Rules In Brief
Australian Sporting Clays Sporting Clays was established as a clay target discipline to simulate the type of shooting one could normally expect in the field while hunting. The size of the targets, their speed and angles of flight are all variable, making sporting clays the most challenging clay target sport you can ever participate in. Unlike conventional clay target shooting where targets all follow regular and standard trajectories from course to course, no two sporting clays ground are the same and no two grounds have the same targets. However, ever shooter on a given sporting range on a given day receives exactly the same targets as his or her fellow competitors. In Sporting Clays, aspects of the natural terrain at
the ground are fully utilised so that competitors are shooting amongst
trees, rocks, uphill, downhill and overhead. Standard clays, "midis" and "minis" which are both smaller, the larger but very thin "battue" targets that turn on their side at the end of their trajectory, the hard-rimmed "rabbit" targets that roll along the ground, and the smallest of all, the "super-mini" is a high speed midget. Targets are thrown in single and double formation, and in combinations of different sizes and at infinitely variable speeds, from angles at all points of the compass around the competitor. A single round of Sporting Clays consists of 25 targets. In Sporting Clays the challenge to the competitor is
a multi-disciplinary one as he or she must maintain a mental approach
that encourages concentration and accuracy. The emphasis on eye-hand
coordination required is greater than in any other of the shooting disciplines,
therefore a high degree of mental alertness must be maintained in addition
to general fitness. |
|
Compak A condensed version of Sporting Clays known as Compak,
offers exciting possibilities for future international competition.
Consisting of four shooting stations, 25 targets of varying angles and
speed are lunched around each shooter. This allows for a high proportion
of contrasting Sporting Clay targets to be shot in a small area where
a seated audience can watch without the need to move from station to
station |
|
English Sporting In its early form, English Sporting usually presented the shooter with two different targets. The targets used were normally quartering targets, crosser, driven, overhead, rabbits, springing teal amongst others the course creator might feel is challenging. Today, As the most popular form of clay shooting, English Sporting provides a shooting environment that offers different layouts and a constant challenge. |
|
F.I.T.A.S.C This International Sport discipline is named after
the Federation that runs it. FITASC is an Acronym for a French term
that means the International Federation for Sporting Shooting. Competitions
consist of 100+ targets shot over at least 4 sections, International
competitions are as large as 200 targets over 8 sections shot through
a time period of two to four days. The layout uses all the more familiar
speeds and angles of the uncomplicated English version. Each layout is approached by a group of 6. From an open
firing point (one meter circle, 6 circles in total), they shoot a selection
of targets fired from differing traps. Singles are fired first, followed
by doubles, until all shooters have fired from all of the positions.
There is no set layout but it is down to the referee's decision, as
all targets must be fired in safe directions. A shooter must have the
gun out of the shoulder from the moment the target is called for and
up until the target becomes visible. |