Balsley Wins Gold, Uptagrafft Silver Along With Two Quotas at Pan American Games

Brad Balsley
Brad Balsley
USA Shooting
USA Shooting

Toronto, Ontario, CAN -(AmmoLand.com)- In a Final that included the reigning Olympic and  Pan American Games Champion, Brad Balsley made his first international medal in Men’s Rapid Fire Pistol a big one – a gold medal that comes along with an Olympic quota – at the Pan American Games.

“It felt great to be able to compete and be at the same level as those guys,” Balsley said.  “It’s kind of what we are working to and with (Leuris) Pupo (CUB) being the current gold medalist; it was nice being able to hang with him. It’s the first final I’ve competed in with him.”

Balsley’s journey to the top of the podium today wasn’t an easy one as Balsley qualified for the Final in the sixth and last position with a score of 565 – 11 points behind the nearest competitor. A disastrous Stage Two left Balsley waiting until all shooters were finished to see if he’d even qualify for the Final.

“I was very, very nervous,” Balsley said. “I wasn’t too confident because it was a pretty crappy Stage Two. I had a lot to come back from. I screwed up the four-second series, but I figured out what I was doing wrong after talking to sports psychologist Sean McCann and fixed it for the Finals.”

In a Rapid Fire Pistol Final, all five-target series are just four seconds. Balsley would have several four-hit series. By the last series, he held just a two-hit lead over Emerson Duarte of Brazil. On his last series, Balsley had three hits to end with 32 hits overall. Though Duarte hit four, he only ended with 31 and took the silver medal. Douglas Gomez of Venezuela won the bronze medal.

Balsley’s U.S. teammate and 2011 Pan American Games gold medalist Emil Milev (Temple Terrace, Florida) finished Qualification in first place with a score of 582, equaling the Pan American Games record set by Pupo eight years ago.

In the Final, Milev’s first series was a perfect five hits, then a series of three, then another five hits. After that, Milev’s series fell to two hits and he was eliminated in the fifth position.

 “I felt comfortable, it wasn’t going better than I expected, the pistol was going where I wanted it and I probably relaxed a little bit. I guess I needed that little – softness, I guess – to start shooting bad,” he said. “I couldn’t recover after the first two-hit series.”

“Balsley got first place and the quota place – that was just an amazing Final for him,” Milev said.

More information on selection procedures and quotas for the 2016 Olympic Games can be found here.

In Women’s Sport Pistol, Sandra Uptagrafft (Phenix City, Alabama) once again claimed the Pan American Games silver medal in the event, and this time, she also claimed an Olympic quota with it. Uptagrafft also won silver in the event in 2011.

Sandra Uptagrafft
Sandra Uptagrafft

“It was a tough competition,” Uptagrafft said. “I’m excited and relieved all at the same time. You really had to win it. No one was giving it to you today.”

Uptagrafft qualified for the Semifinal in fifth place with a score of 571. There she scored 12 hits, behind Lynda Kijeko of Canada’s 13 to qualify for the gold-medal match.

In the gold-medal match however, Kiejko and Uptagrafft would tie in the first two series. Eventually Kiejko took over the lead, 7-3. In the medal matches, the number of hits doesn’t matter – points are awarded whether an athlete ties or shoots more points than her opponent.

“Since it was ugly, I was kind of glad we tied,” Uptagrafft said with a laugh. “I thought she’d won it a few times when we tied and I was like ‘Phew! Thank goodness!’ Uptagrafft’s win also secures the first Women’s Sport Pistol quota for the U.S. Mariana Nava of Mexico won the bronze medal.”

Uptagrafft’s teammate Brenda Silva (Snowflake, Arizona) qualified for the Semifinal with a score of 573. There she was eliminated in sixth place.

Men’s Double Trap is the only event contested in Shooting at the Pan American Gamestomorrow. The lone U.S. competitor Glenn Eller (Houston, Texas) will look to the Pan Am Games to regain the form that saw him win the World Championships and finish second at the World Cup Finals in 2013. He’s had five top-10 finishes since during international competition including a World Cup silver medal in 2014. The U.S. has already earned the maximum number of Olympic quotas in Men’s Double Trap.

Earlier this week, the U.S. Pan American shooting team picked up five medals (one gold, two silver and two bronze) in Men’s Air Rifle (gold, bronze), Women’s Trap (silver, bronze) and Men’s Air Pistol (silver). Gold medalist Connor Davis (Shelbyville, Kentucky) also won an Olympic quota for the U.S. in Men’s Air Rifle.

Competition continues tomorrow with the Men’s Double Trap competition starting at 9:00 a.m. ET. Follow along for live updates from the Pan American Games on facebook and twitter.  Start lists and results are also available on the Toronto 2015 website.

About USA Shooting

USA Shooting, a 501c3 non-profit corporation, was chartered by the United States Olympic Committee as the National Governing Body for the sport of shooting in April 1995. USA Shooting’s mission is to prepare American athletes to win Olympic medals, promote the shooting sports throughout the U.S. and govern the conduct of international shooting in the country.

Check us out on the web at usashooting.org and on Twitter at twitter.com/USAShooting.