In what might be a preview of the YSS tournament, several contending squads entered the Arkansas Game and Fish Foundation’s Trap Tournament earlier this month at the complex, with Bald Knob recording a 241 out of 250 attempts to win the senior division, edging Southwest Arkansas Leadheads by one clay pigeon. Manila’s senior squad was third with 231 out of 250. In the junior division, Cabot Red ran up a 223 score out of 250 attempts, Camden was second at 216 and South Side Bee Branch took third with a 207 score. Carson Nunnally of Manila was the top shooter.
In the YSS junior division up to five shooters per team get one round of 25 shots, with all five shooters contributing their scores to the final total. In the senior division, the five-person teams shoot two rounds of 25 shots. The top 16 squads in each region advance to the state finals.
Also, each region will be looking for the best shooter among all competitors. If a junior hits all 25 shots, or a senior connects on 50 of 50, they advance to their respective Champion of Champions event, held after the state finals May 30-31. In the last round, those perfect-score competitors will shoot at targets until only one shooter is left without missing a shot.
“This sets the stage for what the season is going to look like,” Jose Jimenez, the AGFC’s chief of the Recreational Shooting Sports Division, said of the tournament’s opening weekend. “We look at it as one big hurdle that will set the season and everything else is downhill. We’re excited about it, and after many months of preparation, it’s finally here.
“It’s an agency event, and you can see all the different (AGFC) divisions represented. This is a huge collaborative effort, and (like) the Archery in the Schools State Tournament, this is one of the biggest events in the agency. There’s a lot of pressure in that, and we look to be successful and perform.”
Admission to the five weekends is free, and there will be concessions on-site, including food trucks and new offerings such as Kona Ice and a Filipino ice cream truck. Also, an archery area and stocked fishing pond is available for participants.
By Jim Harris, Managing Editor, Arkansas Wildlife Magazine
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