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Olympic Skeet

The world's fastest and most challenging skeet discipline

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125 targets qualification
8 stations (Station 4 shot twice)
Governed by ISSF

What is Olympic Skeet?

Olympic Skeet is the most challenging and fastest form of skeet shooting in the world. Governed by the International Shooting Sport Federation (ISSF), it features random delays, low gun position, and faster targets than any other skeet discipline. The sport demands lightning-fast reflexes, perfect gun mounting, and unwavering mental discipline.

The field layout is identical to American Skeet with two trap houses (high and low) and eight shooting stations arranged in a semicircle. However, Olympic Skeet introduces critical challenges: targets launch with a random delay of 0-3 seconds after calling "Pull," and shooters must hold the gun below shoulder level until the target appears. Station 4 is unique - it is shot twice during the round (once in the middle and once at the end).

A qualification round consists of 125 targets shot over five rounds of 25 targets each. The top six competitors advance to a 25-target final where elimination rounds determine medal winners. Missing even one target can mean the difference between gold and silver.

History

Skeet shooting became an Olympic sport in 1968 at the Mexico City Games, using the American format. However, the International Shooting Sport Federation (ISSF) developed a more challenging version with random delays and low gun position to increase difficulty and test pure reflexes.

Olympic Skeet was introduced as a separate discipline in 1996, featuring the random delay system and mandatory low gun position. These changes transformed the sport from a predictable sequence into a true test of instinctive shooting, reaction time, and mental discipline.

Today, Olympic Skeet remains one of the most demanding shotgun disciplines, with world-class shooters regularly achieving perfect scores of 125 in qualification. The discipline continues to evolve with equipment improvements and training methods, but the core challenge of random timing and low gun position remains unchanged.

Key Characteristics

Random Delay

Target launches with random delay of 0-3 seconds after calling "Pull" - no predictability

Low Gun Position

Gun buttstock must be held at hip level (ready position) until target appears - no pre-mounting allowed

Faster Targets

Targets travel faster than American Skeet, requiring quicker reactions

Olympic Format

125 targets qualification, top 6 advance to 25-target elimination final

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