Tag: shooting sports

SHOOTING USA to Air Segment on SASP College Nationals

www.shootingusa.com (1)Make sure to tune in to the Outdoor Channel for the Shooting USA Hour, Wednesday, Aug. 10, 2016 9 p.m. EST, to watch the Scholastic Action Shooting Program (SASP) athletes participate at the 2016 College Nationals. The young shooters had a blast plinking for speed at the CMP Talladega Marksmanship Park in Talladega, Ala. back in March. Check out the promo for the segment here! You’ll no doubt want to tune in again on Aug. 17  to watch the 2015 SASP Nationals and on Aug. 31 to watch the 2015 SCTP Nationals. college nationals 2

SSSF Welcomes Chris Hodgdon as Board Member

Chris Hodgdon joins the SSSF Board of Directors.
Chris Hodgdon joins the SSSF Board of Directors.
The Scholastic Shooting Sports Foundation (SSSF) welcomes Chris Hodgdon as the 11th member of the SSSF Board of Directors. Hodgdon will be joining the Group C Directors, Bub Edwards, Carlton Nether and Eric Tarbox, who have just been re-elected for the next three-year term. All four of them will begin their three-year term of service at the 2016 Annual BOD meeting in Atlanta on Jan. 9, 2016. “We are very fortunate to have Chris join our board of directors, bringing his background and experience with our programs and his industry knowledge to the table,” said Louise K. Terry, SSSS Board of Directors chairman. “He has demonstrated a real, first-hand commitment to our mission and our values, and we welcome him as we move into 2016!" Hodgdon is a past coach in trap, skeet and sporting clays in the Scholastic Clay Target Program (SCTP). He is a Benefactor Member of the NRA and serves on the NRA Shooting Sports Committee. He is also a member of the Kansas Rifle Association, Mill Creek Gun Club, Powder Creek Gun Club and other hunting conservation groups. “I am humbly honored to be nominated to serve on the SSSF Board of Directors.  My passion is to help grow the shooting sports through our younger generation, I believe the future is bright with the quality program offered by SCTP and SPP to the thousands of participating athletes, coaches and parents.” Hodgdon lives with his wife, Adele, in Shawnee, Kan., and has two sons, Pierce, 20, and Joel, 23.

Grace Callahan’s Journey from SCTP to PSCA

PSCA shooter Grace Callahan.
PSCA shooter Grace Callahan.
Grace Callahan is proof that dedication and a strong drive are key ingredients in the recipe for success. Callahan, currently a junior at Rowan University, began her shooting career as a SCTP member and is now a pro with the PSCA. The impressive shooter is going strong in the world of female shooting and has big plans for her future, but she’s never forgotten what she learned during the ups and downs of her past shooting career. “My dad, Bruce, introduced me to shooting when I was 10 years old, and I joined the Tri State Shooters SCTP program at the Hudson Farm in Andover, New Jersey, in 7th grade and remained with the program throughout high school,” Callahan said. “I loved the sport of shooting. I was also playing lacrosse at the same time, but realized I couldn’t balance both sports and that I’d have to choose one. So, by my junior year in high school, I had dropped lacrosse and was focusing solely on shooting.  As a varsity goalie, however, I was coerced into stepping up when the team was short handed my senior year.”
Grace and her father, Bruce Callahan.
Grace and her father, Bruce Callahan.
Callahan said she fondly recalls her first SCTP Nationals event. “It was the best experience. It was the first time I got to participate in a competition with people who were only my age. I ended up placing first for ladies in the Junior Varsity Division.” Callahan continued to excel at the Nationals competition, placing first the following three years at the Varsity level, but she said despite her success in the sport, she did have some low moments. “It’s hard to see yourself get knocked down, but you just got to go back at it. My perseverance and dedication to the sport kept me in there, and I had to give up a lot. But I understood that not hanging out with my friends for a couple of weekends wouldn’t hurt my relationship with them, but it would help my shooting. And quite honestly, I’d rather be in my RV with my dad going shooting than anywhere else.” One of her toughest challenges came when she didn’t qualify during her first attempt at the PSCA. The organization had asked the top NSCA competitors in the nation to fly to the Delta in Arkansas for the qualification match.
Grace takes home 1st place in 2013 SCTP match.
Grace takes home 1st place in 2013 SCTP match.
“I missed the qualification by one bird,” she said. “I was devastated. Then, I had the chance to qualify during an amateurs shoot against the pros, but I missed again. It hurt my heart so much to lose twice. But, my dad just said, ‘you need to keep trying.’ So I did. I went to Georgia and ended up in second place at the qualification and then won the entire third pro tour stop. I returned for pro tour stop four at nationals and took second place overall. I learned that little baby steps lead to huge accomplishments.” Callahan said despite her successes, she constantly strives to get better and encourages other aspiring shooters, especially young girls, to never give up and always push themselves harder. “When I see little girls out there shooting, I tell them to not think of themselves as less qualified than the boys,” she said.  “I say, ‘You’re here for a reason and you have more determination than these boys. You have just as much strength and capability.’” Callahan says her long-term goal is to just shoot for the rest of her life. For now, she trains regularly with Joseph Scull at Cedar Creek Sporting Clays in Millville, NJ, to continue preparation for the upcoming season.  Having recently gained her NSCA Level I instructor’s certification, she also actively instructs at the Hudson Farm in Andover, NJ, as well.

New Scholastic Pistol Program Coaches Certified in Missouri

mo_coach_class121315The Scholastic Pistol Program (SPP) hosted 19 new coach candidates from five different states through the NRA Level I Pistol Coaches class on December 12-13, 2015 in Pacific, MO.  The coach school consists of two days of sports-specific lessons and practical coaching exercises designed to teach the coach candidate the basics of coaching a pistol team and is the preferred course for new coaches looking to start or join a Scholastic Pistol Program.  Our thanks go out to Mike Seevers, head coach of the Arnold Jr. Shooters, for sponsoring the class and for the good folks at the Gemmer Muzzleoading Range for hosting the live-fire practical portion of the class.  The class was taught by Ben Berka, SSSF executive director and Michael Perkowski, Illinois SPP state advisor. For more information and a current schedule of upcoming courses, go to https://sssfonline.org/scholastic-pistol-program-spp/spp-coaches-training/.  To host a course in your area, please contact Rick Leach at 262-894-4284 or rleach@sssfonline.com  

2015 SSSF National Championship Participation Results in Impressive Economic Contributions to Local Economy

SSSF-Logo-(Revised)Southwick Associates’ recent economic report of the 2015 SSSF National Championship at the World Shooting and Recreational Complex in Sparta, Ill., June 12-18, 2015, is further proof that sporting events can serve as powerful economic drivers in communities across the nation. Southwick Associates, a market research and economics firm specializing in the hunting, shooting, sportfishing, and outdoor recreation markets, found that contributions from the event to the Illinois GDP totaled $15,797,787. Tax revenues generated $3,960,917, and 245 jobs were supported in the state. The report indicates that in addition to the 2,600 scholastic shooters who participated in the National Championship, 4,000 parents and 600 coaches also attended. The competitors, parents, and coaches each spent an average of $1,429 on event fees and other costs (food, travel, lodging, etc.). This spending made measurable contributions to the Illinois economy. Southwick Associates and the NSSF garnered this information through an online survey conducted between July 24 and August 14, 2015. The survey was designed to characterize spending and participation of competitors and others attending the SSSF National Championship. Of the 7,200 competitors, parents, and coaches at the event, 824 completed the survey. View the entire report here.

SSSF Donates More Than $700,000 to Midway USA Foundation

On September 22, 2015, MUFI-2013-Logo-2the Scholastic Shooting Sports Foundation donated more than $700,000 to the Midway USA Foundation.  The donation was a result of endowment funding earned by Scholastic Clay Target and Scholastic Pistol Program teams via state, regional, and national championship events as well as team fundraising events conducted over the past several months.  One hundred and three teams from 23 states benefited from the donation.  So far in 2015, the SSSF has donated almost $975,000 benefiting 220 member-teams.  In the past two years SSSF has donated more than $2.7 million to 329 member-team endowment accounts in 42 states.

SCTP Featured in Washington Times News Article

A recent Washington Times news piece highlighting the growth of the shooting sports among high school-aged youth boasts the accomplishments of Scholastic Clay Target Program (SCTP) team member Lindsay Martin and acknowledges the SCTP for its valuable role in recruitment of millennials into the shooting sports. The article refers to the thousands of teens who participate in competitive shooting, saying it’s one of the fastest-growing sports for high schools in recent years. The Washington Times interviewed Tom Wondrash, SCTP director, about the influx of youth participation in shooting sports in schools and the community. Wondrash told the publication he believes the growth is due to its inclusivity and opportunity for participation. He’s quoted as saying, “What separates shooting sports from stick-and-ball sports is that when it’s time for our kids to go to a tournament, all the kids can compete — heavy, thin, tall, short, fast, slow, boy or girl — it doesn’t make them any different,” Mr. Wondrash said. “That’s what really lends itself to our sport.” An Olympic hopeful, 17-year-old Martin is a member of the Dusters trapshooting team, which was established by the Scholastic Shooting Sports Foundation (SSSF). The senior at Glen Allen High School in Virginia is considered a rising star in her community. The only girl on the team, she’s becoming known as the “shotgun shooter.” Martin says she is a fan of women learning to shoot, and she even teaches women how to fire a shotgun at her local gun range in Charles City County. Martin is one of many youth featured in the media in recent years who are being recognized not only for their superb shooting skills, but for their positive character traits and citizenship values, which are promoted and encouraged through the SCTP and other SSSF programs.      

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The Scholastic Shooting Sports Foundation is a 501(c)(3) public charity dedicated to providing shooting-sports education and opportunities to school-age youths around the United States to encourage young athlete personal growth and development.
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