Sports / Skeet / Olympic Skeet

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

Olympic Skeet Final

After qualification, the top 6 shooters advance to the elimination final. Learn about the medal round format, elimination process, and strategies for competing in finals.

Learn About Olympic Skeet Final

Organizations

International Shooting Sport Federation (ISSF)

The governing body for Olympic Skeet worldwide. ISSF sets the rules, sanctions international competitions, and organizes the Olympic Games shooting events. Founded in 1907, ISSF ensures consistent standards across all member nations.

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Olympic Competition

Olympic Skeet has been part of the Summer Olympics since 1968. Both men's and women's events are contested, with qualification rounds of 125 targets followed by elimination finals.

Major Tournaments

Olympic Games

Every 4 years - Men's and Women's events

ISSF World Championships

Annual - Rotating locations worldwide

ISSF World Cup Series

Multiple events annually - Global circuit

Continental Championships

European, Asian, Pan American Championships

Getting Started in Competition

1

Master Low Gun Position

Practice mounting from low position thousands of times - this is the foundation

2

Train with Random Delays

Practice with random delay system to develop reaction time and patience

3

Enter ISSF Competitions

Start with local ISSF-sanctioned events, work toward World Cup qualification

4

Build Consistency

Aim for consistent 120+ scores in qualification to be competitive

Competition Format

ISSF Olympic Skeet competitions follow a standardized format:

Qualification Round

125 targets (5 rounds of 25) - top 6 advance

Final Round

25 targets with elimination after each 5 targets

Medal Determination

Gold/Silver from final, Bronze from qualification score

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