ISSF 25 meter rapid fire pistol

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25 meter rapid fire pistol is one of the ISSF shooting events and is shot with .22 LR pistols. The event has been a part of the Olympic program ever since the beginning in 1896, although its rules changed greatly before World War II, after which they were only slightly changed until the two major revisions of 1989 and 2005. The latter restricted the event to sport pistols, thereby banning .22 Short cartridge (last used in 2004 and replaced by .22 Long Rifle in 2005) as well as encircling grips and low trigger-pull weight. This caused a decline in results, as evidenced by a comparison of the world records under the pre-2005 rules (597) and post-2005 rules (593).

25Metre Rapid Fire Pistol
Men
Number of shots2×30 + 40
Olympic GamesSince 1896
World ChampionshipsSince 1933
AbbreviationRFP

Instead of dropping specialized rapid fire pistols, manufacturers designed new pistols, such as the Walther SSP, conforming to the standard pistol requirements, but optimized for the rapid fire event.

Course of fire

The centers of the targets are 75 cm apart, and the 10 score zone has a diameter of 10 cm.
When paper targets (as opposed to electronic scoring systems) are used, thin scoring rings are printed on the target. The thick aiming lines are present in both versions.

Traditionally, RFP competitions use paper targets that are able to turn 90 degrees to appear to the shooter and then turn back to disappear when the shooting time is up. During the last few decades, these targets have gradually been replaced by electronic devices which use red and green lights to indicate the beginning and the end of the shooting time, and which automatically handle late shots. As these systems are expensive, they are normally only used in international competitions.

A series (or string) consists of five shots fired at one target each within a limited time. The targets stand next to each other at a 25 m distance from the shooter. As with all ISSF pistol disciplines, all firing must be done with one unsupported hand. When the targets appear or when the green light comes on, the competitor must raise his arm from a 45 degree angle starting position and fire his five shots. If a shot is too late, it will score as a miss.

There are three different time limits for the series: 8 seconds, 6 seconds, and 4 seconds. A stage consists of two series of each type, and a full course of fire comprises two such stages, or a total of 60 shots. Since the targets are divided into concentric score zones with 10 being the most central part, the total maximum score is 600.

In major competitions, the top six shooters qualify for a final round of four additional 4-second series, with a shot scoring at or above 9.7 being counted as a hit, or a miss otherwise. The results of the qualification round and the final are added together, and any ties are broken by firing an additional 4-second series.

World Championships, Men

YearPlaceGoldSilverBronze
1933 Granada  Andre Charles Des Jamonnieres J. (FRA)  Cristobal Tauler Alos (ESP)  Luis Calvet Sandoz (ESP)
1935 Rome  Walter Boninsegni (ITA)  František Pokorný (TCH)  Arturo Gonzalez Costello (ESP)
1937 Helsinki  Kārlis Kļava (LAT)  Pranas Giedrimas (LTU)  Erik Ljungqvist (FIN)
1939 Luzern  Torsten Ullman (SWE)  Cornelius van Oyen (GER)  Jonas Miliauskas (LTU)
1947 Stockholm  Carlos Enrique Díaz Sáenz Valiente (ARG)  Constantin Mylonas (GRE)  Sven Lundquist (SWE)
1949 Buenos Aires  Huelet Benner (USA)  Harry Wendell Reeves (USA)  Leonard Ravilo (FIN)
1952 Oslo  Huelet Benner (USA)  Penait Calcai (ROM)  Carlos Enrique Díaz Sáenz Valiente (ARG)
1954 Caracas  Nikolai Kalinichenko (URS)  William McMillan (USA)  Pentti Linnosvuo (FIN)
1958 Moscow  Aleksandr Kropotin (URS)  Alexander Zabelin (URS)  Ștefan Petrescu (ROM)
1962 Cairo  Alexander Zabelin (URS)  Igor Bakalov (URS)  James Henderson McNally (USA)
1966 Wiesbaden  Virgil Atanasiu (ROM)  Józef Zapędzki (POL)  Renart Suleimanov (URS)
1970 Phoenix  Giovanni Liverzani (ITA)  Ladislav Falta (TCH)  Weselin Petkov (BUL)
1974 Thun  Alfred Radke (FRG)  Heinz Weissenberger (FRG)  Viktor Torshin (URS)
1978 Seoul  Ove Gunnarsson (SWE)  Werner Beier (FRG)  Gerhard Petritsch (AUT)
1982 Caracas  Igor Puzirev (URS)  Ove Gunnarsson (SWE)  Alfred Radke (FRG)
1986 Suhl  Adam Kaczmarek (POL)  Andrzej Macur (POL)  Ralf Schumann (GDR)
1990 Moscow  Ralf Schumann (GDR)  Miroslav Ignatiuk (URS)  Petri Eteläniemi (FIN)
1994 Milan  Krzysztof Kucharczyk (POL)  Emil Milev (BUL)  Ralf Schumann (GER)
1998 Barcelona  Ralf Schumann (GER)  Daniel Leonhard (GER)  Iulian Raicea (ROM)
2002 Lahti  Marco Spangenberg (GER)  Ralf Schumann (GER)  Niki Marty (SUI)
2006 Zagreb  Zhang Penghui (CHN)  Liu Zhongsheng (CHN)  Sergei Alifirenko (RUS)
2010 Munich  Alexei Klimov (RUS)  Zhang Jian (CHN)  Li Yuehong (CHN)
2014 Granada  Kim Jun-hong (KOR)  Oliver Geis (GER)  Li Yuehong (CHN)
2018 Changwon  Lin Junmin (CHN)  Zhang Jian (CHN)  Jean Quiquampoix (FRA)
2022 New Administrative Capital  Lee Gun-hyeok (KOR)  Clément Bessaguet (FRA)  Ghulam Mustafa Bashir (PAK)

World Championships, Men's Team

YearPlaceGoldSilverBronze
1937 Helsinki Finland
Vilho Elo
Erik Ljungqvist
Arvo Odenvall
Jaakko Rintanen
Sulo Cederström
Lithuania
Pranas Giedrimas
Kazys Sruoga
Antanas Jelenskas
Antanas Karčiauskas
Antanas Mamžeika
Germany
Fritz Bucherer
Hans Funck
Walter Hartwig
Paul Jasper
Cornelius van Oyen
1939 Luzern Hungary
Laszlo Badinszky
Lajos Borzsonyi Dr.
Ede Domby
Károly Takács
Laszlo Vadnay
Lithuania
Pranas Giedrimas
Vladas Nakutis
Antanas Mamžeika
Jonas Miliauskas
Antanas Jelenskas
Germany
Fritz Bucherer
Ludwig Leupold
Walter L.
Cornelius van Oyen
Zindel M.
1947 Stockholm Italy
Ferdinando Bernini
Bertoni G.
Linari F.
Mazzavillani B.
Finland
Väinö Heusala
Matti Kallio
Mauri Kuokka
Leonard Ravilo
Greece
Evangelos Chryssafis
Angelos Papadimas
Constantin Mylonas
Georges Vichos
1949 Buenos Aires Argentina
Carlos Enrique Díaz Sáenz Valiente
Dionisio Fernández
Oscar Rosendo Cervo
Enrique Furtado
Finland
Väinö Heusala
Matti Kallio
Leonard Ravilo
Eino Saarnikko
United States
Huelet Benner
Hancock W.
Logie C.
Harry Wendell Reeves
1952 Oslo United States
Huelet Benner
Walter Devine
William McMillan
Harry Wendell Reeves
Finland
Väinö Heusala
Veli-Jussi Hölsö
Leonard Ravilo
Lauri Toikka
Argentina
Cabral G.
Oscar Rosendo Cervo
Schack E.
Carlos Enrique Díaz Sáenz Valiente
1954 Caracas Soviet Union
Evgeni Cherkassov
Nikolai Kalinichenko
Victor Nasonov
Oleg Zhgutov
United States
Huelet Benner
William McMillan
Thomas Mitchell
Philip Clay Roettinger
Finland
Väinö Heusala
Pentti Linnosvuo
Leonard Ravilo
Lauri Toikka
1958 Moscow Soviet Union
Evgeni Cherkassov
Aleksandr Kropotin
Victor Nasonov
Alexander Zabelin
United States
Huelet Benner
William McMillan
Miller D.
Aubrey Smith
Hungary
Aladár Dobsa
József Gyönyörű
Ferenc Kun
Károly Takács
1962 Cairo Soviet Union
Efim Haydurov
Igor Bakalov
Renart Suleimanov
Alexander Zabelin
 United States
James Henderson McNally
William McMillan
Aubrey Smith
Cecil Wallis
Italy
Ugo Amicosante
Giovanni Liverzani
Roberto Mazzoni
Sergio Varetto
1966 Wiesbaden Soviet Union
Igor Bakalov
Stanislav Frantsevski
Renart Suleimanov
Alexander Zabelin
Romania
Virgil Atanasiu
Mihai Dumitriu
Marcel Roşca
Ion Tripşa
East Germany
Gerhard Feller
Gerhard Dommrich
Christian Duering
Lothar Pinnig
1970 Phoenix Czechoslovakia
Ladislav Falta
Vladimír Hurt
Rudolf Kolinek
Lubomír Nácovský
Romania
Virgil Atanasiu
Dan Iuga
Marcel Roșca
Ion Tripșa
Italy
Ugo Amicosante
Roberto Ferraris
Giovanni Liverzani
Silvano Mignardi
1974 Thun Soviet Union
Yuri Alekhin
Afanasijs Kuzmins
Victor Torshin
Mikhail Ziubko
Czechoslovakia
Vladimír Hurt
Vladimír Hyka
Jan Kotora
Lubomír Nácovský
Romania
Virgil Atanasiu
Corneliu Ion
Marin Stan
Marcel Roșca
1978 Seoul West Germany
Werner Beier
Alfred Radke
Helmut Seeger
Heinz Weissenberger
Italy
Rolando Comazzetto
Roberto Ferraris
Gianfranco Mantelli
Alberto Sevieri
Sweden
Curt Andersson
Ove Gunnarsson
Boo Levin
Ragnar Skanåker
1982 Caracas Soviet Union
Afanasijs Kuzmins
Igor Puzirev
Sergei Rysev
Vladimir Vokhmianin
Romania
Gratian Calota
Corneliu Ion
Suliu V.
Marin Stan
Hungary
László Orbán
Laszlo Nemeth
Gábor Plank
Istvan Szalai
1986 Suhl Soviet Union
Afanasijs Kuzmins
Oleg Tkachyov
Vladimir Vokhmianin
Hungary
Csaba Hell
Zoltan Kovacs
László Orbán
East Germany
Roger Herzig
Peter Schumann
Juergen Wiefel
1990 Moscow Soviet Union
Miroslav Ignatiuk
Afanasijs Kuzmins
Victor Torshin
Hungary
László Balogh
Zoltan Kovacs
Lajos Pálinkás
Switzerland
Otto Keller
Anton Kuechler
Hansrudolf Schneider
1994 Milan Poland
Adam Kaczmarek
Andrzej Macur
Krzysztof Kucharczyk

Meng Gang
Wang Runxi
Zhang Ruimin
Hungary
István Jambrik
Sándor Kacskó
Lajos Pálinkás
1998 Barcelona
Ralf Schumann
Daniel Leonhard
Lars Uehlin

Ji Haiping
Zhang Penghui
Meng Gang

Shoichi Uenosono
Tomohiro Kida
Shuji Tazawa
2002 Lahti
Ralf Schumann
Marco Spangenberg
Klaus-Dieter Schmidt

Ji Haiping
Liu Guohui
Zhang Penghui
Ukraine
Oleg Tkachyov
Roman Bondaruk
Taras Magmet
2006 Zagreb
Zhang Penghui
Liu Zhongsheng
Liu Guohui
Russia
Sergei Alifirenko
Sergei Poliakov
Alexei Klimov
Italy
Marco Liberato
Riccardo Mazzetti
Nicola Nello Pizzi
2010 Munich
Zhang Jian
Li Yuehong
Ding Feng
Russia
Alexei Klimov
Leonid Ekimov
Dmitry Brayko
 United States
Brad Balsley
Keith Sanderson
Emil Milev
2014 Granada
Oliver Geis
Christian Reitz
Aaron Sauter
Czech Republic
Tomas Tehan
Martin Podhráský
Martin Strnad
Russia
Leonid Ekimov
Alexei Klimov
Alexander Alifirenko
2018 Changwon
Lin Junmin
Zhang Jian
Yao Zhaonan

Oliver Geis
Christian Reitz
Christian Freckmann
South Korea
Kim Jun-hong
Song Jong-ho
Park Jun-woo
2022 New Administrative Capital  China
Li Yuehong
Lu Zhiming
Zhang Jueming
 Ukraine
Maksym Horodynets
Pavlo Korostylov
Denys Kushnirov
 Korea
Kim Seo-jun
Lee Jae-kyoon
Lee Gun-hyeok

World Championships, Women

YearPlaceGoldSilverBronze
1962 Cairo  Sofia Tiagni (URS)  Nadezhda Yulina (URS)  Gertrude Schernitzauer (USA)

World Championships, Mixed

YearPlaceGoldSilverBronze
2022 New Administrative Capital  Ukraine
Yulia Korostylova
Maksym Horodynets
 India
Simranpreet Kaur Brar
Anish Bhanwala
 Korea
Kim Jang-mi
Kim Seo-jun

World Championships, total medals

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Soviet Union134320
2  China65213
3  Germany55313
4  United States35412
5  Poland3205
6  Italy3137
7  West Germany2215
8  Sweden2125
9  Argentina2024
10  Romania1438
11  Finland1359
12  Czechoslovakia1304
13  Hungary1236
14  Russia1214
15  East Germany1034
16  France1012
 South Korea1012
18  Latvia1001
19  Lithuania0314
20  Spain0123
21  Bulgaria0112
 Greece0112
23  Czech Republic0101
24  Switzerland0022
25  Austria0011
 Japan0011
 Ukraine0011
Totals (27 entries)484647141

Current world records

Current world records in 25 metre rapid fire pistol
MenQualification593  Christian Reitz (GER)
 Kim Jun-hong (KOR)
July 30, 2013
July 6, 2014
Osijek (CRO)
Beijing (CHN)
edit
Final38  Kim Jun-hong (KOR)April 25, 2018Changwon (KOR)
Teams1756  China (Zhang, Lin, Yao)September 10, 2018Changwon (KOR)edit
Junior MenIndividual589  Jean Quiquampoix (FRA)
 Zhu Haojie (CHN)
 Peter Florian (GER)
July 26, 2015
September 10, 2018
September 15, 2019
Maribor (SLO)
Changwon (KOR)
Bologna (ITA)
Final35  Zhu Haojie (CHN)September 10, 2018Changwon (KOR)
Teams1747  China (Zhu, Cheng, Pan)September 10, 2018Changwon (KOR)

Olympic and World Champions

The dominant shooter of the event has been Ralf Schumann of Germany with a total of five major World-level Championship titles, with three Olympic gold medals and two Individual World titles. He is the first and one of the only two shooters to have won a particular Olympic event three times, and is the first of three shooters to have won three individual Olympic titles. Károly Takács and Józef Zapędzki also won two consecutive Olympic titles. Huelet Benner won two consecutive World Championships.

A rare double is that between this rapid fire event and its direct opposite 50 metre pistol; this has only been accomplished by Alfred Lane (completed in 1912), Torsten Ullman (1939), Huelet Benner (1952) and Pentti Linnosvuo (1964), with Lane (both events at the 1912 Olympics) and Linnosvuo using only Olympic titles. Benner, on the other hand, is the only shooter with two titles in both events.

YearVenueIndividualTeam
1896[a]Athens  Ioannis Frangoudis (GRE)
Alfred Lane at the 1912 Olympics
1900[b]Paris  Maurice Larrouy (FRA)
1912[c]Stockholm  Alfred Lane (USA)  Sweden
1920[d][1]Antwerp  Guilherme Paraense (BRA)  United States
1924Paris  Henry Bailey (USA)
1932Los Angeles  Renzo Morigi (ITA)
1933Granada  Charles des Jammonières (FRA)
1935Rome  Walter Boninsegni (ITA)
1936Berlin  Cornelius van Oyen (GER)
1937Helsinki  Kārlis Kļava (LAT)  Finland
1939Luzern  Torsten Ullman (SWE)  Hungary
1947Stockholm  Carlos Enrique Díaz Sáenz Valiente (ARG)  Italy
1948London  Károly Takács (HUN)
1949Buenos Aires  Huelet Benner (USA)  Argentina
1952Oslo  Huelet Benner (USA)  United States
1952Helsinki  Károly Takács (HUN)
1954Caracas  Nikolai Kalinichenko (URS)  Soviet Union
1956Melbourne  Ştefan Petrescu (ROU)
1958Moscow  Alexander Kropotin (URS)  Soviet Union
Károly Takács, the first double Olympic Champion, competing in 1961
1960Rome  William McMillan (USA)
1962Cairo  Alexander Zabelin (URS)  Soviet Union
1964Tokyo  Pentti Linnosvuo (FIN)
1966Wiesbaden  Virgil Atanasiu (ROU)  Soviet Union
1968Mexico City  Józef Zapędzki (POL)
1970Phoenix  Giovanni Liverzani (ITA)  Czechoslovakia
1972Munich  Józef Zapędzki (POL)
1974Thun  Alfred Radke (FRG)  Soviet Union
1976Montreal  Norbert Klaar (GDR)
1978Seoul  Ove Gunnarsson (SWE)  West Germany
1980Moscow  Corneliu Ion (ROU)
1982Caracas  Igor Puzirev (URS)  Soviet Union
1984Los Angeles  Takeo Kamachi (JPN)
1986Suhl  Adam Kaczmarek (POL)  Soviet Union
1988Seoul  Afanasijs Kuzmins (URS)
1990Moscow  Ralf Schumann (GDR)  Soviet UnionJuniors
1992Barcelona  Ralf Schumann (GER)IndividualTeam
1994Milan  Krzysztof Kucharczyk (POL)  Poland  Joseph Gonzalez (USA)  Germany
1996Atlanta  Ralf Schumann (GER)
1998Barcelona  Ralf Schumann (GER)  Germany  Jorge Llames (ESP)  Germany
2000Sydney  Sergei Alifirenko (RUS)
2002Lahti  Marco Spangenberg (GER)  Germany  Martin Behrendt (GER)  Germany
2004Athens  Ralf Schumann (GER)
2006Zagreb  Zhang Penghui (CHN)  China  Christian Reitz (GER)  Russia
2008Beijing  Oleksandr Petriv (UKR)
2010Munich  Alexei Klimov (RUS)  China  Zhou Zhiguo (CHN)  China
2012London  Leuris Pupo (CUB)
2014Granada  Kim Jun Hong (KOR)  Germany  Jean Quiquampoix (FRA)  China
2016Rio de Janeiro  Christian Reitz (GER)
2021Tokyo  Jean Quiquampoix (FRA)

References

External links