Two gripping and volatile 10m air rifle finals at the ISSF World Cup Final in Doha produced victories in the men’s event for Hungary’s world No.1 Zalan Pekler and, in the women’s version, Poland’s world No.12 Aneta Stankiewicz.

“I am still shaking a little bit because this final was really nerve-wracking”, Pekler, 23, told ISSF TV after a competition where he only took over the lead with four shots remaining, finishing on 251.2 ahead of Serbia’s Lazar Kovacevic on 249.4.

Bronze went to 22-year-old European Games bronze medallist Jiri Privratsky of the Czech Republic after China’s world silver medallist and Tokyo 2020 bronze medallist Yang Haoran, who had seemed poised to win, failed to make the final three.

The competition had been led over the first two series of five shots by Naoya Okada, the Japanese shooter who had topped the earlier qualifying with 632.0 points ahead of Pekler and Yang.

Okada maintained that lead in the first two elimination rounds, but then scores of 10.3 and 10.0 dropped him to fourth, one place above Pekler, as Yang moveominously through for a 0.2 lead over Kovacevic, who had scored a 10.9, and Privratsky.

Two shots later the long-time leader was out, fifth overall, after scoring 9.8 and 10.5.

Yang also faltered, however, scoring 9.9 and 10.5 with shots 17 and 18 to drop to joint fourth with Pekler as Kovacevic, who had scored a perfect 10.9 in the previous round, took the lead on 189.0 ahead of Privratsky on 188.7.

Things got worse for the Chinese shooter in the next round as a 10.4 was followed by a 9.8 which meant he was out before the medal rounds, with Pekler taking the lead for the first time, 0.2 ahead of his Serbian rival.

The Hungarian extended his lead over Kovacevic to 1.4 in the penultimate round as Privratsky left with bronze and although he wavered with the first of his last two efforts, scoring 9.8, he recovered with a concluding 10.7 to reach a total of 251.2.

Kovacevic, whose opening 10.3 had narrowed the lead, was left with an impossible task by the time he fired his final effort, which earned 9.5 for a total of 249.4.

It is always very special to come to a competition as world-ranked number one,” Pekler added. “It is always a little extra pressure, but I am really happy that I could achieve this amazing result in the final and also in the qualification.

That’s why I came here – to win the World Cup final. And I am really happy right now.

“I almost fell out at one point. It was very tight between these really great shooters. But at the end I could win gold and I am really happy.

Right now the Olympics is the main goal for me, to achieve a medal there. But this season was very successful for me, especially in World Cups, and I hope this great form will remain in the next year.

Among those who failed to emerge from qualifying were Sweden’s world champion Victor Lindgren and world bronze medallist Frantisek Smetana of the Czech Republic.

The women’s final matched the men’s for drama. 

It appeared for a while that the Chinese contingent of Jiayu Han, world champion, world No.1 and world record holder, 19-year-old world silver medallist and world No.2 Zhilin Wang and 17-year-old world No.3 Yuling Huang might replicate the clean sweep achieved by their team-mates in the previous day’s women’s 10m pistol event.

Wang, Han and Huang had qualified first, second and fourth, with only France’s Oceanne Muller interrupting their dominance.

The 20-year-old French shooter, who finished fifth at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics and won bronze at this year’s European Games, underlined her potential to be one of the home banner-carriers at next year’s Paris Games as she held her lead in the first set of five shots and reached the elimination rounds just 0.1 off a lead held by Huang.

She eventually finished fifth – but not before the departure of the 24-year-old Chinese favourite, Han.

Huang, whose elimination round shots included two 9.9s, eventually missed out on a medal by one place as Norway’s steadily improving European champion Jeanette Duestad brought her experience to bear in a competition where she secured bronze.

Meanwhile Stankiewicz, at 28 the eldest shooter in the final, had moved into the lead after the second elimination round before producing round after round of consistently high scores, including a 10.8 and four 10.7s.

She secured the greatest triumph of her career so far with 253.3 points, as Wang, despite two concluding 10.7s, remained well off gold on 252.6.

My first five shots weren’t the best so I had to run the girls,” Stankiewicz told ISSF TV.

“My favourite shot was the 10.8, but there was a lot of 10.7s. It is all about the feeling inside you.”

Asked her reflection upon the fact that, despite being only 28, she was the eldest in the final, she replied with a laugh: “I don’t care! Maybe I am not the youngest but I have the big experience and I have to live with this.”

Tomorrow is given over to shotgun events and will feature the men’s and women’s trap and skeet finals.

Find all the Doha 2023 World Cup coverage at ISSF – International Shooting Sport Federation – YouTube

 

Fuente: http://www.issf-sports.org