Susan Nattrass Headed To Pan Am Games

the spank

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Canada's top female shooter Susan Nattrass is headed to T.IT.S to compete for Canada at the Pan Am Games beginning July 12th and running until July 19th. Her list of accomplishments is nothing short of extraordinary. I hope she wins. I have shot at a shoot with her in the past and she is a heck of a shot and a real nice lady!

Here is a reprint from an article about her....

Ageless Susan Nattrass goes into the Pan Am Games taking aim at perfection


The seemingly endless list of accomplishments, both in her athletic field and beyond, is simply stunning. But, for Susan Nattrass, Canada’s ageless trapshooting standout, the desire to compete and succeed hasn’t waned in the slightest.


Armed with the experience of appearing in six Olympic Games, winning seven world titles, 14 world championship medals, and the honour of being selected as her country’s flag bearer for the 2007 Pan Am Games in Rio de Janeiro (where she struck gold), Nattrass is one of Canada’s most decorated athletes.


Yet, at age 64, Nattrass is still taking aim at competing at the highest level, and is as dedicated to her craft as she’s ever been. “I love the challenge,” started Nattrass, minutes before she boarded a plane from Seattle (near her home) to Toronto and the Pan Am Games. “Being the best you can be, seeking that perfect score, it still drives me. And, if everything goes well, and you succeed, it really is the best feeling in the world.”


The native of Medicine Hat, Alta., who began competing internationally in 1969 in women’s trapshooting, has also made her mark as a champion of equal rights for her sport.


At the 1976 Summer Olympics, Nattrass became the first-ever woman to participate in the trapshooting event. At that time, shotgun shooting in the Olympics was open to both ###es until after the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona.


Leading up to the 1992 Summer Games, the IOC made the decision to make trap and skeet exclusive to men only and introduced double trap for women and men beginning at the 1996 Olympics. From 1992 to 1997, Nattrass worked tirelessly for the inclusion of separate women’s events in the shotgun events, eventually leading to the women’s trap and skeet events inclusion into the 2000 Olympics in Sydney.


“I worked very hard for five years to see women get the rights they deserved,” said Nattrass, the Lou Marsh Award recipient as Canada’s athlete of the year in 1981. “Certainly, you are proud of the accomplishments and big moments – being inducted into Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame, being an Officer of the Order of Canada, meeting the Queen – but to see those changes come to the sport, it’s extremely meaningful to me.”


Not that Nattrass, who has become a well-regarded coach and mentor, is the type to rest on her laurels. Far from it, in fact.


Her competition and teammates will be younger at the Pan Ams, but it’s readily apparent, in words and tone, that Nattrass is locked and loaded.


“This is my 46th year competing for Canada,” she proudly noted. “I’ve definitely had to adapt to things over time. When I was young, I had phenomenal vision. I’ve been working with a sports vision group in Burnaby (BC) to get my eyes in shape. Some days, when it’s cloudy, the orange target looks likes it is the size of an aspirin. On a bright day, it looks like a watermelon. But, I can tell you that I am really prepared and really excited for this opportunity.”


The shooting competition begins on July 12 in Innisfil, north of Toronto, at the Pan Am Shooting Centre and will finish on July 19.
 
Thanks for the post Spank... I was not aware of the depth of Susan's accomplishments... very impressive.
 
Thanks for the post Spank... I was not aware of the depth of Susan's accomplishments... very impressive.

She is one long time running top competitor. I am going to look into seeing if she hosts shooting clinics. Vancouver is only a day's drive away. I would like to attend a clinic with somebody of her experience and come away with some good advice and corrections.
 
She is one long time running top competitor. I am going to look into seeing if she hosts shooting clinics. Vancouver is only a day's drive away. I would like to attend a clinic with somebody of her experience and come away with some good advice and corrections.

I asked her if she was interested inn a shooting clinic in the Vancouver area. She said "yes" very much so. She asked that you call her at (604) 787-4094 She does group clinics and private instruction. Clubs can invite her to do a clinic.

She posed for this picture.

DSCN9749.jpg


DSCN9732.jpg
 
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Whenever I have heard her speak I get the impression that this is one classy Canadian.
Hopefully, there are lots of young Canadian women that she has mentored over the years to keep the tradition going.
 
Looked up the Canadian shooting team -

Shooting Federation of Canada nominating a squad that includes five Olympians in Sharon Bowes, Michel Dion, Susan Nattrass, Cory Niefer and Paul Shaw.
Aside from the Olympians, the full team consists of Aerial Arthur, Amanda Chudoba, Kabir Dhillon, Michal Dugovic, Monica Fyfe, Allan Harding, Mark Hynes, Metodi Igorov, Lynda Kiejko, David Mylnikov, Drew Shaw, Gale Stewart, Greg Sych, Benjamin Taylor, Yanka Vasileva, Lea Wachowich, Curtis Wennberg, Jonathan Weselake and Shannon Westlake.
 
I am pretty sure it is a Perazzi. She used to shoot with a friend of mine way back in the day and he said they bought their guns around the same time through a mutual friend who was both a Perazzi and CIL rep. He shot some kind of an MX8 that was made specifically for the 1976 Olympics. Susan's gun in that picture has the classic Perazzi shaped receiver reminiscent of those Ithica imported Perazzi's.
 
Yes, a Perazzi. The MX8 version for Montreal was the MT6 ... it had a striped receiver and one of the first, if not the first O/U with screw in chokes.
One of my buddies is still shooting his.

Had a nice chat with Susan at the Pan Ams in between Q & SF ... some bad luck with a string of misses in the SF's put her out of medal contention,
together with a nice gal from Puerto Rico ... she qualified for Skeet, her husband for Trap. Both of them eventually missed out for the Bronze
matches, both by 1 target ! They were both a lot of fun to talk to. Lots of questions about shooting in the Canadian winter.

Also had a good gab with the Shaws and sat with them through the Women's Trap SF and medal rounds. Shoot-offs and miss & outs to finalize both.

Kayle Browning's US Team coach & asst. coaches were both good guys to talk to as well. Lots of support for their shooters !
 
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