Posted on 07/12/2025 4:23:49 PM PDT by T Ruth
The precision and sporter shooters will compete at Hillsdale College July 24-26.
The American Legion’s Junior 3-Position Air Rifle National Championship will again be held on the campus of Hillsdale College in Hillsdale, Mich., July 24-26. The top 15 precision and 14 sporter youth marksmen who competed in the American Legion postal match advanced to the championships.
During competition July 24 and 25, participants in both the precision and sporter categories will shoot a .177-caliber air rifle in three positions – prone, standing and kneeling – 20 times for each position twice. The top eight competitors in both categories will advance to the finals on Saturday, July 26, where each shooter will fire 10 shots standing. The winner from each respective category will receive a $5,000 scholarship provided by The American Legion and the Sons of The American Legion. A $1,000 scholarship, provided by the American Legion Auxiliary, will be awarded to the second-place finishers in each category.
The precision and sporter champions will also receive a trip to The American Legion’s 106th National Convention in Tampa, Fla., in August to be honored alongside other American Legion youth program champions.
Click here: to donate by Credit Card
Or here: to donate by PayPal
Or by mail to: Free Republic, LLC - PO Box 9771 - Fresno, CA 93794
Thank you very much and God bless you.
Love good pellet/bb gun.
I guess that society has degenerated so fast and so far since then that such a
thing (high school marksman teams) is unthinkable now.
I suppose between the widely prescribed psychoactive medications and
the loss of civility it may be wise, tragically.
We are on the brink of losing our very civilization, it appears.
Maybe not ‘losing’ it, but watching it being transformed to something far less than it was.
Something crude, juvenile and barbaric.
Good for them.
A local Christian school has skeet shooting.
My old high school discontinued anything of the sort, along with the
Naval Junior ROTC program the year after I graduated.
Had to get rid of everything that had anything to do with yucky guns you know…
I think the indoor range went away first - the usual EPA lead contamination hand-wringing. Then the .22 rifles went back to DCM and were probably sold through the DCM and later CMP processes.
The school still has a JROTC unit, it still has "ARMORY" painted in military stencil on the Petty Officers' door, but the rifle team shoots airguns now. I'm a bit amazed that they're retained that much.
I guy I work with has a son that shoots shotgun on some team, I’d like to say it’s through his high school. This is somewhere in Jackson county Michigan. So they’re still out there.
Careful! You boys can put your eye out with that thing!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.