Shooting at the 2018 Asian Games – Men's trap

Men's trap
at the 2018 Asian Games
VenueJakabaring Shooting Range
Dates19–20 August
Competitors30 from 16 nations
Medalists
gold medal    Chinese Taipei
silver medal    India
bronze medal    South Korea
← 2014
2022 →

The men's trap event at the 2018 Asian Games in Palembang, Indonesia took place on 19–20 August at the Jakabaring International Shooting Range.[1]

Schedule

[edit]

All times are Western Indonesia Time (UTC+07:00)

Date Time Event
Sunday, 19 August 2018 09:00 Qualification day 1
Monday, 20 August 2018 09:00 Qualification day 2
16:00 Final

Records

[edit]

Prior to this competition, the existing world, Asian and Games records were as follows.

Qualification
World Record  Giovanni Pellielo (ITA) 125 Nicosia, Cyprus 1 April 1994
Asian Record  Khaled Al-Mudhaf (KUW) 124 Atlanta, United States 14 May 1998
Games Record  Fahad Al-Deehani (KUW) 123 Hiroshima, Japan 8 October 1994
Final
World Record  Alberto Fernández (ESP) 48 New Delhi, India 29 October 2017
Asian Record  Abdulrahman Al-Faihan (KUW) 39 Astana, Kazakhstan 8 August 2017
Games Record

Results

[edit]

Qualification

[edit]
Rank Athlete Day 1 Day 2 Total S-off Notes
1 2 3 4 5
1  Manavjit Singh Sandhu (IND) 25 23 24 22 25 119 +12
2  Eum Ji-won (KOR) 23 25 23 25 23 119 +11
3  Ahn Dae-myeong (KOR) 24 23 24 25 23 119 +10
4  Lakshay Sheoran (IND) 22 25 24 25 23 119 +0
5  Hagen Topacio (PHI) 21 25 25 23 24 118 +5
6  Yang Kun-pi (TPE) 23 24 24 22 25 118 +4
7  Alain Moussa (LBN) 25 23 23 21 25 117
8  Khaled Al-Mudhaf (KUW) 22 23 23 25 24 117
9  Abdulrahman Al-Faihan (KUW) 22 24 22 25 24 117
10  Du Yu (CHN) 23 24 22 24 24 117
11  Mohammed Al-Rumaihi (QAT) 24 22 24 23 24 117
12  Viktor Khassyanov (KAZ) 23 23 24 24 23 117
13  Shih Jung-hung (TPE) 23 24 23 24 23 117
14  Muhammad Farrukh Nadeem (PAK) 24 23 23 24 23 117
15  Hamad Al-Kendi (UAE) 22 24 24 22 24 116
16  Han Fei (CHN) 24 23 23 22 24 116
17  Andrey Mogilevskiy (KAZ) 20 21 25 24 25 115
18  Aamer Iqbal (PAK) 24 25 23 21 22 115
19  Savate Sresthaporn (THA) 23 23 25 23 21 115
20  Mohammed Ali Khejaim (QAT) 21 23 24 23 23 114
21  Nguyễn Hoàng Điệp (VIE) 21 23 24 23 22 113
22  Elie Bejjani (LBN) 23 20 22 23 24 112
23  Mohammad Hossein Parvareshnia (IRI) 23 24 22 19 24 112
24  Saif Al-Shamsi (UAE) 22 24 21 24 21 112
25  Lê Nghĩa (VIE) 22 23 22 23 21 111
26  Chen Seong Fook (MAS) 22 24 22 22 20 110
27  Chartchai Ularnwiriyakul (THA) 19 21 23 19 22 104
28  Ali Hafezi (IRI) 19 20 23 20 21 103
29  Slamet Riadi (INA) 20 18 21 22 20 101
30  Bagus Sholeh Aristyawan (INA) 17 20 16 14 17 84

Final

[edit]
Rank Athlete Series S-off Notes
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Yang Kun-pi (TPE) 5 10 14 19 23 28 33 38 43 48 AR
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Lakshay Sheoran (IND) 4 9 14 18 21 26 29 34 39 43
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Ahn Dae-myeong (KOR) 4 9 14 18 21 25 27 30
4  Manavjit Singh Sandhu (IND) 3 8 12 16 21 24 26
5  Eum Ji-won (KOR) 4 7 12 17 20 23
6  Hagen Topacio (PHI) 2 6 8 13 18

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Approved changes in 2017-2020 ISSF Rules". ISSF. 18 October 2016. Retrieved 24 August 2018.
[edit]