10 metre running target mixed

10 metre running target mixed
Men
Number of shots: 2x20
World Championships: Since 1994
Abbreviation: 10RTMIX
Women
Number of shots: 2x20
World Championships: Since 2002
Abbreviation: 10RT20MIX

10 metre running target mixed is one of the ISSF shooting events, shot with an airgun at a target that moves sideways. The target is pulled across a two meter wide aisle at the range of 10 metres from the firing point. The target is pulled at either of two speeds, slow or fast, where it is visible for 5 or 2.5 seconds, respectively. The difference from 10 metre running target is that the slow and the fast runs are fired in a randomized order, that is not known beforehand to the shooter.

The course of fire is 40 shots, divided into two 20-shot stages, each consisting of exactly 10 slow and 10 fast runs.

Contents

World Championships, Men

This event was held in 1994-2009.

Year Place Gold Silver Bronze
1994 Milan  Roy Hill (USA)  Miroslav Janus (CZE)  Krister Holmberg (FIN)
1998 Barcelona  Zhiyuan Niu (CHN)  Miroslav Lizal (CZE)  Jury Jourasov (UKR)
2002 Lahti  Jozsef Sike (HUN)  Michael Jakosits (GER)  Adam Saathoff (USA)
2006 Zagreb  Lukasz Czapla (POL)  Lin Gan (CHN)  Zhiyuan Niu (CHN)
2008 Plzeň  Lukasz Czapla (POL)  Krister Holmberg (FIN)  Emil Andersson (SWE)
2009 Heinola  Dimitry Romanov (RUS)  Miroslav Januš (CZE)  Maxim Stepanov (RUS)

World Championships, Men Team

This event was held in 1994-2009.

Year Place Gold Silver Bronze
1994 Milan Czech Republic
Miroslav Janus
Jan Kermiet
Lubos Racansky
Russia
Anatoli Asrabaev
Igor Kolesov
Alexander Konichev
United States of America
Roy Hill
Adam Saathoff
Lonn Saunders
1998 Barcelona Czech Republic
Miroslav Lizal
Lubos Racansky
Miroslav Janus
People's Republic of China
Zhiyuan Niu
Ling Yang
Jun Xiao
Finland
Krister Holmberg
Vesa Saviahde
Pasi Wedman
2002 Lahti Russia
Dimitri Lykin
Maxim Stepanov
Igor Kolesov
People's Republic of China
Ling Yang
Guobin Zeng
Zhiyuan Niu
Finland
Pasi Wedman
Vesa Saviahde
Teppo Koskue
2006 Zagreb People's Republic of China
Zhiyuan Niu
Lin Gan
Ling Yang
Ukraine
Vladyslav Prianishnikov
Oleksandr Ulvak
Andrey Gilchenko
Sweden
Niklas Bergstroem
Emil Andersson
Sami Pesonen
2008 Plzeň Russia
Dmitry Romanov
Alexander Blinov
Maxim Stepanov
Ukraine
Vladyslav Prianishnikov
Andrey Gilchenko
Alexander Zinenko
Hungary
Jozsef Sike
Tibor Szabo
Tamas Tasi
2009 Heinola Russia Czech Republic Slovakia

World Championships, Women

This event was held in 2002-2009.

Year Place Gold Silver Bronze
2002 Lahti  Audrey Soquet (FRA)  Zhiqi Qiu (CHN)  Xia Wang (CHN)
2006 Zagreb  Audrey Corenflos (FRA)  Galina Avramenko (UKR)  Aiwen Sun (CHN)
2008 Plzeň  Galina Avramenko (UKR)  Viktoriya Zabolotna (UKR)  Kateryna Samohina (UKR)
2009 Heinola  Natalya Gurova (KAZ)  Viktoriya Zabolotna (UKR)  Olga Stepanova (RUS)

World Championships, Women Team

This event was held in 2002-2006.

Year Place Gold Silver Bronze
2002 Lahti People's Republic of China
Zhiqi Qiu
Xia Wang
Xuan Xu
Germany
Silke Johannes
Daniela Faust
Julie Kirr
Ukraine
Galina Avramenko
Ganna Neustroyeva
Kateryna Samohina
2006 Zagreb Ukraine
Galina Avramenko
Viktoriya Zabolotna
Kateryna Samohina
People's Republic of China
Aiwen Sun
Xuan Xu
Qijue Wang
Russia
Anna Ilina
Irina Izmalkova
Julia Eydenzon

World Championships, total medals

 Rank  Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  Russia 4 1 3 8
2  China 3 5 3 11
3  Ukraine 2 5 3 10
4  Czech Republic 2 4 0 6
5  France 2 0 0 2
5  Poland 2 0 0 2
7  United States 1 0 2 3
8  Hungary 1 0 1 2
9  Kazakhstan 1 0 0 0
10  Germany 0 2 0 2
11  Finland 0 1 3 4
12  Sweden 0 0 2 2
13  Slovakia 0 0 1 1
Total 18 18 18 54

Current world records

Current world records in 10 metre running target mixed
Men Individual 393  Vladyslav Prianishnikov (UKR) February 26, 2008 Winterthur (SUI) edit
Teams 1158  Russia (Blinov, Ermolenko, Lykin)
 China (Gan, Niu, Yang)
March 22, 2002
July 31, 2006
Thessaloniki (GRE)
Zagreb (CRO)
edit
Junior Men Individual 386  Dmitry Romanov (RUS) July 31, 2006 Zagreb (CRO) edit
Teams 1138  Ukraine (Gilchenko, Savkin, Zinenko) March 31, 1996 Budapest (HUN) edit
Women Individual 390  Audrey Soquet (FRA) July 9, 2002 Lahti (FIN) edit
Teams 1149  China (Qiu, Wang, Xu) July 9, 2002 Lahti (FIN) edit
Junior Women Individual 383  Galina Avramenko (UKR) November 6, 2003 Gothenburg (SWE) edit
Teams 1105  Russia (Danilenko, Gulak, Stepanova) July 26, 2006 Zagreb (CRO) edit