ISSF 50 meter pistol

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ISSF 50 meter pistol
Men
Number of shots60 + 10
Olympic GamesSince 1896
World ChampionshipsSince 1900
AbbreviationFP

50 m Pistol (formerly called Free Pistol) is one of the ISSF shooting events. It provides the purest precision shooting among the pistol events, and is one of the oldest shooting types, dating back to the 19th century and only having seen marginal rule changes since the 1930s.

The pistol used must be in caliber .22 using .22 Long Rifle ammunition, may only be loaded with one round at a time, and have 'open' sights (i.e. optical and laser sights are not allowed). It must also be operated by one hand and not supported by any other part of the shooter's body. Apart from that, there are practically no rules for the pistol, explaining the former name of the event. Trigger force may be as low as the shooter pleases, the grip may be designed in any way and there are no restrictions on size and weight. Precision pistols with long barrels, grips fitted to the shooter's hand, very light trigger pull, etc., are often themselves called free pistols.

The course of fire is 60 shots within a maximum time of two hours. The target is the same as in 25 m Standard Pistol, and with double the distance this explains the lower result level. 570 out of the maximum 600 is considered a world-class result. The current world record, 581, was achieved already in the Moscow Olympics in 1980 by USSR's own Alexander Melentiev.

Most shooters excelling in 50 m Pistol also compete at the same level in 10 m Air Pistol, a similar precision event.

Current world records

Template:Shooting WR FP Junior Men Teams
Current world records in 50 m Pistol
Men Qualification 583  Jin Jong-oh (KOR) September 9, 2014 Granada (ESP) edit
Final 230.1  Jitu Rai (IND) March 01, 2017 New Delhi  India edit
Teams 1719  Romania (Babii, Ilie, Stan) September 7, 1985 Osijek (YUG) edit
Junior Men

Template:Shooting WR FP Junior Men Individual

World and Olympic Champions

There are no double Olympic champions in 50 m Pistol. World Championships were held annually up to the 1930s, which made a few long streaks possible, but after World War II few shooters have been able to win two major worldwide titles.

Another rare double is that between this precision event and its direct opposite 25 m Rapid Fire Pistol; this has only been accomplished by Alfred Lane (completed in 1912), Torsten Ullman (1939), Huelet Benner (1952) and Pentti Linnosvuo (1964), with Lane and Linnosvuo using only Olympic titles. Benner, on the other hand, is the only shooter with two titles in both events.

Year Venue Individual Team
1896 Athens  Sumner Paine (USA)
19001 Paris  Karl Röderer (SUI)  Switzerland
1901 Luzern  Karl Hess (SUI)  Switzerland
1902 Rome  Karl Hess (SUI)  Switzerland
1903 Buenos Aires  Benjamin Segura (ARG)  Argentina
1904 Lyon  Paul Van Asbroeck (BEL)  Switzerland
Alfred Lane at the 1912 Olympics
1905 Brussels  Julien Van Asbroeck (BEL)  Belgium
1906 Milan  Konrad Stäheli (SUI)  Belgium
1907 Zürich  Paul Van Asbroeck (BEL)  Belgium
1908 Vienna  Richard Fischer (GER)  Italy
1908 London  Paul Van Asbroeck (BEL)  United States
1909 Hamburg  Paul Van Asbroeck (BEL)  Germany
1910 Loosduinen  Paul Van Asbroeck (BEL)  Belgium
1911 Rome  Charles Paumier du Verger (BEL)  Belgium
1912 Bayonne-Biarritz  Paul Van Asbroeck (BEL)  Belgium
1912 Stockholm  Alfred Lane (USA)  United States
1913 Camp Perry  Vilhelm Carlberg (SWE)  United States
1914 Viborg  Paul Van Asbroeck (BEL)  Italy
1920 Antwerp  Karl Frederick (USA)  United States
1921 Lyon  Hans Hänni (SUI)  Italy
1922 Milan  Hans Hänni (SUI)  Switzerland
Aleksandr Melentiev, the 1980 Olympic Champion and World record holder
1923 Camp Perry  Irving Romaro Calkins (USA)  United States
1924 Reims  Wilhelm Schnyder (SUI)  Switzerland
1925 St. Gallen  Wilhelm Schnyder (SUI)  France
1927 Rome  Wilhelm Schnyder (SUI)  Switzerland
1928 Loosduinen  Wilhelm Schnyder (SUI)  Switzerland
1929 Stockholm  Fritz Zulauf (SUI)  Switzerland
1930 Antwerp  Lean Revilliod de Bude (SUI)  Switzerland
1931 Lwów  Marcel Bonin (FRA)  Switzerland
1933 Granada  Torsten Ullman (SWE)  Switzerland
1935 Rome  Torsten Ullman (SWE)  Switzerland
1936 Berlin  Torsten Ullman (SWE)
1937 Helsinki  Torsten Ullman (SWE)  Switzerland
Boris Kokorev, the 1996 Olympic Champion
1939 Luzern  Erich Krempel (GER)  Switzerland
1947 Stockholm  Torsten Ullman (SWE)  Argentina
1948 London  Edwin Vásquez (PER)
1949 Buenos Aires  Beat Rhyner (SUI)  Argentina
1950 Oslo  Torsten Ullman (SWE)  Sweden
1952 Helsinki  Huelet Benner (USA)
1954 Caracas  Huelet Benner (USA)  Soviet Union
1956 Melbourne  Pentti Linnosvuo (FIN)
1958 Moscow  Makhmud Umarov (URS)  Soviet Union
1960 Rome  Alexei Gushchin (URS)
1962 Cairo  Vladimir Stolipin (URS)  Soviet Union
1964 Tokyo  Väinö Markkanen (FIN)
File:2ggffghf.jpg
Mikhail Nestruev, the 2004 Olympic Champion
1966 Wiesbaden  Vladimir Stolipin (URS)  Soviet Union
1968 Mexico City  Grigori Kosych (URS)
1970 Phoenix  Harald Vollmar (GDR)  Soviet Union
1972 Munich  Ragnar Skanåker (SWE)
1974 Thun  Gregori Zapolski (URS)  Soviet Union
1976 Montreal  Uwe Potteck (GDR)
1978 Seoul  Moritz Minder (SUI)  Switzerland
1980 Moscow  Aleksandr Melentiev (URS)
1982 Caracas  Ragnar Skanåker (SWE)  Soviet Union
1984 Los Angeles  Xu Haifeng (CHN)
1986 Suhl  Sergei Pyzhianov (URS)  Soviet Union
1988 Seoul  Sorin Babii (ROU)
1990 Moscow  Spas Koprinkov (BUL)  Hungary Juniors
1992 Barcelona  Kanstantsin Lukashyk (EUN) Individual Team
1994 Milan  Wang Yifu (CHN)  Ukraine  Anatolie Corovai (MDA)  Moldova
1996 Atlanta  Boris Kokorev (RUS)
1998 Barcelona  Franck Dumoulin (FRA)  China  Andrija Zlatić (YUG)  Poland
2000 Sydney  Tanyu Kiryakov (BUL)
2002 Lahti  Tan Zongliang (CHN)  China  Vladimir Issachenko (KAZ)  Ukraine
2004 Athens  Mikhail Nestruev (RUS)
2006 Zagreb  Tan Zongliang (CHN)  China  Pu Qifeng (CHN)  China

1 The Olympic competitions in Paris also counted as the 1900 World Championships.