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The NCAA Rifle Championship is an annual co-educational rifle national collegiate championship sponsored by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The tournament includes an individual and team championships consisting of the two-day aggregate scoring of the smallbore competition and air rifle competition.
Since there are only 22 Division I schools, 2 Division II schools, and 5 Division III schools that sponsor rifle, the NCAA holds only a single National Collegiate championship. There are 2 men's teams, 9 women's teams, and 23 mixed/ co-ed teams (the number of teams exceeds the number of schools because four schools field two teams).
The statistic was first recognized in the 1986–87 season when 3-point field goals were officially instituted by the NCAA. [1] From the 1986–87 season through the 2007–08 season , the three-point perimeter was marked at 19 ft 9 in (6.02 m) for both men's and women's college basketball. [ 2 ]
The 2021 NCAA Rifle Championships took place from March 12 to March 13 in Columbus, Ohio, at the Lt. Hugh W. Wylie Rifle Range.The tournament went into its 41st NCAA Rifle Championships, after having been canceled mid-event in 2020 due to COVID-19, and featured eight teams across all divisions. 48 athletes including 40 from qualifying teams and 8 at-large individuals competed in the event.
The 2015 NCAA Rifle Championships were contested at the 36th annual NCAA-sanctioned competition to determine the team and individual national champions of co-ed collegiate rifle shooting in the United States. The championships were held at the E.F. Horton Rifle Range at the University of Alaska Fairbanks in Fairbanks, Alaska.
After several conferences used a shot clock during the previous few seasons, the NCAA instituted a 45-second clock for the 1985–86 season. The clock was reduced to 35 seconds in 1993–94 and 30 in 2015–16. [26] [27] The Wildcats lost multiple assistant coaches to other college positions in the years following the 1985 NCAA championship game.
In basketball, true shooting percentage is an advanced statistic that measures a player's efficiency at shooting the ball. [1] It is intended to more accurately calculate a player's shooting than field goal percentage , free throw percentage , and three-point field goal percentage taken individually.
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 30 November 2024. Rare shooting proficiency in basketball During his second stint with the Phoenix Suns, Steve Nash achieved the 50-40-90 feat in four separate seasons, the most of any player. The 50–40–90 club is a statistical achievement used to distinguish players as excellent shooters in the ...