As usual a bit rewind...
I have to confess that during the hard preparation times I dreamed about being successful at Plzen. I couldn't help, even if I know that these kinds of thoughts put unnecessary stress on ourself. But "I had a dream"!
Plzen range is within a huge sports area, where many commodities can be found.
So, in there, you can feel the space around, but not on our shooting range. In fact, the chosen range to accommodate the Champs, is tiny. Not in number of benches, but in space between them and behind them.
Plzen is not a new facility, so, needs at that time were different. But, for such a big Champs, some care has to be taken to facilitate circulation around and comfort zones for the shooters, after all it was the Euro/Worlds, the 1st after the pandemics.
Such a huge competition puts an enormous burden on organisations, and criticising them is easy when you just arrive to shoot and nothing else.
WRABF opened a specific channel to debate whats when well and not so well, so I'm not doing it here, but I will just want to note two very important points that should draw our attention in the future.
One, is the distance to travel to clean the rifles.
Europe has a very restrictive firearms law, and even at this close specific ranges, you can not travel outside benches with rifles outside their case. Travel cases, specially the ones used for air travel, are not light, small, or silent, when rolled on the ground. And having to cross all the shooting range, and more 300m to arrive at your cleaning destination was a nightmare. So, I think, this has to be better studied, particularly when a perfect zone, just half doors to the shooting range, was available.
The other was something should be copied by others. That was a very good idea and should be implemented more. I'm talking about the complaint appraisal committee. It was formed by all team captains, and to give you an exemple, if a scored has been complained, the master referee prepared the target, and all captains looked through it. After they vote, except the one from the same target country. I made part of that committee, and others before, so I can say it was the fairest way to choose a doubtful situation. Hat's off.
Weather was misty in there, even if we were on summer time. Cold, rainy, and windy. Did I said windy? Oh boy, it was windy.
When I'm at a range new to me, I tend to visualize all the potential shooting wind obstacles. What I noticed there, was a complex range, with many easy to fall traps. As you cannot change a range building, might better to understand it and not fighting against it.
My appraisal brought me several hard to overcome aspects that I have to deal when aiming:
1. Benches are way back, so very hard to see more than two/three competitors flags. This is key to anticipate wind trend and turning waves.
2. Lateral barriers. You have there a sort of lateral obstacles, planted in a way that, from my perspective, are more pernicious than benefic to shooting. They started 3m after shooting line, running for around 35m and then left a free ~10m space until the target.
Funny enough, that space was where the wind blew more strongly. So, more flags than usual on that zone.
About the barriers. There were not solid, instead, there are around 2m high and formed by wooden boards leaving, between them, a full 10~15cm open space. I have talked about it already, but I started to notice something was wrong at the practice time.
I do my cards from bottom to top, and why on earth my last two rows were so difficult to hit correctly? I talked to my mates, we looked all around and really thought the culprit was the free space between the barrier end and the targets. But, I was not convinced, because why so much on the rows 1 and 2? At the end of practice day I spend a lot of time at the range wondering around to try to figure out what's happening. Then, in despair, I went to the targets, looked back to benches and took a careful look at the barriers. Bingo, the upper barriers gaps lined with the bullet path. And being higher than the target, we can't see it through the flags.
Damn, the day after will start IS and I haven't realize that on practice, to try a couple of things. That night I did draw a plan to shoot so, I might could go around that trap, or not. And I did.
During the competition, many shooters complaint abut those 1 and 2 first rows!
Studying the range is very important, so do it. At Plzen I shot normally on the rows 3 to 5, but on the first 2 rows, I never shot lateral conditions, because they were the worst to deal, because of the venturi gap effect. I shot just front wind conditions, more truer than back ones. And normally I don't do it, so had to adapt.
The wind during IS was manageable, thank God! But on LR (I already told that WRABF changed to word varmint to rifle...) it was impossible. Strong, unpredictable, back and forth, with very strong bursts. I remember being seated, waiting for the whistle to start, asking me, man what are you going to do? I looked around and saw even more concerned shooters than me, that was reassuring...
During all day shooting you had 4~5 seconds to shoot in a condition, and if missed, a 9 or worst was granted.
When the dust settle down, only a 750 emerged, and I was the lucky owner.
I knew that I did something special, as on the last day, HR day, many people were behind me seeing me shooting. Great this was to my ego, when noticed, I had to recompose myself, as a sudden pressure raised inside me. Refocus and abstraction has been practice before and it helped me.
For HR, the wind settle down a bit and more 750 surfed, being wind reading and ability to cope with wind obstacles the major key differentiator between shooters.
There are moments which belong to us, and we'll never forget. Let me share the most striking one at Plzen. On the last HR target I had a dubious shot, might be 10 or 9. Could be then, 1st or 3rd place overall... I knew it will be complained, because referee gave me the 10.
It it was complained, but I didn't want to go to the committee, because it was my target. 10 captains were at the committee there to access the shot, and I went to the cafeteria waiting for the verdict. I couldn't eat or drink nothing, until my mate came with a big smile in his face. Yes, I did it! Could never forget that smile!
Of course all the practice done before, either physical, gear related and mental, played a huge part on my success, but those late hours at the range studying it, played gold to me.
It was a great time meeting friends, learning new ways to overcame shooting obstacles, understanding different shooting approaches, and having fun.
I brought home:
Individual
- IS - World vice-champion, European champion and European record (747 42x)
- LR - World and European champion, with World and European record (750 48x)
- HR - World and European champion, with World and European record (750 61x)
- 2 gun aggregate - World and European champion, with World and European record (1500 109x)
- 3 gun aggregate - World and European champion, with World and European record (2247 151x)
Team (with Ricardo Serapio and Luís Pereira)
- IS - World and European champion, with World and European record (2233/127x)
- LR - World and European champion, with World and European record (2237/124x)
- HR - World and European vice-champion ( 2245/164x)
All results here:
https://www.wrabf.com/https://www.wrabf.com/World Championships.html
And my dream come true!
I can't be more grateful to my family and my dearest wife. Without their support, and love, I would never succeed. Your support, patience and understanding when I was not in the best mood, gave me all the strength to continue.
To Tony Harper, my mentor, always there to help and share his wisdom and knowledge.
To Erkki SeikKula, who continue to believe in me and granted the longest ever Lapua support.
And to my Team mates, and my club, helping to keep high that desire to excel.
(to be continued)