honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Roosevelt rifle teams reload every season

By Stanley lee
Advertiser Staff Writer

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Shaun Tomita, 17, zeroes in on the target during a practice session at the school's riflery range.

Photos by JEFF WIDENER | The Honolulu Advertiser

spacer spacer

AIR RIFLERY 101

THE TARGET

The target is 33 feet away. The bulls-eye’s size is half-a-millimeter. The pellet in the air rifle is 4.5 millimeters.

THE SHOOTER

Each shooter has 10 shots in three positions — prone, kneeling and standing. A perfect score is 300. A good shooter can score in the 250 range.

CRITICAL SHOTS

Roosevelt coach Nathan Urabe said it’s the standing position that determines the winner. He’s seen shooters in the prone and kneeling score in the 90s and even 100. But in standing, "you’re so high off the ground and there’s little support."

"There’s a lot of sway and motion. To get better in the standing, there’s the mental aspect of it and knowing you can shoot it. You just have to keep practicing."

RIFLERY IN COLLEGE

The NCAA sponsors riflery as a coed sport, which combines smallbore and air rifle. Alaska-Fairbanks has won eight of the past nine NCAA titles.

spacer spacer
Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Members of the Roosevelt boys and girls teams set up targets before practice.

spacer spacer
Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Among the members of Roosevelt's air riflery team are, front row, from left, Kelli Shintani and Brianne Chinen. Back row, from left, Mason Laikupu, coach Nathan Urabe, Michael Blickos and Andrew Dolder.

spacer spacer

A carefree attitude and laid-back approach have helped Roosevelt's air riflery teams find success in a sport that requires hitting a miniscule bull's-eye 33 feet away.

The Rough Riders are perennial contenders in the O'ahu Interscholastic Association. The boys finished second in the OIA and fifth at the state tournament while the girls placed 10th. Though Roosevelt graduated key seniors, it managed to find shooters — when there's no outside junior program to offer development — to keep the program right on target.

"It seems that every year, we get better somehow," senior Michael Blickos said. "We have sophomores who are shooting (well)."

Experience helps, but so does attitude. The Rough Riders know how to switch from intense concentration, enjoying themselves and keeping things — including the target — in perspective.

"It's better to have people that are funny and interesting because you have a much more relaxed environment," junior Andrew Dolder said. "You don't feel pressured to constantly shoot better. But shooting better does help."

It also helps when your coach, Nathan Urabe, shares the same attitude.

"He's the kind of person you want to be your friend," said senior captain Mason Laikupu. "He has never yelled at us before. He makes suggestions. If he gets mad, he'll probably laugh or joke about it.

"It's that kind of personality that helps. We're not on edge that he'll get mad at us."

Urabe isn't sure what has made his program successful, but knows his shooters have always had a good attitude. Team members, not him, are the ones who read the results of opponents in the newspaper. He tells them to focus on family and academics, and views success as the fact his team is still competing to this day. When he took over in 1999, the team's future was uncertain due to low turnout.

"The first goal was just to keep it going and continue to educate about shooting and being safe with guns," Urabe said. "If we're competitive, we're competitive. My main goal was to educate."

Educating the team goes beyond what they do in the classroom. The team has to go through a training program and test offered by Civilian Marksmanship Program before it hits the range.

"It's not like the movies where you can 'bang bang,' " Blickos said. "It's respect and discipline, and you learn that in air rifle."

Added Kelli Shintani: "You just have to be positive. If you think negative, you get really bummed out by one shot, and it affects your day. If you have a bad shot, you just have to let it go."

In the end, winning doesn't make a difference, though the Rough Riders have managed to let fun dictate their performance, not the other way around. The boys and girls teams are off to 1-0 starts and host Kaimuki on Saturday.

"If we do good, so be it," Laikupu said. "We'll have fun either way."