Midweek were all tuned up, and those that arrived for the Main were fresh and ready to go. The 28ga prelim event was won by Lauren Downum with a perfect 100. As the day continued the sun warmed backs and a slight breeze cooled the 88 degree heat. In the Doubles event, Dan Jones tied Michael Peterson and James Decker but bested them in a shoot off for Doubles Champion. Friday night’s social event boasted free hors d’oeuvres and a social hour in the clubhouse.

Another beautiful sunny day with a cooling breeze allowed shooters to post good scores for the Saturday 12ga and 20ga events. A 100 straight shoot off between Tanner Bissel, Rick Curtin, Billy Williams and Joe Witty led to collegiate shooter Tanner becoming 12ga Champion. Curtin and Williams were RU and 3rd respectively. The 20 ga event culminated in another 100 straight tie with Dan Jones, Emily Steinbaugh, and John Imbt battling for the championship. Dan Jones became 20 ga champion.

Saturday night also hosted an Old Pueblo tradition of the Junior Shootoff. Juniors were handicapped based upon their averages in 12ga or 20ga, depending on what they decided to shoot in the shootoff. All juniors were invited to participate; the prize money of $500 extended to 5th place. During the shootoff another generous donation extended the prize money to 6th place! We had a full score of juniors participate, and they rocked! What a great opportunity for new shooters to get experience in a shootoff with the more experienced juniors. They banded together and supported each other, cheering and commiserating as each shooter succeeded or was eliminated. That’s the future of our sport.

Dinner on Saturday was another tradition of steaks cooked on the large outdoor fire pit grill accompanied by baked beans, rolls, and salad, but the cheesecake was my favorite. During dinner several folks were honored. Ron Wilson started the Old Pueblo shoot 40 years ago, so to commemorate the anniversary and his contributions over the years, an engraved bottle of spirits was presented to him. The Tucson club has another tradition of handing out once-in-a-lifetime sterling silver thunder-bird pins for those shooters who shoot a 100 straight at the Tucson club for the first time. This does not have to be your first 100 straight ever, just your first at the Tucson club. I and five other shooters received our thunder-bird pins.

Sunday was cooler for the 28 ga event with afternoon breezes just in time for the .410 event. Even so, good scores were posted by those who persevered with the lone 100 by John Imbt taking the 28ga event championship. Robert Lopez and Billy Williams shot off with scores of 98 for the .410 event championship with Robert prevailing.

The shoot concluded with an awards ceremony in which the Pacific Sporting Arms shoot bags and Briley money clips were presented to the HOA champions. Kevin Kercheval won the HOA D/E class bag, Thomas Phelps HOA C, Mackinzee Swetman HOA B, Frank Demarco HOA A, Dan Jones HOA AA , Lauren Downum HOA 3rd Place, Tanner Bissel Runner Up, and Emily Steinbaugh the HOA Champion bag. It was a poetic moment for me to receive the 40th Old Pueblo Open HOA champ bag and money clip from my dad who worked so hard to make this shoot great.

Filed Under: Clay Target Nation - ARTICLES

NSSA Scoreboard

May 8, 2016 By Sherry Kerr

Skeet Scoreboard
Click image to select the NSSA Scoreboard by month

Scores are shown in PDFs that can be viewed, printed, or downloaded.

See the Scoreboard by month.

Filed Under: Scoreboard Tagged With: NSSA, Scoreboard, skeet

Photo Gallery: Krieghoff Classic 200

February 25, 2016 By Sherry Kerr

South Florida Shooting Club hosted more than 200 shooters at the Krieghoff Classic 200 on February 4-6. NSCA member Johnathan D. Evans not only shot clays at the event but also shot a large number of photos at the scenic club. He has generously shared them with us, and we’re sharing some of them with you.

You’ll see more of them in the magazine over the coming months.

Click on any thumbnail below to open the gallery and scroll through larger images. Enjoy!

Filed Under: Clay Target Nation - ARTICLES, homepage section 2 Tagged With: Bill McGuire, FITASC, Johnathan D. Evans, Krieghoff, photo gallery, South Florida Shooting Club, sporting clays, Wendell Cherry

Restart Open at Kern County (CA) Gun Club

February 24, 2016 By Sherry Kerr

Who does’t want a “Restart” once in a while? And the beginning of each year, New Year’s, just begs for one. Thus it was decided that’s what everyone needed at Kern County Gun Club in January. Organizers knew it was touch and go on the weather when they set the date. But Saint Peter stepped up, and in keeping with California weather, the conditions were fantastic.

HOA Chili Rob McCormick and Ty Younts
HOA Chili Rob McCormick and Ty Younts

The format? A one-day, two-gun tournament comprised of 12 and 20 gauges, along with an HOA.

Generous sponsors have added nice loot for the winners as well: flats of shells for gun and class champions, engraved crystal trophies for HOA winners, and special awards for Lady and Junior champions.

Cliff Bolt has done a fantastic job promoting the Kern County events, and the Restart Open was no exception. The maximum capacity of 50 shooters was filled. Shooters from as far away as Montana and Minnesota were in attendance. In addition to local Bakersfield area shooters, Southern California was also well represented. Everyone did their best to be tuned up and ready for competition. A nice group of shooters convened at the club on Friday for last-minute practice. Good idea, as it turned out; you would need to shoot well to win.

Led by Jon Cunningham, the club was in top-notch form. Dean, Jeff, and Jeffrey Rouell, Jr. put a shine on the property. Not a thread was out of place. The referees were spot on and cheery. If you haven’t experienced the Kern County hospitality, you owe yourself a visit to the club. You won’t be disappointed.

Squadding was organized by Rick Douglass, and Hall of Famer Hal Stewart had the computers teed up well in advance. A handful of folks were registered on Friday. Then beginning at 7:00 a.m. on Saturday, the lovely and gracious Tina Stephens took the helm, registering shooters and doing the administrative tasks. Alongside Tina was trainee Misty, who turned out to be a quick study. The volunteers at skeet shoots are the backbone of the sport. Be sure to say “thank you” to those tireless workers at every event.

The 12 gauge commenced with the first flight at 8:30. There were plenty of good scores but no hundie. The door was still open when the second rotation took the fields at 10:00. The stars lined up for one competitor, Rob McCormick, breaking his first-ever 100 straight. Rob is a SoCal celebrity, one of the generous sponsors of the sport. Chili Rob as he is known, has been at it for a few years, nipping at the straight a few times. Congratulations Rob, well deserved. And the score held up, the sole perfect of the gauge.

There was plenty of good shooting: two 99s, a 98, and seven 97s fought for the scraps. In the end it was McCormick at gun champ, Cliff Bolt runner-up, Ty Younts AA1, Mike Archer A1, Harold Jeffers B1, Hal Stewart C1, and Ron Schaefer D1. Sean Collier was the Junior champ, and Kathryn Friesen was Lady champ. One gun down, one to go.

Did I mention that lunch was included in the program? And what a lunch it was. The West Coast famous Buoni BBQ was on hand — BBQ pork loin, BBQ beans, salad and sides. The only downside was the food coma following the feast. Thank you to Frank, Lori, and Dominic for feeding us. What a treat.

Immediately following lunch, the first rotation of 20 gauge shooters took the field. Conditions were still great and high scores followed. This time it was another SoCal shooter who stepped up. Hall of Famer and National Director Keith Phelps cleared the field with his 100 straight. He was followed by three 99s and three 98s. After shoot-offs, it ended up Phelps as gun champ, Keith Key runner-up, Buoni AA1, local shooter Tracy Edwards A1, Chili Rob McCormick B1, Ron Schaefer C1, and Joe Kerchinski D1. Again, Sean Collier was the Junior champ and Kathryn Friesen was Lady champ.

Drama was developing on the HOA front. Three shooters were in the hunt, followed by a couple who needed help from the leaders. Dominic Buoni has been whipping just about everyone’s tails, so he sort of had a bullseye on his back. McCormick was only down two targets but finished early, having to wait on results. Younts was also right there with the other two. It was really anyone’s game. When the dust settled, McCormick’s 198 captured the HOA title. Buoni and Younts shot off their 197s for runner-up, with Younts prevailing. Buoni took AA1, followed by Keith Key A1, Phelps B1, Shaefer C1, and Kerchinski D1.

Guess who the Junior and Lady Champs were? You got it, Collier and Friesen. In addition to the perfect scores, there were several personal bests during the day. Congratulations and great shooting, everyone.

The one-day tournaments have been well received at Kern County Gun Club. Bolt and Cunningham have been instrumental in promoting and supporting the skeet program. The results are obvious. After all, people vote with their feet. At this event alone, five new NSSA members were signed up. It’s satisfying to have a full shoot and see smiling faces. Thank you, guys. Please keep up the good work.

— Contributed by Chris Baker

HOA Chili Rob McCormick and Ty Younts
Keith Phelps, 20 gauge champ, with Tina Stephens

Filed Under: Clay Target Nation - ARTICLES, NSSA Shoot Reports Tagged With: Chris Baker, events, Kern County Gun Club, skeet

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