The Vegas Shoot 2015 Review
by Chris on Feb.09, 2015, under Main Page
Mom and I are on our way back from Vegas. As I write this we are passing through Boise. (Technology is pretty cool these days).
The third and final day went pretty well for me. I shot a 299/22X which is exactly dead-on my statistical average for the year, so I can’t be too upset. I would have liked to shoot a 300 of course, but I made a cardinal mistake on one shot, and that’s what happens. That gave me a total of 896/58X out of a possible 900/90X. That’s a tad below my average, thanks to the 298 on the first day and the lousy X count on Saturday, but all in all its in the range of normal, so I’m pretty satisfied.
I improved a fair amount over last year’s performance, both in terms of score and placement. Last year I shot an 894 and 60-some X’s, and finished 12 in the Second Flight – which translated to around 49th overall as I recall. This year I improved my position each day. After Friday I was 35th, after Saturday I was 27th, and I finished 16th overall (out of 875 competitors in my division). I joked that if I had a couple more days, I could win the thing!
Unfortunately that was not good enough to finish in the money. Only the top 8 archers in each Flight won prizes. I guess that’s why there is always next year.
Here are some interesting stats about the tournament:
- 2,520 archers took part in this years event.
- Of those, 427 came from foreign lands, representing 39 countries.
- Each of the 50 US States plus American Samoa were represented by at least one archer.
- California and Arizona contributed the largest of number of archers, at 422 and 206 respectively. 58 archers from Oregon made the trek, while 86 Washingtonians were in attendance.
- More than $216,000 dollars in prize money was awarded across all of the various divisions, plus an additional $24,000 dollars in scholarships were awarded to the winners of the junior divisions.