Memphis/Shelby County, TN Scholastic Trap

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http://www.commercialappeal.com/mca/my_life/article/0,2846,MCA_25356_4547544,00.html

Shooting sport aims to raise interest in outdoors

Schools signing on for Clay Target Program

By Larry Rea
Special to My Life
March 17, 2006

Bill Cox is a firm believer in the Scholastic Clay Target Program.

How firm, you ask?

"The SCTP is the absolute best program we have seen to get youngsters involved in shooting," said Cox, who lives in Collierville and is a member of the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Commission, which is the ruling body for the state's wildlife agency. "Our hope is their involvement in shooting will translate into an interest in hunting and will recruit new license buyers."

All of which is why Cox, with the help of the Shelby County school board, and, in particular, board member Ron Lollar, took what Chad Whittenburg, the state SCTP coordinator for the Tennessee Wildlife Federation, called "the bold step to allow the program to be instituted throughout their schools."

Briarcrest is the latest Memphis-area high school to join the SCTP.

"We are forming a league with other schools, such as MUS, Houston, Germantown, Bolton, Arlington and it looks like CBHS (Christian Brothers High School) might also be getting up a team," said Kim Winstead, whose husband, Bobby, is the coach at Briarcrest.

The season runs from March through June. A round of trap is 25, hit or miss. Most competitions consist of four rounds (100) compared to 200 for state and national competition. Individual scores are added to get a team score (all are team events, no individual).

SCTP, developed by the National Shooting Sports Foundation, allows elementary through high school-age youths to compete as a team for national and state titles in trap, skeet and sporting clays. Skeet, Winstead said, is not offered at the scholastic level.

"This is a sport that kids can letter in and get scholarships to many colleges," Winstead said.

Since its inception in 2001, SCTP has seen phenomenal growth, including a 50 percent growth rate in 2005 with an estimated 6,000 participants, according to the Newtown, Conn.-based NSSF.

In Tennessee, the SCTP is administered and guided by the Tennessee Wildlife Federation (TWF) with help from volunteers who act as a steering committee for the program.

The SCTP, which consists of five shooters per team, is designed to teach the importance of safe firearms handling, responsibility, leadership, teamwork and to promote competition.

"We have 26 participants and could have had many more, but being our first year we did not want to keep adding (shooters)," Kim Winstead said. "MUS has 39 shooters and the others all have 15 to 25 shooters. Of course, the interest is spread all over the city based on the school's location."

Plans are being completed to organize an association for Shelby County schools to formalize the events/schedules and compile league rules and bylaws. Briarcrest's Winstead is the league's vice president. Other officers are coaches Kurt Simons of Arlington (president) and Kevin Carter of Houston (secretary-treasurer).

On a recent Sunday afternoon at the Memphis Sports Shooting Association off Old Brownsville Road, Briarcrest held its first scrimmage, testing its marksmanship against Arlington.

The MSSA will host the West Tennessee Regional SCTP on May 6-7.

Briarcrest, which has been practicing twice a week since January, is the lone team whose coach is not a member of the school staff.

The State SCTP is set for June 24-25 at Nashville.

To learn more about the program, go to www.nssf/sctp.org or www.tnwf.org.

Copyright 2006, commercialappeal.com - Memphis, TN. All Rights Reserved.
 
http://www.commercialappeal.com/mca/local/article/0,2845,MCA_25340_4643875,00.html

Scholastic shooting spreads in Shelby

By Cassandra Kimberly
[email protected]
April 23, 2006

Though this was Mason Sheffield's first year competing in high school interscholastic clay shooting, the Bolton High School senior has been hunting, he says, "ever since I was old enough to hold a gun."

Competitors from six Shelby County public and private high schools gathered Saturday at the Memphis Sport Shooting Association in Arlington for the second interscholastic clay shooting meet of the season.

Like Sheffield, many of the high school shooters haven't been able to use their skills in a team sport until this year.

"There are just so many people that don't do sports, but they are hunting all of the time," said Briarcrest sophomore and trap shooter Mary-Katherine Hill, 16. "It's just good practice for them."

Last season, only Memphis University School and Houston High School had trap shooting clubs.

That changed when Shelby County School Board member Ron Lollar heard about the 400 scholarships set aside by the Tennessee Wildlife Federation for Tennessee high school trap team members across the state.

Lollar and County Schools Supt. Bobby Webb gathered interested coaches and sponsors to form four more teams from Arlington, Bolton, Germantown and Briarcrest high schools. To join, students must maintain a "C" average, cannot misbehave and must complete a Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency hunter's safety course.

Though some parents and school officials were worried about safety issues, coaches and students made sure to take all precautions.

"Safety is paramount," said Kermit Simons, Arlington coach and president of the newly founded Shelby County Scholastic Shooting Association. "Students are never allowed to bring guns to school and are always supervised."

Bolton coach Doug Murray said the best thing about the sport is how it helps the student's grades and self-esteem.

"They walk around school with their heads a little higher," said Murray. "It gives them a purpose ... and it's catching on quick. It's like water on the ground. It's just running."

-- Cassandra Kimberly: 529-5278

Copyright 2006, commercialappeal.com - Memphis, TN. All Rights Reserved.
 
SCTP Regionals in Memphis, May 6th

From Memphis Sport Shooting Association:

On May 6 the club will be hosting the West Tenn SCTP Regional Trap Shoot and we will have approx 280 young shooters from West Tenn shooting at the club. When it started out there were to be 800 kids shooting over three days. Now it is going to be held at four locations in West Tenn and the it will be telephonic. Caba Farms in Henry County, Southgate in Lavinia and Tull Bottom Gun Club in Henderson are the three other sites. We will be hosting the most kids at our facility. The shooting will start about 8:00 and go until all 280 kids have shot 100 targets. The TWRA and the SCTP folks are in charge of this shoot. The club will be crowded for that day to say the least. I think there will be 10 different schools shooting with us. Members are welcome to watch however there won't be much trap or skeet shooting going on other than the kids. We plan on using 7 of the nine fields for this event. Field #1 and the wobble trap could be open. That will be up to management.

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Wow.......280 high school trap shooters in one place. Could be fun.
 
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