Free pistol at the Olympics

The "free" pistol is former and still unofficially used name for the men's ISSF 50 meter pistol competition held at the Olympics. "Free" pistol is used to distinguish between other pistol disciplines (air, rapid fire, standard, sport, military/centre-fire). The competition was first held at the inaugural 1896 Olympics (at 30 metres) and then held at 50 metres (or yards, in 1908) each time that shooting was on the programme (that is, excluding 1904) until 1920. It was dropped from the programme for amateurism reasons from 1924 to 1932, but returned in 1936. It was held again at every Games from then until 2016; the event, which had no women's equivalent, was dropped after 2016 to make room for a mixed team air pistol event as the sport moved toward gender equality. In all, the event was held 24 times.[1] The event was nominally open to women from 1968 to 1980, although very few women participated these years.

ISSF 50 meter pistol
at the Olympic Games
Alfred Lane, 1912 Olympic pistol champion
Overview
SportShooting
GenderMen
Years heldMen: 1896, 1900, 19081920, 19362016
Reigning champion
Men Jin Jong-oh (KOR)

A team event was held four times from 1904 to 1920.

Medals

Men

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1896 Athens
Sumner Paine
 United States
Holger Nielsen
 Denmark
Ioannis Frangoudis
 Greece
1900 Paris
Karl Röderer
 Switzerland
Achille Paroche
 France
Konrad Stäheli
 Switzerland
1904 St. Louis Not held
1908 London
Paul Van Asbroeck
 Belgium
Réginald Storms
 Belgium
James Gorman
 United States
1912 Stockholm
Alfred Lane
 United States
Peter Dolfen
 United States
Charles Stewart
 Great Britain
1920 Antwerp
Karl Frederick
 United States
Afrânio da Costa
 Brazil
Alfred Lane
 United States
1924 Paris Not held
1928 Amsterdam Not held
1932 Los Angeles Not held
1936 Berlin
Torsten Ullman
 Sweden
Erich Krempel
 Germany
Charles des Jammonières
 France
1948 London
Edwin Vásquez
 Peru
Rudolf Schnyder
 Switzerland
Torsten Ullman
 Sweden
1952 Helsinki
Huelet Benner
 United States
Ángel León
 Spain
Ambrus Balogh
 Hungary
1956 Melbourne
Pentti Linnosvuo
 Finland
Makhmud Umarov
 Soviet Union
Offutt Pinion
 United States
1960 Rome
Aleksey Gushchin
 Soviet Union
Makhmud Umarov
 Soviet Union
Yoshihisa Yoshikawa
 Japan
1964 Tokyo
Väinö Markkanen
 Finland
Franklin Green
 United States
Yoshihisa Yoshikawa
 Japan
1968 Mexico City
(mixed)
Grigory Kosykh
 Soviet Union
Heinz Mertel
 West Germany
Harald Vollmar
 East Germany
1972 Munich
(mixed)
Ragnar Skanåker
 Sweden
Daniel Iuga
 Romania
Rudolf Dollinger
 Austria
1976 Montreal
(mixed)
Uwe Potteck
 East Germany
Harald Vollmar
 East Germany
Rudolf Dollinger
 Austria
1980 Moscow
(mixed)
Aleksandr Melentyev
 Soviet Union
Harald Vollmar
 East Germany
Lyubcho Dyakov
 Bulgaria
1984 Los Angeles
Xu Haifeng
 China
Ragnar Skanåker
 Sweden
Wang Yifu
 China
1988 Seoul
Sorin Babii
 Romania
Ragnar Skanåker
 Sweden
Igor Basinski
 Soviet Union
1992 Barcelona
Kanstantsin Lukashyk
 Unified Team
Wang Yifu
 China
Ragnar Skanåker
 Sweden
1996 Atlanta
Boris Kokorev
 Russia
Igor Basinski
 Belarus
Roberto Di Donna
 Italy
2000 Sydney
Tanyu Kiryakov
 Bulgaria
Igor Basinski
 Belarus
Martin Tenk
 Czech Republic
2004 Athens
Mikhail Nestruyev
 Russia
Jin Jong-oh
 South Korea
Kim Jong-su
 North Korea
2008 Beijing
Jin Jong-oh
 South Korea
Tan Zongliang
 China
Vladimir Isakov
 Russia
2012 London
Jin Jong-Oh
 South Korea
Choi Young-Rae
 South Korea
Wang Zhiwei
 China
2016 Rio de Janeiro
Jin Jong-oh
 South Korea
Hoàng Xuân Vinh
 Vietnam
Kim Song-guk
 North Korea

Multiple medalists

Rank Gymnast Nation Olympics Gold Silver Bronze Total
1Jin Jong-oh South Korea (KOR)2004–20163104
2Ragnar Skanåker Sweden (SWE)1972, 1984–19921214
3Alfred Lane United States (USA)1912–19201012
Torsten Ullman Sweden (SWE)1936–19481012
5Harald Vollmar East Germany (GDR)1968, 1976–19800213
Igor Basinski Soviet Union (URS)
 Belarus (BLR)
1988, 1996–20000213
7Makhmud Umarov Soviet Union (URS)1956–19600202
8Wang Yifu China (CHN)1988–19920112
9Yoshihisa Yoshikawa Japan (JPN)1960–19640022
Rudolf Dollinger Austria (AUT)1972–19760022

Medalists by nation

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 United States (USA)4239
2 Soviet Union (URS)3216
3 South Korea (KOR)3205
4 Sweden (SWE)2226
5 Russia (RUS)2013
6 Finland (FIN)2002
7 China (CHN)1225
8 East Germany (GDR)1214
9 Switzerland (SUI)1113
10 Belgium (BEL)1102
 Romania (ROU)1102
12 Bulgaria (BUL)1012
13 Peru (PER)1001
 Unified Team (EUN)1001
15 Belarus (BLR)0202
16 France (FRA)0112
17 Brazil (BRA)0101
 Denmark (DEN)0101
 Germany (GER)0101
 West Germany (FRG)0101
 Spain (ESP)0101
 Vietnam (VIE)0101
23 Austria (AUT)0022
 Japan (JPN)0022
 North Korea (PRK)0022
26 Czech Republic (CZE)0011
 Great Britain (GBR)0011
 Greece (GRE)0011
 Hungary (HUN)0011
 Italy (ITA)0011

Team rapid fire pistol

Men

Games Gold Silver Bronze
1900 Stockholm
Friedrich Lüthi, Paul Probst, Louis Richardet, Karl Röderer, Konrad Stäheli
 Switzerland
Louis Duffoy, Maurice Lecoq, Léon Moreaux, Achille Paroche, Jules Trinité
 France
Solko van den Bergh, Antonius Bouwens, Dirk Boest Gips, Henrik Sillem, Anthony Sweijs
 Netherlands
1908 Stockholm
Charles Axtell, Irving Calkins, John Dietz, James Gorman
 United States
René Englebert, Charles Paumier du Verger, Réginald Storms, Paul Van Asbroeck
 Belgium
Geoffrey Coles, William Ellicott, Henry Lynch-Staunton, Jesse Wallingford
 Great Britain
1912 Stockholm
John Dietz, Peter Dolfen, Alfred Lane, Henry Sears
 United States
Erik Boström, Eric Carlberg, Vilhelm Carlberg, Georg de Laval
 Sweden
Hugh Durant, Albert Kempster, Horatio Poulter, Charles Stewart
 Great Britain
1920 Antwerp
Raymond Bracken, Karl Frederick, Michael Kelly, Alfred Lane, James H. Snook
 United States
Anders Andersson, Gunnar Gabrielsson, Sigvard Hultcrantz, Anders Johnson, Casimir Reuterskiöld
 Sweden
Dario Barbosa, Afrânio da Costa, Guilherme Paraense, Fernando Soledade, Sebastião Wolf
 Brazil

Multiple medalists

Rank Gymnast Nation Olympics Gold Silver Bronze Total
1John Dietz United States (USA)1908–19122002
Alfred Lane United States (USA)1912–19202002

Medalists by nation

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 United States (USA)3003
2 Switzerland (SUI)1001
3 Sweden (SWE)0202
4 Belgium (BEL)0101
 France (FRA)0101
6 Great Britain (GBR)0022
7 Brazil (BRA)0011
 Netherlands (NED)0011

References

  1. "Historical Results". issf-sports.org. Internatinal Shooting Sport Federation. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.