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Olympic shooting event From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The men's 200 metre military rifle event was one of five sport shooting events on the Shooting at the 1896 Summer Olympics programme. It was held at a distance of 200 metres, on 8 April and 9 April, with each shooter firing half of his shots on the first day and half the second. Shooters fired four strings of ten shots each, for a total of 40 shots. 42 shooters, representing each of the seven nations that had shooters in Athens, competed.
Men's military rifle at the Games of the I Olympiad | ||||||||||
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Venue | Kallithea shooting range | |||||||||
Dates | April 8–9 | |||||||||
Competitors | 42 from 7 nations | |||||||||
Winning score | 2350 | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
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When the competition finished in the morning of 9 April, Pantelis Karasevdas of Greece had hit the target all 40 times, amassing a score of 2,350 points. Panagiotis Pavlidis hit the target 38 times and came in second.
This was the only appearance of the 200 metre military rifle event. Military rifle categories would return in 1920 (a 300 metres (980 ft) three positions event) and 1924 (seven events at 300 and 600 metres (980 and 1,970 ft)). It was the first event held at the newly inaugurated Kallithea shooting range. A ceremonial first shot was fired by Olga Constantinovna of Russia, the queen consort of the Hellenes.[1][2]
The competition had each shooter fire 40 shots, in 4 strings of 10, at a range of 200 metres. Scoring involved multiplying target hits by points scored in each string.[2]
Date | Time | Round | |
---|---|---|---|
Gregorian | Julian | ||
Wednesday, 8 April 1896 Thursday, 9 April 1896 | Wednesday, 27 March 1896 Thursday, 28 March 1896 | 10:30 | Strings 1–2 Strings 3–4 |
Only partial results are known.
Rank | Shooter | Nation | Score | Hits | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pantelis Karasevdas | Greece | 2,350 | 40 | 480 | Unknown | |||
Panagiotis Pavlidis | Greece | 1,978 | 38 | Unknown | ||||
Nicolaos Trikupis | Greece | 1,713 | 34 | Unknown | ||||
4 | Anastasios Metaxas | Greece | 1,701 | Unknown | ||||
5 | Georgios Orphanidis | Greece | 1,698 | Unknown | ||||
6 | Viggo Jensen | Denmark | 1,640 | 30 | Unknown | |||
7 | Georgios Diamantis | Greece | 1,456 | Unknown | 384 | Unknown | ||
8 | Albert Baumann | Switzerland | 1,294 | Unknown | ||||
9 | Ioannis Theofilakis | Greece | 1,261 | Unknown | 312 | Unknown | ||
10 | Sidney Merlin | Great Britain | 1,156 | Unknown | 477 | Unknown | ||
11 | Alexios Fetsios | Greece | 894 | Unknown | 272 | Unknown | ||
12 | Eugen Schmidt | Denmark | 845 | 12 | Unknown | |||
Spiridon Stais | Greece | 845 | Unknown | |||||
14–41 | Charles Waldstein | United States | Unknown | 354 | 154 | Unknown | ||
Machonet | Great Britain | Unknown | ||||||
Giuseppe Rivabella | Italy | Unknown | ||||||
Aristovoulos Petmezas | Greece | Unknown | ||||||
Albin Lermusiaux | France | Unknown | ||||||
G. Karagiannopoulos | Greece | Unknown | ||||||
22 others, names unknown | Greece | Unknown | ||||||
— | Holger Nielsen | Denmark | Retired after two strings | Unknown | Did not finish |
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