Shooting at the 1964 Summer Olympics – Men's trap

The men's trap was a shooting sports event held as part of the Shooting at the 1960 Summer Olympics programme. The competition was held from 15 to 17 October 1964 at the Tokorozawa Clay Pigeon Shooting Range in Tokorozawa, Saitama.[1] 51 shooters from 28 nations competed.[1] Each nation could send up to two shooters. The event was won by Ennio Mattarelli of Italy, the nation's second victory in three Games in the event. Pāvels Seničevs of the Soviet Union took silver. William Morris earned the United States' first medal in the trap since 1924 with his bronze. Seničevs and Morris defeated Galliano Rossini of Italy in a three-way shoot-off for second; Rossini (who had won gold in the event in 1956 and silver in 1960) thus just missed earning a third medal in the trap. Defending champion Ion Dumitrescu of Romania finished fifth.

Men's trap
at the Games of the XVIII Olympiad
Gold medalist Ennio Mattarelli
VenueTokorozawa Clay Pigeon Shooting Range, Tokorozawa, Saitama
Date15–17 October 1964
Competitors51 from 28 nations
Winning score198 OR
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Ennio Mattarelli Italy
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Pāvels Seničevs Soviet Union
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)William Morris United States
← 1960
1968 →

Background

This was the ninth appearance of the men's ISSF Olympic trap event. The event was held at every Summer Olympics from 1896 to 1924 (except 1904, when no shooting events were held) and from 1952 to 2016; it was open to women from 1968 to 1996.[2]

Eight of the top 11 (including a tie for 10th) shooters from the 1960 Games returned, including all three medalists: gold medalist Ion Dumitrescu of Romania, silver medalist Galliano Rossini of Italy, bronze medalist Sergei Kalinin of the Soviet Union, sixth-place finisher Joe Wheater of Great Britain, seventh-place finisher Adam Smelczyński of Poland, eighth-place finishers Claude Foussier of France and Karni Singh of India, and tenth-place finisher Laszlo Szapáry of Austria. Rossini was also a former champion (gold in 1956) and was competing in the event for the fourth time. Smelczyński had been the silver medalist to Rossini in 1956. In the two World Championships since 1960, Dumitrescu had taken a bronze (1961) and Singh had taken silver (1962). The 1961 World Champion, Ennio Mattarelli, joined Rossini for a formidable Italian pair.[1]

Israel, Pakistan, and Rhodesia each made their debut in the event. Great Britain made its ninth appearance, the only nation to have competed at each edition of the event to that point.

Competition format

The competition used the 200-target format introduced with the return of trap to the Olympics in 1952. The 1964 event dropped the two-round competition that had been used in 1960; only a single round of shooting was done, with all shooters facing 200 targets. Shooting was done in 8 series of 25 targets.[3][1]

Records

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

World record
Olympic record  Galliano Rossini (ITA)195 Melbourne, Australia29 November – 1 December 1956

Ennio Mattarelli of Italy set a new Olympic record at 198.

Schedule

DateTimeRound
Thursday, 15 October 1964
Friday, 16 October 1964
Saturday, 17 October 1964
9:30Final

Results

RankShooterNationScoreNotes
Ennio Mattarelli  Italy198OR
Pāvels Seničevs  Soviet Union194Shoot-off: 25
William Morris  United States194Shoot-off: 24
4Galliano Rossini  Italy194Shoot-off: 23
5Ion Dumitrescu  Romania193
6Juan Enrique Lira  Chile193
7Bob Braithwaite  Great Britain192
8Joachim Marscheider  United Team of Germany191
9Josef Meixner  Austria190
10Mohamed Mehrez  Egypt190
11Joe Wheater  Great Britain190
12Floyd Nattrass  Canada190
13Juan Ángel Martini, Sr.  Argentina189
14Heinz Rehder  United Team of Germany189
15Mitsuo Sanami  Japan189
16Lennart Ahlin  Sweden189
17Gilberto Navarro  Chile188
18Armando Marques  Portugal188
19Georgios Pangalos  Greece187
20Rune Flodman  Sweden187
21Frank Little  United States187
22Sergei Kalinin  Soviet Union187
23An Jeong-geun  South Korea186
24Claude Foussier  France186
25Jaime Bladas  Spain186
26Karni Singh  India186
27Johannes Lamprecht  Rhodesia186
28Guy de Valle Flor  Portugal186
29Michel Prévost  France184
30Toshiyasu Ishige  Japan184
31José Luis Alonso Berbegal  Spain184
32Adam Smelczyński  Poland183
33Gheorghe Enache  Romania182
34Eduard de Atzel  Peru182
35Park Sam-gyu  South Korea181
36Goh Tai Yong  Malaysia178
37Enrique Dibos  Peru178
38Ahmed Kadry Genena  Egypt178
39Harry Willsie  Canada177
40Joseph Aoun  Lebanon176
41Lin Ho-ming  Taiwan175
42Jack Rickards  Rhodesia174
43Laszlo Szapáry  Austria173
44José Passera  Argentina173
45Fotios Isaakidis  Greece172
46Jaime Loyola  Puerto Rico171
47Maksim Kahan  Israel170
48Lin Wen-chu  Taiwan170
49Devi Singh  India168
50Yap Pow Thong  Malaysia140
51Moihuddin Khawja  Pakistan91
Miguel Torres  Puerto RicoDNS
Antonios Saad  Lebanon

References