Shooting at the 1912 Summer Olympics – Men's 300 metre free rifle, three positions

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Men's 300 metre free rifle, three positions
at the Games of the V Olympiad
1912 Paul Colas.JPG
Paul Colas
Venue Kaknäs
Date2 July
Competitors84 from 9 nations
Winning score987 OR
Medalists
Gold medal icon.svg Paul Colas
Flag of France.svg  France
Silver medal icon.svg Lars Jørgen Madsen
Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark
Bronze medal icon.svg Niels Larsen
Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark
  1908
1920  

The men's 300 m rifle three positions was a shooting sports event held as part of the shooting at the 1912 Summer Olympics programme. It was the third appearance of the event, which had been introduced in 1900. The competition was held on Tuesday, 2 July 1912. [1] Eighty-four sport shooters from nine nations competed. The event was won by Paul Colas of France, the nation's first medal in the event. Denmark took the silver and bronze medals, as Lars Jørgen Madsen (in his third time competing in the event) finished second and Niels Larsen placed third.

Background

This was the third appearance of the men's 300 metre three-positions rifle event, which was held 11 times between 1900 and 1972. [2] [3] Lars Jørgen Madsen of Denmark, who had taken fifth in 1900 and 14th in 1908, was competing once again. Other veterans of the 1908 Games competing again included the four Norwegians from the top 10 in 1908: gold medalist Albert Helgerud, bronze medalist Ole Sæther, sixth-place finisher Julius Braathe, and ninth-place finisher Olaf Sæther. Léon Johnson of France, the eighth-place finisher, also returned. None of the world champions competed. [4]

Russia and South Africa made their debut in the event. Denmark, France, and Norway each made their third appearance, the only nations to have competed at every appearance of the event to date.

Competition format

The competition had each shooter fire 120 shots, 40 shots in each of three positions: prone, kneeling, and standing. The target was 1 metre in diameter, with 10 scoring rings; targets were set at a distance of 300 metres. Thus, the maximum score possible was 1200 points. Any rifle could be used, with an open fore sight and open back sight; any ammunition could be used. Ties were broken by hits on targets, then centre hits, then 10s, then 9s, etc. [4] [5]

Records

Prior to the competition, the existing world and Olympic records were as follows.

World record
Olympic recordFlag of Switzerland.svg  Emil Kellenberger  (SUI)930 Paris, France 5 August 1900

The top ten shooters in 1912 broke the Olympic record. Paul Colas ended with the new record, at 987 points.

Schedule

DateTimeRound
Tuesday, 2 July 191211:00
16:00
Final

Results

RankShooterNationTotalNotes
Gold medal icon.svg Paul Colas Flag of France.svg  France 987 OR
Silver medal icon.svg Lars Jørgen Madsen Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark 981
Bronze medal icon.svg Niels Larsen Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark 962
4 Hugo Johansson Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 959
5 Gudbrand Skatteboe Flag of Norway.svg  Norway 956
6 Bernhard Larsson Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 954
7 Albert Helgerud Flag of Norway.svg  Norway 952
8 Tönnes Björkman Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 947
9 Ole Sæther Flag of Norway.svg  Norway 941
10 Erik Blomqvist Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 932
11 Gustaf Adolf Jonsson Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 928
12 Ole Olsen Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark 926
13 Voitto Kolho Flag of Russia.svg  Finland 923
14 Mauritz Eriksson Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 922
15 Einar Liberg Flag of Norway.svg  Norway 921
16 Christian Tauson Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark 921
17 Carl Osburn US flag 48 stars.svg  United States 915
18 Olaf Sæther Flag of Norway.svg  Norway 914
19 Gustaf Nyman Flag of Russia.svg  Finland 913
20 Werner Jernström Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 912
21 Cornelius Burdette US flag 48 stars.svg  United States 912
22 Paul Vighals Flag of Norway.svg  Norway 911
23 Østen Østensen Flag of Norway.svg  Norway 911
24 Léon Johnson Flag of France.svg  France 908
25 Heikki Huttunen Flag of Russia.svg  Finland 906
26 Thomas Refsum Flag of Norway.svg  Norway 905
27 Olaf Husby Flag of Norway.svg  Norway 905
28 Harry Adams US flag 48 stars.svg  United States 903
29 Julius Braathe Flag of Norway.svg  Norway 900
30 Arne Sunde Flag of Norway.svg  Norway 900
31 Engebret Skogen Flag of Norway.svg  Norway 899
32 Warren Sprout US flag 48 stars.svg  United States 896
33 Laurits Larsen Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark 894
34 Carl Björkman Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 888
35 Allan Briggs US flag 48 stars.svg  United States 888
36 Harold Bartlett US flag 48 stars.svg  United States 884
37 Robert Jonsson Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 875
38 Frederick Hird US flag 48 stars.svg  United States 875
39 Huvi Tuiskunen Flag of Russia.svg  Finland 875
40 George Harvey Red Ensign of South Africa (1912-1951).svg  South Africa 874
41 Vilho Vauhkonen Flag of Russia.svg  Finland 870
42 August Wikström Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 870
43 Nils Skog Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 869
44 Louis Percy Flag of France.svg  France 868
45 Auguste Marion Flag of France.svg  France 868
46 Frants Nielsen Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark 851
47 Anders Peter Nielsen Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark 849
48 Per-Olof Arvidsson Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 839
49 Emil Holm Flag of Russia.svg  Finland 835
50 Emil Bömches Flag of Hungary (1867-1918).svg  Hungary 828
51 Robert Patterson Red Ensign of South Africa (1912-1951).svg  South Africa 810
52 Hans Schultz Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark 808
53 Raoul de Boigne Flag of France.svg  France 806
54 Feofan Lebedev Flag of Russia (1991-1993).svg  Russia 806
55 Robert Bodley Red Ensign of South Africa (1912-1951).svg  South Africa 806
56 Ernest Keeley Red Ensign of South Africa (1912-1951).svg  South Africa 800
57 Lauri Kolho Flag of Russia.svg  Finland 787
58 Dmitry Kuskov Flag of Russia (1991-1993).svg  Russia 780
59 Jalo Autonen Flag of Russia.svg  Finland 776
60 Povl Gerlow Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark 772
61 George Whelan Red Ensign of South Africa (1912-1951).svg  South Africa 762
62 Pavel Valden Flag of Russia (1991-1993).svg  Russia 758
63 Athanase Sartori Flag of France.svg  France 754
64 Arthur Smith Red Ensign of South Africa (1912-1951).svg  South Africa 752
65 Boris Belinsky Flag of Russia (1991-1993).svg  Russia 746
66 Aleksandr Tillo Flag of Russia (1991-1993).svg  Russia 744
67 Albert Johnstone Red Ensign of South Africa (1912-1951).svg  South Africa 741
68 Konstantin Kalinin Flag of Russia (1991-1993).svg  Russia 736
69 Zoltán Jelenffy Flag of Hungary (1867-1918).svg  Hungary 718
70 Charles Jeffreys Red Ensign of South Africa (1912-1951).svg  South Africa 715
71 Pavel Lesh Flag of Russia (1991-1993).svg  Russia 713
72 Rezső Velez Flag of Hungary (1867-1918).svg  Hungary 712
73 Osvald Rechke Flag of Russia (1991-1993).svg  Russia 699
74 László Hauler Flag of Hungary (1867-1918).svg  Hungary 677
75 Aladár von Farkas Flag of Hungary (1867-1918).svg  Hungary 653
76 Georgy de Davydov Flag of Russia (1991-1993).svg  Russia 635
77 Dāvids Veiss Flag of Russia (1991-1993).svg  Russia 623
78 Aleksandr Dobrzhansky Flag of Russia (1991-1993).svg  Russia 463
Hans Denver Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark DNF
Pierre Gentil Flag of France.svg  France DNF
Jens Hajslund Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark DNF
Géza Mészöly Flag of Hungary (1867-1918).svg  Hungary DNF
István Prihoda Flag of Hungary (1867-1918).svg  Hungary DNF
Nestori Toivonen Flag of Russia.svg  Finland DNF

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References

  1. "Shooting at the 1912 Stockholm Summer Games: Men's Free Rifle, Three Positions, 300 metres". sports-reference.com. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 10 November 2014.
  2. "Historical Results". ISSF. Retrieved 12 December 2020.
  3. The event was open to women in 1968 and 1972.
  4. 1 2 "Free Rifle, Three Positions, 300 metres, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 10 December 2020.
  5. Official Report, p. 1058.