Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
not included in the Olympic program: 1912 Stockholm details [c] Alfred Lane United States: Paul Palén Sweden: Johan Hübner von Holst Sweden: 1920 Antwerp [d] not included in the Olympic program: 1924 Paris details: Henry Bailey United States: Vilhelm Carlberg Sweden: Lennart Hannelius Finland: 1928 Amsterdam: not included in the Olympic ...
For instance, only five women competed at the 1980 Moscow Olympics, while the next Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, which introduced women-only events, featured 77 female competitors. Two women won medals in mixed events: Margaret Murdock, silver in rifle 3 positions (1976) and Zhang Shan, gold in skeet (1992).
Pages in category "Olympic medalists in shooting" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 768 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Sydney Organising Committee for the Olympic Games. 2001. pp. 42– 43. ISBN 0-9579616-1-8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-09-11 "Shooting Official Results Book". Official Report of the XXVIII Olympiad (PDF). Organising Committee for the Olympic Games Athens 2004. August 2004. pp. 56– 57. ISBN 960-88101-7-5
Shooting at the 1984 Summer Olympics took place at Prado Olympic Shooting Park, Chino, California, United States. The games marked the first time that women’s shooting events were included in the Olympic program.
Shooting at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City comprised seven events. A second shotgun event, Skeet, was introduced. They were held between 18 and 23 October 1968. For the first time, women competed alongside men. [1]
Shooting at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal comprised seven events, all mixed. For the first time ever, a woman won an Olympic medal in shooting: Margaret Murdock received silver in the three positions event. [1] Lanny Bassham and Murdock tied for first place, but Murdock was placed second after review of the targets. Bassham suggested ...
He competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics, 1920 Summer Olympics, and 1924 Summer Olympics, winning a total of eleven Olympic medals: [2] five gold (including two individual golds), four silver, and two bronze. [3] He is the most successful shooter at the Olympic Games when individual and team medals are both taken into the account.