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Photo Gallery: Fujairah Mountain Shooting Championship

March 6, 2023 By hdyer

Several of the NSCA’s top shooters recently traveled to Dubai, UAE, for the Fujairah Mountain Shooting Championship (FMSC), organized by Fujairah Shooting Club under the patronage of H.H. Sheikh Mohammed bin Hamad Al Sharqi, Crown Prince of Fujairah. This new sporting clay shooting championship was set in the countryside of Fujairah, United Arab Emirates, among Fujairah’s mountains area, offering many unique backdrops for targets.

The USA had two out of the top three shooters on the podium. Anthony Matarese Jr. finished in second, while Junior Joseph Fanizzi was third in the Open and also took Junior Champion. European shooter Matthieu Delmas won the event. USA shooters Madison Sharpe and Karen Miles were Lady Champion and Lady runner-up, respectively.

These photos of the Fujairah Mountain Shooting Championship were taken by Don Brunt. Click on a photo to enlarge.

 

Filed Under: Clay Target Nation - ARTICLES, Clay Target Nation Photo Galleries, Sporting Clays Photos Tagged With: clay target shooting, sporting clays

Hey, What’s That Gun? A True One-of-a-Kind

February 21, 2023 By hdyer

In the February issue of Clay Target Nation, our popular “Hey, What’s That Gun?” column tells the story of a one-of-a-kind shotgun owned by an NSSA-NSCA member who wanted to remain anonymous. Due to space considerations, we couldn’t give all the details in print, but you can read all about it here. The shooter writes:

I commissioned this fully bespoke shotgun when I was competing in skeet. Every part of the gun’s construction was performed by one of the most masterful American craftsmen and artisans. My intention was to create the ultimate American-made shotgun, and there is good evidence it was achieved. This project got off the ground in 2002 and the gun was delivered in late 2004. The first decision was the gun itself had to be a premium-level competition shotgun. Kolar was the obvious choice here, as the only American maker of pro-level competition guns. They also readily agreed to allow and participate in having the stock work and engraving done by others. No other premium gunmaker, neither foreign nor domestic, was willing to work on a truly bespoke gun like this one.

This is a full skeet set with a 12-gauge barrel, carrier barrel, 20, 28 and .410 tubes, full set of chokes for all gauges, two forearms (a traditional skeet and a beautiful birds-beak design) and a custom Americase to hold it all. Kolar built the gun, shipped it to the stock maker, then shipped the action to the engraver and finally assembled the completed gun. As expected on a multi-year project of this magnitude, there were bumps and issues, but they facilitated everything to the ultimate outcome you see here. My thanks to the folks at Kolar for allowing my dream to come true.

Next, I selected the finest wood blank I could find. This was no easy task. I was a patron and member of the Firearm Engravers Guild of America (FEGA), and for many years, they co-hosted their annual convention with the American Custom Gunmakers Guild. There were several members of that guild that were stock makers and wood vendors, so I literally looked through thousands of blanks. I looked through hundreds more on every stock wood site on the internet. I actually found the wood at a vendor in the Safari Club International show. The Turkish Circassian walnut blank was from a 900-year-old tree in the Caucasus mountains. This tree was growing when Richard the Lionheart was on Crusade! Nothing more about the wood need be said — it speaks for itself. It has caused more than a few twisted necks as folks walk by the gun rack at shoots.

With this fabulous wood secured, I needed a stock maker who really knew what he was doing. He had to be an artist in wood as well as an expert technician so the gun fit me. Paul D. Hillmer of Iowa was my choice after asking many knowledgeable people. He specialized in building competitive shotgun stocks. When Kolar completed the gun in-the-white, they shipped it to Paul, and I brought the wood with me. I spent two days at his shop. After the normal greetings, we got down to business. Paul was amazed at the wood I brought him, and I was relieved he declared the grain structure sound enough to handle the tens of thousands of rounds that would pound it. He spent more than two hours measuring me, adjusting a fit gun, and then tweaking it to perfection. When the measurement was completed, he carefully transferred the measurements to the wood blank, and then the real work began. I was expecting him to use a drawknife and rasps but was amazed that instead, he had a custom-designed disc on a motor arbor. He then started grinding the stock blank freehand! I was as nervous as an expectant father as he was creating my new baby in front of my eyes. His skill level was off the chart. He also used a couple of other custom-made tools as the blank was quickly roughed into shape. What I thought might take days he did in hours. I was taking pictures through the whole process, but one tool was so special he would not allow me to photograph it — his secret, he said.

By the morning of the second day, Paul had the stock fitted to the action and I fired it in his indoor range. He molded the grip to fit me like a glove. He had built the exact cast-off, pitch, twist, and drop into the wood and then tweaked everything until he was satisfied it was perfectly shooting to point of aim. The stock was about 85 to 90% of the finished shape and the forearms somewhat less. I left the rest to him. A steel rod was installed through the wrist of the stock to strengthen this critical area, and the action was glass bedded for additional protection. Since this gun was intended to be shot in competition during summer months in Texas, it had to endure sweat, humidity and rain storms, so everything that could be done was done to that end.

As I mentioned, I had been in FEGA for years and become friends with many of the Master Engravers. Having seen all the engravings presented during that time, I wanted Eric Gold to engrave the gun. This required me to have that request in place at least four years in advance, as Eric’s skills were and are in high demand from the most discerning of firearm aficionados around the world. Eric has won many awards for his work, including even the storied Holland & Holland firm. We already had a friendship before this project started, and it developed even further. As this was a competition gun, the engraving could not be the typical ducks or pheasants. It had to denote the speed and accuracy required of the sport, but I didn’t want something with clay pigeons on it like some of the contemporary production guns. So, Eric and I had a brainstorming session and came around to the thought: What is the fastest bird? A peregrine falcon, of course. At first, we thought of a falcon chasing and then killing a pigeon. But then I thought, no! This is a Texas gun, and a dove can outfly a pigeon any day. We had our theme!

We researched literally hundreds if not thousands of pictures of both falcons and doves. As we homed in, Eric developed the artwork that comes before all engravings. With the scenes drawn, he worked his magic with his distinctive scroll, including his signature inlayed wild roses. This is bulino engraving, which is composed of thousands of small dots that ultimately provide the photographic-like detail to the engraving scenes. Eric works under a 40-power microscope to do this work.

The Kolar offered a special challenge: The Kolar action is made on CNC equipment out of through-hardened 4140 Chrome Moly steel billet — very tough stuff. They are made this way so they do not have to be heat tempered after the machine work, which can cause movement in the action dimensions. It is common practice for engravers to annul actions to make them soft enough to engrave, but we could not do that in this case. Therefore, Eric had to engrave on the hard action. He told me it was so hard he couldn’t engrave more than 1/10” before having to resharpen his carbide graving tool. In the end, he declared that was the first and the last Kolar he would ever engrave! It took him 10 months of work, start to finish.

One final detail from Eric. The top lever came to him with the pad of the lever already checked. Eric could not stand that! He sent the lever to an expert metal worker, who cut 2/3 of the lever off and welded on a blank of steel. With the blank canvas, Eric then custom-craved the lever to his satisfaction. He presented me the cut-off lever as a keepsake.

Paul finished the stock and forearms and returned them to Kolar. Kolar blued the barrels, and when the action came back from Eric, they did final assembly the gun. The only outstanding issue was the finish on the action. I had previously used Metalife, a proprietary hard chrome plating, to protect engraved actions. Metalife is super thin at .0005 – .00005, so it doesn’t cover up any of the engraving, yet will never separate nor peel off, and it is absolutely rust-proof. Unfortunately, we discovered through test plates that Metalife is so slick that gold inlays will not stay in place on a Metalife surface. Eric engraved on the raw 4140 steel, and although it is chrome moly, 4140 is not rust proof. We initially thought that Kolar could French Gray the action, which involves an acid wash process, but the fine detail of the bulino engraving nixed that. Upon consulting with the best gun finish experts, we decide to go Italian, i.e., to go bare metal with no finish. Eric mixed up some very fine black powder with some Reniassance Micro-Crystalline Wax to protect and highlight the engraving. In addition, I researched a couple dozen rust-preventive products, including calling their technical services. I settled on Corrosion-X, as it bonds to the metal and cannot be wiped off without solvent. This gun was built to shoot, not to sit in a safe. So I am very diligent about wiping the gun down after each outing, and 16 years later, it does not have a speck of rust.

After all that work, we took the gun to the 2005 FEGA convention and Eric entered it in every category it was eligible for as his only entry that year. It won every award, including the Connecticut Shotgun award and the top prize as the Engraver’s Choice award. It was also featured in a Shooting Sportsman article about Eric by Clair Kofoed and one of Tom Turpin’s books on fine custom guns. Many knowledgeable industry people considered it the finest firearm built that year.

I am sure many of the skeet shooters that were around Texas in the 2005-2008 time frame might remember this gun. A new job ended my skeet shooting after 2008, but I am back shooting sporting clays.

You can view photos of the gun below. Click on each photo to enlarge.

Filed Under: Clay Target Nation - ARTICLES Tagged With: clay target shooting, Kolar Elite Shotguns

84th Virginia State Skeet Championships

December 8, 2022 By Cara Woodard

The 84th Virginia State Skeet Championships were held at Fredericksburg Rod and Gun Club on September 8-11, 2022. The Club was ready and looked great, thanks to the hard work of Bud Hitchcock, Brian D’Souza, Nick Gravina, Jim Hart and others.

Wood – HOA CH

The shoot kicked off on Thursday with the 12-Gauge Preliminary Event and the first flights of doubles. Garrett Jordan posted a fine 100 to win the Preliminary Event.

Friday morning brought great weather conditions for the 28-gauge event, the start of the 20-gauge, and the last doubles flight. Conor Stephens captured the 28-gauge title, with John Snyder runner-up and Dick Weinley third. Class winners were Garrett Jordan (AA), Brian D’Souza (A), John Allen (B), Bob Myers (C) and Barry Akers (D). Class winners were awarded beautiful belt buckles, thanks to Virginia’s State Shoot Assistance Grant from NSSA. Tom Williams was the Doubles Champion, winning his fourth doubles title. Highlights of the evening included the presentation of VSSA Sportsman of the Year, awarded to Mark Parker, and Referee of the Year, awarded to James Reinhold. Kevin Baker won the drawing for a complimentary entry to the main events of the World Shoot.

Saturday evening marked two first-time state title winners and several personal bests. Junior shooter Ethan Shiflett shot his first 100 straight and won the 12-gauge title! John Snyder was runner-up and Meredith Tunick-Kling third. Class winners were Keythe Hancock (AA), Jim Hickerson (A), John Allen (B), Robert Williams (C), Allen Parker (D) and Cody Ellis (E). Jim Hart won the 20-gauge, Fred Wood was runner-up and Garrett Jordan third.

The B-C-D-E HOA shoot-off was the final shooting event for the day. Class winners were determined by shoot-offs, and the lucky winners (B-David Whipp III, C-Ethan Shiflett, D-Becky Myers) returned to the shoot-off field to vie for the cash prize generously donated by Mark Scott. When the dust settled, Ethan Shiflett continued his winning streak and was the 2022 B-C-D-E HOA winner.

Following shoot-offs, shooters and their guests sat down together to enjoy the Hall of Fame dinner hosted by Fredericksburg and prepared by Jeremiah Burns MGy Sgt USMC (Ret) and his crew from Jeremiah’s Kansas City BBQ. VSSA President Richard Haynie recognized the 2021 State Teams and presented their plaques. Then it was time for the highlight of the evening, the induction of Al Ange into the VSSA Hall of Fame. Al was accompanied by his wife Peggy and his family, and it was wonderful to celebrate his shooting accomplishments and contributions to our sport.

Sunday morning, September 11, brought us all together as we held a moment of silence at 8:46 a.m. to honor those who lost their lives in the attacks 21 years ago.

Fred Wood took top honors in the .410 event with an outstanding 98, followed by Brian D’Souza, runner-up, and Garrett Jordan, third. Class winners were Jim Hickerson (AA), Steve Kling (A), Savannah Morrow (B), Dale Flory (C) and Cody Ellis (D). High Over All title went to Fred Wood, runner-up to Conor Stephens and third to Garrett Jordan. Meredith Tunick-Kling was the Lady HOA champion. Savannah Morrow was Sub-Junior HOA winner, and Ethan Shiflett, 12-gauge champ, was the recipient of the Bond NSSA Life Membership Award. Our Sub-Junior and Junior shooters continue to enjoy the support and generosity of the Milton Mills Memorial awards and benefits, and the VSSA Award.

Many thanks to the outstanding Shoot Management Team – Mark Parker, our Chief Referee, Tonda Finney, Kristi Garstang and Darlene Jeffrey on the desk (and Darlene and Mark coordinating awards and trophies), and Bud Hitchcock for their tireless work to help make this shoot a success. We especially appreciate our dedicated referees, who come from far and near to help make this shoot happen.

We look forward to next year’s 85th Virginia State Skeet Championships, to be held at Arrowhead Gun Club, September 7-10, 2023.

– Contributed by Hannah Goddard

 

Filed Under: Clay Target Nation - ARTICLES, NSSA News, Skeet Events, Skeet News Tagged With: clay target shooting, NSSA, skeet, Virginia State Skeet Championships

86th Pennsylvania State Shoot

December 8, 2022 By Cara Woodard

PSSA held the 86th annual Pennsylvania State Open Skeet Championships at Shenecoy Sportsmen’s beautiful 16-field facility in McConnellstown, Pennsylvania, on August 26-28. The weather was great! Not too hot, not too humid, not much wind, no rain, not many clouds.

Two hundred nineteen participants shot at least one gun, including 50 out-of-state shooters (from AZ, CA, DE, FL, IL, IN, MD, NC, NY, OH, TX, VA, and WV); thank you so much for coming folks! There were 183 four-gun shooters. The shoot difficulty factor was 22.8.

Open HOA winners were Owen Knight (Champion, 397), Mike Rykacewski Jr. (runner-up, 397) and Nick Boerboon (third, 396). PA HOA winners were Rykacewski Jr. (champion), Boerboon (runner-up) and Chris Kline (third). Open HAA Champion and runner-up, respectively, were Kline (495) and Knight (493); Boerboon (492-PA) was third. PA HAA honors went to Kline (champion), Boerboon (runner-up) and Rykacewski Jr. (third).

The 28-gauge Prelim started the festivities on Friday morning with 59 shooters participating. The top score was 99, and there were three of them. After shooting off, Tyler Mroczka was Open Champion, Alyssa Gormish and Larry Blount, respectively, were Open runner-up and third. PA Prelim winners were Mrozcka (Champion), Alyssa Gormish (runner-up) and Ethan Cree (third). Mike Zavasky, Clay Gormish, Mark Eckert, Greg Valentine, and John Tucker, respectively, took PA class AA-D firsts.

There were 158 doubles shooters on Friday afternoon and two 100 straights. Chris Kline emerged as Open Champion by winning a shoot-off of the 100s with Alyssa Gormish, runner- up; Sam Armstrong was Open third. PA Champion, runner-up, and third, respectively, were Kline, Alyssa Gormish and Josh Crofutt. PA class firsts (AAA-D) went to Boerboon, Denny Lehman, Carl Biddle, Andy Trayer, Marcus Rosenstiel Jr., and Mike Rykacewski Sr. In the main event, there were ten 100 straights in both the 12 and 20, eight in the 28 and one in
the .410.

PA Champions, runners-up and thirds, respectively, were: Tyler Mroczka, Pat Leyo, and Adam Vollmer in the 12-gauge (215 shooters with PA shooters taking the top three Open spots); Jeff Holtz, Carl Bathurst and John Brickner in the 20 (205 shooters with Sam Armstrong Open Champion, Brian D’Souza Open runner-up, and Mike Stasio Open third; Tyler Mroczka, Mike Rykacewski Jr., and Tom Shields in the 28 (194 shooters with Kurt Suprynowicz Open Champion); and Nick Boerboon, Mike Rykacweski Jr., and Chris Kline in the .410 (187 shooters with PA shooters taking the top three Open spots).

Class first places (PA) were won by Mike Rykacewski Jr., Frank Smithmyer, Gary Nace, Allison Shaffer, Mark Strickland, Greg Mahoney and John Lavrich (12-gauge AAA-E); Nick Boerboon, Joe Vescovi, Pat Leyo, Ed Call, Joe Gans V and Kurt Fisher (20-gauge AAA-D); Joe Vescovi, Fran Kosmacki, Matt Sanders, Pat Leyo, Zak Sutton and Bill Plunkett (28-gauge AAA-D); and Adam Vollmer, Rich Vensel, Mark Saussure, Marcus Rosenstiel Jr., and Allison Shaffer (.410 bore AA-D).

Grant Glossner and Wade Smith, respectively, were Sub-Junior Open and PA HOA Champion and runner-up. Owen Knight, Zak Sutton and Marcus Rosenstiel Jr., respectively, were Junior Open HOA Champion, runner-up and third; Sutton, Rosenstiel Jr. and Colby Eckert, respectively, were PA HOA Champion, runner-up and third.

Open Lady HOA winners were Meredith Tunick Kling (Champion, 391), Sue Huszai (runner-up, 383) and Allison Shaffer (third, 379). PA Lady HOA winners were Allison Shaffer (Champion), Alyssa Gormish (runner-up) and Debra Meade third.

Saturday evening was busy, beginning with shoot-offs and several hat shoots. Evelyn Zutter had her first 25 straight, Gavin Glossner and Dan Amsler had their first 50 straights, and Allison Shaffer had her first 100 straight this weekend. All had their hats well ventilated. Chris Kline was inducted into the PSSA Skeet Shooting Hall of Fame. Chris has been one of Pennsylvania’s top skeet shooters for years, and he is one of the very best people in the
Pennsylvania skeet community. Congratulations, Chris!

PA’s top shooters for 2022 (2021 data) were recognized. Fran Kosmacki with a 0.9767 average was the state’s Top Gun. All-State First and Second teams were recognized, and each member received a nice wooden plaque. The First team included Fran Kosmacki, Mike Rykaczewski Jr., Josh Crofutt, Tom Hillard and Alyssa Gormish; Second Team members included Denny Lehman, Clay Gormish, Kenny Riddile, Gary Nace and Jack Harshbarger.

All Juniors and Sub-Juniors (25 shot in the 12 gauge) had 50% of their entry fees paid by PSSA.

Denny Lehman spearheaded a drive for the 2022 State Shoot that resulted in over $22,250 in added money. Many thanks to Denny, and especially to Elite Shotguns, the major sponsor of the PA State Shoot, who matched donations received from businesses and individuals up to $10,000. Special thanks also to all the businesses and individuals that made donations.

The PSSA President’s Cup award for 2021 was presented to Murry Gerber of Elite Shotguns in recognition of his ongoing and outstanding support of Pennsylvania skeet. Murray is leading from the front in growth of this sport, and we look forward to continued successes together.

Added money was capped so that gun champion, runner-up and third received $350, $250 and $150, respectively. All class first through fifth places received cash from added money (e.g., in the 12-gauge E1, E2, E3, E4, and E5 received $75, $70, $65, $60, $55, respectively).

In a field of 43 shooters, Guy Barr won the BCDE Challenge shoot-off and received $220. Class champs, B-E respectively, were Tyler Mroczka, Colby Eckert, Ethan Cree and John Lavrich, and each received $75. All winners were from PA.

The Three-Man Team event involved 16 teams picked by the computer. The winning team included Randy Browning, Brian D’Souza and Allison Shaffer, whose 12-gauge scores were 97, 95 and 93, respectively. Each received $80.

The 5-person team belt buckle championship involved 10 teams. The event started and finished on Station 3 with the second team up breaking nine of 10 birds (5 doubles) and none of the other nine teams matching that total. The winning team members, from Tarentum District Sportsmen’s Club near Sarver, PA, were Josh Crofutt, Murry Gerber, Mike Rykacewski Jr., Mike Rykacewski Sr. and Bob Waite. Each received a beautiful belt buckle.

Five shooters participated in the HOA handicap option on Sunday afternoon. Nick Boerboon, Chris Kline and Rich Vensel were first-, second- and third-place winners.

Tyler Mrozcka had quite a weekend shooting his first 100-straight in the 12-gauge and then breaking his first 100-straight in the 28-gauge as an encore. His hat was demolished, of course. Tyler was Open Champion in the Prelim and 12 and PA Champion in the 28.

Members of the Petersburg Volunteer Fire Company provided the delicious catered dinner for all, at no extra cost to the shooters and their guests, on Saturday night. Many thanks to John Ramagli who graciously donated this dinner!

Kudos to Tami Daniel-Means and her hubby Al for handling registration, score keeping and posting; Bobby Wilkin, Chief Referee and shoot-off announcer and his outstanding group of referees; the Generations Skeet Club team who handled medal preparation and distribution; and Nick Boerboon, PSSA President, who was involved in most everything, in addition to shooting lights out.

Special thanks to the following folks whose hard work was greatly appreciated: Barry and Lori Sheffield and all the Shenecoy people who always work so hard; Rod Shyda (Lincoln Traps); Bob Woods (Elite Shotguns); and Wendy and Steve Dunmire and crew (Petersburg Volunteer Fire Company) for running the kitchen throughout the shoot and providing tasty food. Make sure to mark your calendars for the 2023 Pennsylvania State Skeet Shoot which will be held at Shenecoy on August 18-20. We are anticipating having $20,000 plus added money again, along with many other great things.

– Contributed by George Gleich

 

Filed Under: Clay Target Nation - ARTICLES, NSSA News, NSSA Shoot Reports, Skeet, Skeet Events Tagged With: clay target shooting, NSSA, Pennsylvania State Skeet Championship, skeet

Alabama State Sporting Clays Championship

December 8, 2022 By Cara Woodard

Edward Guice, C Class Champion

The fall colors and cool, comfortable weather rolled in perfectly to support the 2022 Alabama State Championship at Bright Star Sporting Clays, October 6-9. Bright Star Sporting Clays is a family-owned operation that started as a few practice machines for owner Jason Jackson and his son. It has grown from its humble beginnings to a full course that throws more registered sporting birds than any other range in Alabama.

Jason brought in Corey Howell, of Howell Traps, and Dean Blanchard to set the courses and provide additional machines for the Sub-Gauge, AFS, FITASC, True Pair and Super Sporting courses. Shooters from Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia, Mississippi, Florida and one from Ohio attended to test their skills and enjoy the welcoming atmosphere.

The Prelim and Main Event were set in the wooded area of the property, while all other events were set on the rolling pasture land of the property. Jason wanted courses where everyone would have fun and still be challenged.

Corey and Dean delivered perfectly with courses that tested all but allowed everyone to break their fair share. The shadows and filtered sunlight on the leaves of the Prelim and Main courses presented added challenges of their own, beyond the wide variety of birds set.

The Friday Prelim finished up with a four-way tie at a score of 98. The shoot-off for all the ties were conducted on the Super Sporting course, but with 20 to 30 yards added to the shooting distance and throwing true pairs. It was  literally like a true pair long-bird competition and a lot of fun. The Prelim was won by Jeff Cramblit, with Brad Collins taking runner-up and Chuck Cranford winning the 12-gauge event.

The Saturday Main Event course ended with several Masters in the mid- to high-90s, but the leaders were Alex Ryan Clark of Georgia and two-time Alabama State Champion Chuck Cranford tied at 98. Chuck was having a tremendous weekend competing in 9 of the 10 events offered at the tournament. He ended up with four HOAs, one runner-up and a Master first.

For most, Sunday’s Main course proved more challenging, but not for Junior shooter Hunter Stover of Mobile, Alabama. Hunter succeeded in shooting an amazing score of 99, a full three birds ahead of the nearest competitor and enough to win him his first Alabama State High Overall title. Chuck Cranford’s scores were good enough to hold on to the runner-up position, and Alex Ryan Clark was third, also taking the Non-Resident High Overall.

Alabama shooters didn’t win everything; one of Mississippi’s top shooters, Steven Tzotzolas, stepped in and won the True Pair event. High Lady was won by Alabama Junior shooter and match photographer, Katie Skinner. For full results, visit ScoreChaser.com.

The Alabama State was very much a family-oriented tournament with many father/son, husband/wife pairs shooting together. For Hunter Stover and his father Benny Stover, it was a very rewarding crown to years of competition.

For Bruce Park, it was his first major tournament and also the first he had shot with his son Sumter, who won D class in both the Main Event and Super Sporting, while dad earned punches in a tie for C1 in Super Sporting.

All three of the Alabama NSCA delegates were in attendance, and all three took home awards. Rocky McCluskey was runner-up in AFS, Perry Johnson took A1 honors in both AFS and FITASC, and Steve Dickinson was M3 in the Prelim event.

It seemed as though everyone won something. Reviewing the payouts on ScoreChaser, over 80 of the shooters won a part of the very generous $18,000+ payout. The tournament sponsors were Albertville PowerQuip Kubota, Atlas Traps, Howell Traps, Comp-N-Choke, Sand Mountain Toyota, White Flyer, and Lake Guntersville Tourism Board.

Everyone seemed very happy with the tournament, thought it ran smoothly and was having a good time. The Saturday evening dinner was catered by the local SCTP group and was delicious. Thanks to all the SCTP shooters and family who took on the duties as trappers for the event.

Bright Star and the Jacksons wanted to put on a match where everyone had fun, promoted fellowship and camaraderie, and felt like they were a part of something, and it seemed the crowd agreed they succeeded. Many were already looking forward to and planning for next year’s event.

– Contributed by Jeff Cramblit

Photos by Katie Skinner

Filed Under: Clay Target Nation - ARTICLES, NSCA News, NSSA News, NSSA Shoot Reports, Shoot Reports, Skeet, Skeet Events, Sporting Clays Tagged With: Alabama State Sporting Clays Championship, clay target shooting, NSCA, sporting clays

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