Shooting at the 1951 Pan American Games

Shooting at the I Pan American Games

At the 1951 Pan American Games a men's sport shooting competition was held. Events were held in Buenos Aires, Argentina at the Tiro Federal Argentino - Buenos Aires between 25 February and 3 March. There were several disciplines, including individual and team events.

Medal summary

Event Gold Silver Bronze
25 metre rapid fire pistol Huelet Benner
 United States (USA)
578 pts Enrique Díaz
 Argentina (ARG)
566 pts Oscar Cervo
 Argentina (ARG)
564 pts
50 metre pistol Edwin Vásquez Cam
 Peru (PER)[1]
549 pts Huelet Benner
 United States (USA)
547 pts Rafael Bermejo
 Mexico (MEX)
543 pts
50 metre rifle three positions Arthur Jackson
 United States (USA)
1125 pts Arthur Cook
 United States (USA)
1119 pts Julio Silva
 Argentina (ARG)
1118 pts
50 metre rifle prone Arthur Jackson
 United States (USA)
591 pts Pedro Postigo
 Argentina (ARG)
590 pts Augusto Cires
 Ecuador (ECU)
589 pts
Skeet Pablo Grossi
 Argentina (ARG)
289 pts Fulvio Rocchi
 Argentina (ARG)
287 pts Aroldo Pienovi
 Argentina (ARG)
285 pts
Military rifle three positions Pablo Cagnasso
 Argentina (ARG)
522 pts Antonio Ando
 Argentina (ARG)
Ramón Hagen
 Argentina (ARG)
Military rifle standing Pablo Cagnasso
 Argentina (ARG)
419 pts Antonio Ando
 Argentina (ARG)
412 pts Ramón Hagen
 Argentina (ARG)
409 pts
50 metre high power rifle three positions Pablo Cagnasso
 Argentina (ARG)
1090 pts Arthur Jackson
 United States (USA)
1088 pts David Schiaffino
 Argentina (ARG)
1073 pts
25 metre rapid fire pistol team Dionisio Fernández
Enrique Díaz
Ernesto Guillón
Oscar Cervo
 Argentina (ARG)
2247 pts Ademar Onéssimo Faller
Adhaury da Costa Rocha
Allan Sobocinski
Pedro Simão
 Brazil (BRA)[2]
2166 pts Ernesto Montemayor
José Reyes
Manuel Larrañaga
Miguel Lambarri
 Mexico (MEX)
2114 pts
25 metre pistol team José Reyes
Miguel Lambarri
Pedro Avilés
Rafael Bermejo
Raúl Ibarra
 Mexico (MEX)
2683 pts Alberto Martijena
Ángel Manelli
Antonio Cannavo
Oscar Bidegain
Pablo Cagnasso
 Argentina (ARG)
2633 pts César Injoke
Edwin Vásquez Cam
Pedro Puente
Vicente Portaro
Wenceslao Salgado
 Peru (PER)
2632 pts
50 metre rifle three positions team David Schiaffino
Fernando Potente
Julio Silva
Oscar Olmos
Rubén Longhi
 Argentina (ARG)
5540 pts Gustavo Rojas
Juan Bizama
Julio Arriagada
Miguel Niño
Vicente Herrera
 Chile (CHI)
5456 pts Enrique Baldwin
Guillermo Baldwin
Luis Albornoz
Luis Mantilla
Rubén Váldez
 Peru (PER)
5435 pts
Skeet team Aroldo Pienovi
Fulvio Rocchi
Geronimo Cosoli
Pablo Grossi
 Argentina (ARG)
756 pts Antônio Snizeck
Edimar Eichemberg
Guido Albertini
Max Schrappe
 Brazil (BRA)[3]
747 pts
50 metre high power rifle three positions team David Schiaffino
Juan Martino
Julio Silva
Pablo Cagnasso
Pablo Pedotti
 Argentina (ARG)
5355 pts Antonio Mendoza
Joel Gálvez
José G. de la Torre
José Nosari
Sebastián de la Cerda
 Mexico (MEX)
4885 pts Gregorio Moya
José Landín
Juan Chávez
Rafael Rodríguez
Rufino Gutiérrez
 Cuba (CUB)
4399 pts
Military rifle three positions team  Argentina (ARG)2548 pts  Peru (PER)2410 pts  Chile (CHI)2408 pts
Military rifle prone team Cirillo Nassiff
Delmo Remy
Pedro Postigo
Roberto Salvagno
Rúben Longhi
 Argentina (ARG)
2918 pts[4] Elías Benavides
Enrique Baldwin
Guillermo Baldwin
Julio Poggi
Rubén Váldez
 Peru (PER)
2896 pts Allan Sobocinski
Alberto Pereira Braga
Antônio Martins Guimarães
Ernani Martins Neves
João Sobocinski
 Brazil (BRA)
2895 pts
Military rifle standing team  Argentina (ARG)1634 pts  Peru (PER)1569 pts  Chile (CHI)1544 pts

Medal table

  *   Host nation (Argentina)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Argentina (ARG)*116623
2 United States (USA)3306
3 Peru (PER)1326
4 Mexico (MEX)1124
5 Brazil (BRA)0213
6 Chile (CHI)0123
7 Cuba (CUB)0011
 Ecuador (ECU)0011
Totals (8 nations)16161547


References

  1. "Les premiers Jeux Panaméricains" (PDF) (in French). Retrieved 2017-12-15.
  2. UOL (2007). "Amador, esporte deu 1ª medalha olímpica ao Brasil". Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  3. UOL (2007). "Medalhistas brasileiros - buenos aires-1951". Retrieved 15 December 2017.
  4. Correio da Manhã (1959-08-27). "Jogos Pan-Americanos em retrospecto (IV)". Retrieved 2017-12-15.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.