Shooting at the 1912 Summer Olympics – Men's 50 metre team small-bore rifle

Men's 50 metre team small-bore rifle
at the Games of the V Olympiad
Venue Kaknäs
Date 3 July
Competitors 24 from 6 nations
Medalists
1st, gold medalist(s)  Great Britain (GBR)
Edward Lessimore, Robert Murray, Joseph Pepé, William Pimm
2nd, silver medalist(s)  Sweden (SWE)
Eric Carlberg, Vilhelm Carlberg, Arthur Nordenswan, Ruben Örtegren
3rd, bronze medalist(s)  United States (USA)
Frederick Hird, William Leushner, Carl Osburn, Warren Sprout
Shooting at the
1912 Summer Olympics
50 m rifle, prone men
Team rifle men
300 m free rifle, 3 positions men
600 m free rifle men
Team free rifle men
300 m military rifle, 3 positions men
25 m small-bore rifle men
25 m team small-bore rifle men
50 m team small-bore rifle men
100 m deer, single shots men
100 m deer, double shots men
100 m team deer, single shots men
50 m pistol men
30 m team military pistol men
50 m team military pistol men
25 m rapid fire pistol men
Trap men
Team clay pigeons men

The men's 50 metre team small-bore rifle (originally called team competition, miniature-rifle) was a shooting sports event held as part of the Shooting at the 1912 Summer Olympics programme. It was the first appearance of the event, though a mixed-distance team small-bore rifle event had been held in 1908. The competition was held on Wednesday, 3 July 1912.[1]

Twenty-four sport shooters from six nations competed.

Results

Place Team Ind. score Team score
1  Great Britain (GBR) 762
William Pimm 195
Edward Lessimore 193
Joseph Pepé 189
Robert Murray 185
2  Sweden (SWE) 748
Arthur Nordenswan 190
Eric Carlberg 189
Ruben Örtegren 185
Vilhelm Carlberg 184
3  United States (USA) 744
Warren Sprout 193
William Leushner 188
Frederick Hird 185
Carl Osburn 178
4  France (FRA) 714
Léon Johnson 189
Pierre Gentil 183
André Regaud 180
Maxime Landin 162
5  Denmark (DEN) 708
Povl Gerlow 185
Lars Jørgen Madsen 180
Frants Nielsen 177
Hans Denver 166
 Greece (GRE) 708
Ioannis Theofilakis 184
Iakovos Theofilas 177
Frangiskos Mavrommatis 174
Nikolaos Levidis 173

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.