Published
for the Fort Bliss/El Paso, Texas Community
August
19, 2004
Go Team USA!
Army Reserves Maj. David Johnson, a member of the U.S. Army World Class
Athlete Program at Fort Carson, Colo., coaches Sgt. 1st Class Anthony
Leone. Johnson is coaching Leone and other members of Team USA’s
rifle marksmen in the Olympic Games at Athens, Greece.
Sgt. 1st Class Jason Parker studies the scoreboard to learn that he is
the final shooter to advance to the final round of the 10-meter air rifle
competition in the Summer Olympics.
Parker
overcomes tricky trigger to finish eighth in Olympics air rifle
Tim Hipps
Army News Service
ATHENS, Greece — Sgt. 1st Class Jason Parker watched his world
record fall Aug. 16 while shooting to an eighth-place finish in the
men’s 10-meter air rifle event in the Summer Olympic Games.
China’s Qinan Zhu won the gold medal with a final world record
of 702.7 points, eclipsing Parker’s world mark of 702.5 established
at the 2003 Munich World Cup.
“The scores keep going up,” Parker said. “It seems
like a world record is set about every year or two. It just gives you
another goal to shoot for. You just have to do it on the day that counts.”
China’s Jie Li won the silver medal with 701.3 points. Slovakia’s
Josef Gonci took the bronze medal with a 697.4 total at Markopoulo Olympic
Shooting Centre.
Parker, a member of the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit at Fort Benning,
Ga., quickly shot a perfect sixth series score of 100 points in the
qualification round.
“That’s the only way to make the final when it’s that
close because that’s how they break the tie,” said Parker’s
coach, Army Reserve Maj. David Johnson of the U.S. Army World Class
Athlete Program. “That gave him a chance.”
Parker studied the scoreboard to see his name land in the final spot
of the eight-marksman final. He then notched 100.5 points in the final
round to finish with a 694.5 total.
“I got in the final and didn’t take advantage of it, just
shot a couple of bad shots,” Parker said. “But the guy who
won it shot a world record so I would’ve had to been on it the
whole match.”
Parker overcame a tricky trigger that contributed to two costly 98-point
series in his qualification round. He managed 99 or 100 points in his
other four stanzas.
“I had a little technical problem with my rifle,” explained
Parker, 30, of Omaha, Neb. “The trigger wasn’t functioning
quite right, but I got it fixed.”
“The gun broke,” said Johnson, 40, a native of Mount Holly,
N.J., who lives in Colorado Springs, Colo. “I took it and ran
it down the hall to the gunsmith, had it repaired, and came back. It
affected him for several shots, but he did a real good job of dealing
with it.”
Parker already is looking forward to the 2008 Beijing Games.
“There were certain parts I thought I shot very, very good, and
there were other parts that I didn’t handle too good,” he
said. “I’m going to take those parts that I didn’t
handle too well, learn from them, and come back in four more years a
stronger shooter.