Kim Rhode and Matt Emmons are
opposite sexes, grew up on opposite coasts
and specialize in different shooting disciplines.
Despite the obvious differences, the
two have something very special in common:
gold medals won in shooting at the
2004 Athens
Olympic Games.
Rhode, the 26-
year-old winner in
women's double
trap, lives in El
Monte, California.
Her occupation, she
says, is "Athlete,"
and she not only can
wear 2004 Olympic
gold to prove it, but she also owns a gold
medal won at the 1996 games in Atlanta. In
fact, in Atlanta she became not only the first
person to attain a gold medal in the newly
introduced event of women's double trap, but
she also became the youngest person to
ever win Olympic gold in shooting.
For her, shooting was just another tradition
carried on from generation to generation.
"Shooting was passed down to me by
my father who had it passed down by his
parents," Kim said. "I've been hunting and
fishing seemingly my whole life."
At first she shot at tin cans and paper
plates. By age 10, Kim was shooting competitively.
At 12 she was the youngest girl to
break 100 straight targets in American
skeet. At 13 she became the Ladies World
Champion in American skeet.
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Though competitive shooting at a worldclass
level would seem like a full-time job,
Kim fits a lot more into a very busy schedule.
She does all of the things an "ordinary"
26-year-old girl does, she says. She loves
to surf, restore old cars, go dancing with
her friends and go out with her boyfriend.
Kim is also about to earn a college degree
in pre-veterinary medicine and art.
"I love art and I love to photograph,
especially when I go on trips," she said.
One trip Kim made this summer was to
the National Jamboree at Fort A.P. Hill, in
Fredericksburg, Virginia.
There, she had a ball, Kim says. She
worked at the shooting booth that the
National Shooting Sports Foundation sponsored
and operated, supported by a bevy of
staff and certified volunteers.
"It was fun watching the kids trade patches
and pins," Kim said. "It reminded me of the
Olympic experience. And it reminded me of the
Olympics in another way-watching kids meet
other kids from all over and making friends
with people with a common bond."
Kim signed autographs, talked to individual
Scouts and even held a press conference.
There, she gave advice on how
Scouts might begin shooting.
"Look for a good program like the
National Shooting Sports Foundation's
Scholastic Shooting Programs to learn safety
and sound fundamentals," she advised. "Try
the different disciplines of shooting and
focus on the one that is the most fun for you.
Most importantly, remember to keep it fun."
Matt Emmons, 24, of Browns Mills,
New Jersey, has already earned a college
degree. Yet while studying accounting, he
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was also busy earning NCAA shooting
championships for the University of Alaska at
Fairbanks. Now he is working toward an
MBA at the University of Colorado at
Colorado Springs.
In between all of his studies, he found
time to win a gold medal in the 50-meter
prone rifle event at the
Athens games. The
accomplishment
crowned a competitive
career that, like Kim's,
began by coming
from a family of
hunters.
"That sparked
my interest in
shooting," Matt
said. "The fact that my father was in charge
of the shooting facilities at a military installation
made access to the ranges pretty easy."
Like Kim, Matt earned his share of
shooting titles growing up. One of the
incentives was the hope of winning a scholarship
from a university that fielded a shooting
team. Through hard work, discipline and
a lot of practice, he attained that scholarship-
and eventually Olympic gold.
Though the medal he won might mark
the high point of his shooting career, it is
the intangibles of competitive shooting that
he most values.
"Shooting makes me challenge myself,"
Matt said. "It allows me to see how good I
can be, and I enjoy working toward a goal.
"I especially value the wonderful people
I have met. I have friends around the
country and around the world because of
shooting.
"Most of all," he said, "I just enjoy it." |