2012 IPSC Shotgun World Shoot

Last updated
2012 IPSC Shotgun World Shoot I
Official logo of the 2012 IPSC Shotgun World Shoot.png
Official logo of the 2012 IPSC Shotgun World Shoot
Location Debrecen, Hungary
Competitors 416
Medalists
Gold medal icon.svg  
Silver medal icon.svg  
Bronze medal icon.svg  

The 2012 IPSC Shotgun World Shoot I held in Debrecen, Hungary was the 1st IPSC Shotgun World Shoot, and consisted of 30 stages over 5 days and over 400 competitors. [1]

Debrecen City with county rights in Northern Great Plain, Hungary

Debrecen is Hungary's second largest city after Budapest. It is the regional center of the Northern Great Plain region and the seat of Hajdú-Bihar county. It was the largest Hungarian city in the 18th century and it is one of the Hungarian people's most important cultural centres. Debrecen was also the capital city of Hungary during the revolution in 1848–1849. During the revolution, the dethronement of the Habsburg dynasty was declared in the Reformed Great Church. The city also served as the capital of Hungary by the end of the World War II in 1944–1945. It is home of the University of Debrecen.

Hungary Country in Central Europe

Hungary is a country in Central Europe. Spanning 93,030 square kilometres (35,920 sq mi) in the Carpathian Basin, it borders Slovakia to the north, Ukraine to the northeast, Austria to the northwest, Romania to the east, Serbia to the south, Croatia to the southwest, and Slovenia to the west. With about 10 million inhabitants, Hungary is a medium-sized member state of the European Union. The official language is Hungarian, which is the most widely spoken Uralic language in the world. Hungary's capital and its largest city and metropolis is Budapest. Other major urban areas include Debrecen, Szeged, Miskolc, Pécs and Győr.

International Practical Shooting Confederation The international organization for the sport of practical shooting

The International Practical Shooting Confederation (IPSC) is the world's second largest shooting sport association and the largest and oldest within practical shooting. Founded in 1976, the IPSC nowadays affiliates over 100 regions from Africa, Americas, Asia, Europe and Oceania. Competitions are held with pistol, revolver, rifle and shotgun, and competitors are divided into different divisions based on firearm and equipment features. While everyone in a division competes in the Overall category, there are also own separate awards for the categories Lady, Super Junior, Junior, Senior and Super Senior.

Contents

Champions

Open

The Open division was the second largest division with 121 competitors (29.1 %).

Individual
OverallCompetitorPointsOverall Match Percent
Gold medal world centered-2.svg Gold Flag of Slovakia.svg Ivan Hos1741.1528100.00%
Silver medal world centered-2.svg Silver Flag of Ukraine.svg Oleksandr Shymchenko1731.902299.47%
Bronze medal world centered-2.svg Bronze Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Josef Rakusan1720.156698.79%
4th Flag of Germany.svg Dirk Frey1715.349498.52%
5th Flag of the United States.svg Jerry Miculek 1695.253597.36%
6th Flag of Russia.svg Vladimir Novikov1684.033596.72%
7th Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Vaclav Vinduska1670.927195.97%
8th Flag of Russia.svg Vsevolod Ilin1650.945294.82%
9th Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Frantisek Bindik1635.521693.93%
10th Flag of Russia.svg Aleksandr Ilin1629.476293.59%
LadyCompetitorPointsOverall percentCategory percent
1st Flag of Thailand.svg Malin Suebsuk1010.073158.01%100.00%
2nd Flag of Sweden.svg Elsa Marianne Hansen944.500054.24%93.51%
3rd Flag of Greece.svg Efstathia Chasogia740.601542.53%73.32%
SeniorCompetitorPointsOverall percentCategory percent
Gold medal world centered-2.svg Gold Flag of the United States.svg Jerry Miculek 1695.253597.37%100.00%
Silver medal world centered-2.svg Silver Flag of Italy.svg Mario Riillo1551.647489.12%91.53%
Bronze medal world centered-2.svg Bronze Flag of Russia.svg Ramazan Mubarakov1510.767586.77%89.12%
Super SeniorCompetitorPointsOverall percentCategory percent
1st Flag of Italy.svg Furio Liberti1366.048978.46%100.00%
2nd Flag of South Africa.svg Carlo Belletti1345.093177.25%98.47%
3rd Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Michael John Scarlett1077.226561.87%78.86%
Teams
PlaceCountryPointsPercentTeam members
Gold medal world centered-2.svg Gold100.00%
Silver medal world centered-2.svg Silver%
Bronze medal world centered-2.svg Bronze%

Modified

The Modified division had 63 competitors (15.1 %).

Individual
OverallCompetitorPointsOverall Match Percent
Gold medal world centered-2.svg Gold Flag of Serbia.svg Igor Jankovic1828.5279100.00%
Silver medal world centered-2.svg Silver Flag of Finland.svg Jani Lehtonen1768.302896.71%
Bronze medal world centered-2.svg Bronze Flag of Serbia.svg Goran Jankovic1752.651395.85%
4th Flag of Serbia.svg Nikola Mihajlovic1737.907095.04%
5th Flag of Russia.svg Alexey Voyno1676.215291.67%
6th Flag of Serbia.svg Branislav Raketic1671.191891.40%
7th Flag of Russia.svg Alexander Venetskiy1660.025490.78%
8th Flag of Russia.svg Alexander Voyno1646.545590.05%
9th Flag of Hungary.svg Géza Puskás1633.931789.36%
10th Flag of Finland.svg Mikael Kaislaranta1626.905288.97%
SeniorCompetitorPointsOverall percentCategory percent
Gold medal world centered-2.svg Gold Flag of Serbia.svg Branislav Raketic1671.191891.40%100.00%
Silver medal world centered-2.svg Silver Flag of Italy.svg Enri Botturi1470.120180.40%87.97%
Bronze medal world centered-2.svg Bronze Flag of Italy.svg Amedeo Sessa1311.456271.72%78.47%
Teams
PlaceCountryPointsPercentTeam members
Gold medal world centered-2.svg Gold100.00%
Silver medal world centered-2.svg Silver%
Bronze medal world centered-2.svg Bronze%

Standard

The Standard division was the largest division with 125 competitors (30 %).

Individual
OverallCompetitorPointsOverall Match Percent
Gold medal world centered-2.svg Gold Flag of Finland.svg Petri Henrik Ol Runtti1922.8117100.00%
Silver medal world centered-2.svg Silver Flag of Italy.svg Roberto Vezzoli1775.860592.36%
Bronze medal world centered-2.svg Bronze Flag of Russia.svg Sergei Konov1734.719690.22%
4th Flag of Russia.svg Andreyi Vikharev1714.126989.15%
5th Flag of Russia.svg Pavel Danilovich1683.143987.54%
6th Flag of Finland.svg Mika Riste1675.511787.14%
7th Flag of Germany.svg Oliver Damm1665.978486.64%
8th Flag of Russia.svg Maksim Skopin1656.054786.13%
9th Flag of Russia.svg Sergey Shevchenko1653.698586.00%
10th Flag of Ukraine.svg Igor Zagurnyi1653.047485.97%
LadyCompetitorPointsOverall percentCategory percent
Gold medal world centered-2.svg Gold Flag of the United States.svg Lena Miculek 1245.456564.77%100.00%
Silver medal world centered-2.svg Silver Flag of Germany.svg Sandra Schuh1198.670762.34%96.24%
Bronze medal world centered-2.svg Bronze Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Vanessa Duffy1162.635960.47%93.35%
JuniorCompetitorPointsOverall percentCategory percent
1st Flag of Thailand.svg Aphisit Kaewmuangpet1223.165063.61%100.00%
2nd Flag of Switzerland.svg Timon Blattner1189.842961.88%97.28%
3rd Flag of Greece.svg Evangelos Gravanis1094.758256.94%89.50%
SeniorCompetitorPointsOverall percentCategory percent
Gold medal world centered-2.svg Gold Flag of the United States.svg Kurt Miller1620.500484.2776100.00%
Silver medal world centered-2.svg Silver Flag of the United States.svg Jeffrey Cramblit1526.854779.41%94.22%
Bronze medal world centered-2.svg Bronze Flag of Germany.svg Klaus Möller1466.084576.25%90.47%
Teams
PlaceCountryPointsPercentTeam members
Gold medal world centered-2.svg Gold100.00%
Silver medal world centered-2.svg Silver%
Bronze medal world centered-2.svg Bronze%

Standard Manual

The Standard Manual division was the third largest division with 107 competitors (25.7 %).

Individual
OverallCompetitorPointsOverall Match Percent
Gold medal world centered-2.svg Gold Flag of Finland.svg Hans Roger Karp1804.1384100.00%
Silver medal world centered-2.svg Silver Flag of Italy.svg Luigi Silvestroni1770.104798.11%
Bronze medal world centered-2.svg Bronze Flag of Russia.svg Aleksandr Petukhov1755.481797.30%
4th Flag of Finland.svg Ari Matero1751.262597.07%
5th Flag of Slovenia.svg Bostjan Pavlic1707.919494.67%
6th Flag of Italy.svg Paolo Zambai1677.295392.97%
7th Flag of Argentina.svg Christian Dario Moreira1666.644592.38%
8th Flag of Italy.svg Giovanni Di Giulio1639.284890.86%
9th Flag of Finland.svg Matti Kasurinen1625.958090.12%
10th Flag of Poland.svg Boguslaw Gaweda1569.234086.98%
SeniorCompetitorPointsOverall percentCategory percent
Gold medal world centered-2.svg Gold Flag of Poland.svg Boguslaw Gaweda1569.234086.98%100.00%
Silver medal world centered-2.svg Silver Flag of Finland.svg Jukka Matti Mikkola1501.864483.25%95.71%
Bronze medal world centered-2.svg Bronze Flag of the Czech Republic.svg Lumir Safranek1466.003381.26%93.42%
Teams
PlaceCountryPointsPercentTeam members
Gold medal world centered-2.svg Gold100.00%
Silver medal world centered-2.svg Silver%
Bronze medal world centered-2.svg Bronze%

See also

IPSC Handgun World Shoots

The IPSC Handgun World Shoot is the highest level handgun match within the International Practical Shooting Confederation (IPSC) which consists of several days and at least 30 separate courses of fire. The Handgun World Shoots are held triennially on a rotational cycle with the other two main IPSC disciplines Rifle and Shotgun.

IPSC Rifle World Shoots

The IPSC Rifle World Shoot is the highest level rifle match within the International Practical Shooting Confederation (IPSC) which consists of several days and at least 30 separate courses of fire. The Rifle World Shoots are held triennially on a rotational cycle with the other two main IPSC disciplines Handgun and Shotgun.

The IPSC Action Air World Shoot is the highest level Action Air match within the International Practical Shooting Confederation (IPSC). The Action Air World Shoots are currently held triennially on the same cycle as the IPSC Shotgun World Shoots.

Related Research Articles

Practical shooting Shooting sport based around precision, power and speed

Practical shooting, also known as dynamic shooting or action shooting, is a set of shooting sports where the competitors are trying to unite the three principles of precision, power and speed, by using a firearm of a certain minimum power factor to score as many points as possible during the shortest amount of time. While scoring systems vary between organizations, each measures the time of which the course is completed, with penalties for inaccurate shooting. The courses are called "stages", and are shot individually by the shooters. Usually the shooter must move and shoot from several positions, fire under or over obstacles and in other unfamiliar positions. There are no standard exercises or set arrangement of the targets, and the courses are often designed so that the shooter must be inventive, and therefore the solutions of exercises sometimes varies between shooters.

IPSC Shotgun World Shoots

The IPSC Shotgun World Shoot is the highest level shotgun match within the International Practical Shooting Confederation (IPSC) and consists of several days and at least 30 separate courses of fire. The Shotgun World Shoots are held triennially on a rotational cycle with the other two main IPSC disciplines Handgun and Rifle.

The 1979 IPSC Handgun World Shoot IV held in Johannesburg, South Africa was the fourth IPSC Handgun World Shoot, and was won by Jimmy Von Sorgenfrei, one of the top seeds before the championship. Leading up to the championship, the South African team had many good competitors, making the team selection tough. Seemingly out of nowhere Jimmy Von Sorgenfrei had appeared on the competition circuit, improving his performances consistently throughout the year before the championship, and was selected for the South African National Team of five men.

The 1981 IPSC Handgun World Shoot V held in Johannesburg, South Africa, was the fifth IPSC Handgun World Shoot, and was won by Ross Seyfried of United States, using a relatively stock firearm compared to the highly tuned firearms of many other shooters. Well known in the U.S., Ross had previously won the 1978 U.S. National Championship, and was member of the US National Team who placed second in the previous 1979 World Shoot. The 1981 championship showed the Americans return with a vengeance when both Ross Seyfried took the individual World Title and the US National Team took gold in the team classification.

1993 IPSC Handgun World Shoot

The 1993 IPSC Handgun World Shoot X held in Bisley, England was the 10th IPSC Handgun World Shoot, and consisted of 5 days with 34 stages, teams from over 27 countries and a lot of rain. The competition had been divided into the Open, Standard and Modified divisions. The Standard division was won by Ted Bonnet of United States, the Modified division by Robert Buntschu of Switzerland and the Open division by Matthew McLearn of United States. Born in Nova Scotia, Mclearn had moved to the U.S. five years prior the world championship to pursue gunsmithing training and advance in the competitive arena. Right before winning the World Shoot he also placed first in the U.S. IPSC Handgun Nationals.

1996 IPSC Handgun World Shoot

The 1996 IPSC Handgun World Shoot XI held in Brasilia, Brazil was the 11th IPSC Handgun World Shoot. The match had 609 competitors, teams from 31 nations and consisted of 35 stages. The Open division was won by Todd Jarrett, while the Standard division once again was won by Ted Bonnet of USA. Todd Jarret from Virginia had established himself as a major player before the event, having placed in the top four of the US Nationals every year since 1990 except one. According to himself he had trained well before the World Shoot in Brazil, and was quoted saying "It's really amazing, the harder I work, the luckier I get."

1999 IPSC Handgun World Shoot

The 1999 IPSC Handgun World Shoot XII held in Cebu, Philippines was the 12th IPSC Handgun World Shoot. Eric Grauffel of France became Open World Champion, Pavel Jasansky of the Czech Republic became Modified World Champion and Michael Voigt of the United States took the Standard World Champion title.

2002 IPSC Handgun World Shoot

The 2002 IPSC Handgun World Shoot XIII held in Pietersburg, South Africa was the 13th IPSC Handgun World Shoot.

2005 IPSC Handgun World Shoot

The 2005 IPSC Handgun World Shoot XIV held in Guayaquil, Ecuador was the 14th IPSC Handgun World Shoot. Once again, Eric Grauffel took the Open title. He was now an 18-year-old student and had already won many European titles, and after the 2005 World Championship, also three World Shoots.

2008 IPSC Handgun World Shoot

The 2008 IPSC Handgun World Shoot XV held in Bali, Indonesia, was the 15th IPSC Handgun World Shoot.

2011 IPSC Handgun World Shoot

The 2011 IPSC Handgun World Shoot XVI held at Rhodes, Greece was the 16th IPSC Handgun World Shoot. There were 30 stages which all had a Greek theme.

2014 IPSC Handgun World Shoot

The 2014 IPSC Handgun World Shoot XVII held at the Universal Shooting Academy in Frostproof, Florida, United States, was the 17th IPSC Handgun World Shoot.

2017 IPSC Handgun World Shoot

The 2017 IPSC Handgun World Shoot XVIII was the 18th IPSC Handgun World Shoot held at the new National Shooting Center in Châteauroux, France during the end of August and start of September. There were 30 stages divided into 5 areas, with each area being named after and having themes from one of the 5 continents Africa, Asia, America, Australia or Europe.

2015 IPSC Shotgun World Shoot

The 2015 IPSC Shotgun World Shoot II held at the shooting range "Le Tre Piume" near Agna, Italy was the 2nd IPSC Shotgun World Shoot. The match consisted of 30 stages over 5 days and 635 competitors from 30 nations.

2017 IPSC Rifle World Shoot

The 2017 IPSC Rifle World Shoot I held at the Patriot Park in Kubinka, Moscow, Russia was the first IPSC Rifle World Shoot. The match consisted of 30 stages over 6 days and 591 competitors from 40 nations.

The Mongolian Practical Shooting Federation is one of the region of Mongol for practical shooting under the International Practical Shooting Confederation. The founder of the federation is Naranbaatar Dorjpagma, the regional director of IPSC.

2018 IPSC Shotgun World Shoot

The 2018 IPSC Shotgun World Shoot III was the third IPSC Shotgun World Shoot, and was held at the National Shooting Center in Châteauroux, France between 3. to 10. June 2018.

2018 IPSC Action Air World Shoot

The 2018 IPSC Action Air World Shoot I was the first IPSC Action Air World Shoot, and was held in Hong Kong indoor at the Kowloonbay International Trade & Exhibition Centre (KITEC). The match consisted of 30 stages over 3 days and had a match capacity of 600 competitors.

References

  1. World Shotgun Championship 2012, Hungary, Debrecen