AT THE OLYMPICS, SHE'LL BE AIMING FOR A DISK OF GOLD.Byline: Ken Peters Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency. Associated Press (AP) Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world. As the four-inch clay disks spiral away at 65 mph, Kim Rhode Kimberly "Kim" Susan Rhode (born July 16, 1979) is an American double trap and skeet shooter. A California native, she is a two-time Olympic gold medal winner and six-time national champion in double trap. She was the youngest member of the U.S. squints, squeezes off a round from each barrel of her shotgun, and the targets virtually dissolve into dust, all within a couple of seconds. In the same motion, Rhode breaks the gun open and nonchalantly non·cha·lant adj. Seeming to be coolly unconcerned or indifferent. See Synonyms at cool. [French, from Old French, present participle of nonchaloir, to be unconcerned : non-, catches the spent shells in her right hand as they kick up out of the barrels. For the youngest female shooter ever in the Olympics, this is a routine so familiar she does it almost without thinking. During a dove-hunting trip to Arizona when she was 7, Rhode sat on her father's lap, hooked her arm over his shotgun, leaned the stock against his shoulder and, before long, had her limit of doves. Four years later, she bagged a kudu kudu (k `d ), short-haired African antelope, genus Strepsiceros. , blesbok blesbok: see damalisk. , steinbok steinbok: see antelope. and fallow deer fallow deera small, 150 lb, fawn deer with white spots and a white spot bordered with black on each buttock. Called also Dama dama. on African safari. By the time she was 12, she was shooting skeet skeet: see shooting. better than her parents, becoming the youngest girl ever to break 100 straight in American skeet shooting skeet shooting Shooting sport using moving targets. Marksmen use shotguns to shoot at clay targets (pigeons) hurled into the air by spring devices called traps. It differs from trapshooting in that skeet traps are set at two points on the field and targets may be thrown . Rhode, of El Monte El Monte (ĕl mŏn`tē), city (1990 pop. 106,209), Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1912. A residential, industrial, and commercial city in the San Gabriel Valley, El Monte manufactures furniture, electronic equipment, semiconductors, , who turns 17 on July 16, now has her sights set on even bigger game this summer: an Olympic medal. In a sport in which most competitors at the range are 30 or above, Rhode - who just shed her red, white, blue and gold-banded braces - is a solid contender in the women's double trap Double Trap is a clay pigeon shooting sport, one of the ISSF shooting events. Participants use a shotgun to attempt to break a clay disk flung away from the shooter at high speed. The layout of double trap shooting is similar to that of trap shooting. next month in Atlanta. And, since she won the event at the World Cup competition recently in Italy, she might well be considered the favorite for the gold. ``When she started beating everybody at 12, surpassed my wife and I pretty quickly, we thought she might go on to something big,'' Rhode's father, Richard, said. ``She became very competitive, and a man at the range came up and said, `You know, she's good enough to shoot in the state competition.' '' That man was Art Bright, who has seen thousands of individuals pass through the Pachmayr International Shooting Park, where he is the general manager. He quickly recognized that Rhode was something special. ``I've seen a lot, and when she first started shooting, I could see she just had a tremendous amount of natural ability,'' said Bright, who became Rhode's mentor and sponsor. ``She had great hand-eye coordination hand-eye coordination Eye-hand coordination Surgery Oculomanual synchronization, required by surgeons, especially for laparoscopic surgery. See Laparoscopic surgery, Paradoxical movement. and it was instinctive for her. ``She also had the tenacity, like an ice skater or a gymnast, that was as positive as I've ever seen in a shooter.'' Rhode usually spends two or three hours a night at the range. ``People say I have lot of natural ability, because I picked it up real quick,'' she said. ``I think it also has to do with the fact I do a lot of practicing, a lot more than most people do. ``I'm good at playing games that have to do with hand-eye coordination, Nintendo-type games, pinball games. I'm really good at things like that.'' Rhode also has something else going for her: her attitude about competition. ``Everybody gets nervous to an extent,'' she said. ``I'm better than most. It's a game. If I lose, I lose. If I win, It's just the cherry on the top. ``I want to go and have a good time, and I know you can't do any better than your best. Some people take it real serious.'' On her way to qualifying for the U.S. Olympic team and winning the World Cup this year, Rhode strung put together an impressive list of achievements. She was the 1993 Ladies World Champion in American skeet; in 1995 she was the national champion in the ladies' double trap, the gold medalist at the Olympic Festival, and the bronze medalist in the World Cup at Seoul. Her sport already has opened literally a world of opportunities for Rhode, a high school junior taking college prep courses. She's a refreshing mix of politeness, maturity, with-it teen-ager and, Bright said, ``just a wonderful kid.'' She recently was in Houston signing autographs in conjunction with the Olympic torch relay, later visited Ohio to help with American Heart Association American Heart Association (AHA), n.pr a national voluntary health agency that has the goal of increasing public and medical awareness of cardiovascular diseases and stroke, and thereby reducing the number of associated deaths and disabilities. fund raising, then headed to matches in Italy and Germany before going to Atlanta, where she will celebrate her 17th birthday in the Olympic village. ``I've been able to travel a lot for competitions, to Argentina, Korea, Cypress, Germany,'' she said. ``I've learned a lot about different cultures and I've had a chance to meet a lot of interesting people.'' Rhode's biggest fans, her parents, had to cut some corners, giving up their own shooting, once she became seriously involved in the sport. Her father pointed out that they were paying about $600 weekly for 1,000 rounds and targets, with travel expenses and fees for competitions sometimes reaching $5,000. The Rhodes don't regret it one bit. ``It's exciting to see your kids do well,'' Sharon Rhode said. ``This was something that we did as a family, and it kept going and going. I never expected this. It's given her a lot of self-confidence.'' CAPTION(S): Photo Photo: Though only 16, El Monte's Kim Rhode will be a top c ontender in the Olympic women's double trap. Associated Press |
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