FRI | JANUARY 27, 2023

Federal Ammunition congratulates sponsored shooter and USA Shooting trap athlete Derrick Mein who recently won two medals at the 2023 International Shooting Sports Federation Rabat Shotgun World Cup.
Hillsdale College sophomore and shotgun team member Joshua Corbin competed at the International Shooting Sports Federation World Cup in Rabat, Morocco. Corbin’s World Cup appearance is the latest instance of a Hillsdale College shotgun team member competing on the international stage.
X-Vision Optics and its line-up of thermal optics and infrared products will be on display at the Mid-States Winter Rendezvous, which will be on January 25th and 26th at the Phoenix Convention Center in Phoenix, Arizona.

SIG SAUER Academy announced that Team SIG Professional Shooter Lena Miculek will visit the SIG Experience Center for a daylong event to showcase the all-new ROSE by SIG SAUER brand and programming on Saturday, February 4, 2023.
SAR announced that they are attending Mid-States Winter “Rendezvous” industry trade show held January 25th and 26th in Phoenix, Arizona.
Colt's Combat Commander melds classic 1911 durability with modern innovations. The upgraded Combat Commander features enhancements like Colt's patented dual recoil system, a high-swept beavertail grip safety with integrated palm swell, and an undercut trigger guard.

For 2023 HatsanUSA introduces the big brother to the Factor RC with the Factor BP. This all-new, highly customizable, pre-charged, pneumatic, bullpup airgun is available in 2 popular big bore calibers - .30 and .35.
SnapSafe introduced several convenient and affordable accessories to help keep gear organized, maximize storage space, and increase the functionality of gun safes.
Natchez Shooters Supplies, an online retailer specializing in shooting, hunting, fishing, hiking, camping, and outdoor supplies, announces it has rebranded as Natchez Shooting & Outdoors.

The 2023 Action Target Safety Award was awarded to Savage Arms at the Action Target SHOT Show booth on January 18.
Bond Arms announced that a concept lever action rifle has taken top prize at SHOT Show 2023, winning this year’s RECOIL Magazine’s "Best in Show" for Best Firearm.
Steiner Optics announces Mic Otto as Steiner’s head of National Sales Manager and Product Specialist.
Henry Repeating Arms announced donations totaling $75,000 to some of the nation’s most significant grassroots gun rights and Second Amendment advocacy groups as part of its charitable Guns for Great Causes campaign. The check presentations to the Second Amendment Foundation, Gun Owners of America, and the Firearms Policy Coalition took place at the SHOT Show.
On Target magazine recently recognized Force X2 Shorty Shotshell with an Editors’ Choice Award for best new shotshell ammunition for 2022, as part of the magazine’s annual awards program.
Ruger has earned two awards from Big Rock Sports at the 2023 Big Rock Sports Outdoor Expo. The SFAR, or Small-Frame Autoloading Rifle, was awarded best product in both the Rifle / Shotgun category and the Overall Best New Shooting Sports Product category.

Legacy optic manufacturer Burris is pleased to announce the appointment of Alberto Corbetta to the position of VP Strategic Brand & Product Marketing.
NSSF, along with several co-plaintiffs, filed a legal challenge seeking declaratory and injunctive relief to prevent Illinois from enforcing the recently enacted law that bans most semiautomatic firearms including Modern Sporting Rifles, certain models of semiautomatic handguns and standard capacity magazines.
The Second Amendment Foundation has filed a motion for preliminary injunction in its federal court challenge of the recently-signed ban on modern semiautomatic rifles and their ammunition magazines.

Trijicon Inc. announced the availability of limited editions of the legendary ACOG 4x32 riflescope in exclusive Tiger Camo patterns. For a limited time, Trijicon will be offering both a three-color Tiger Camo version and a two-color Tiger Camo version of the famed ACOG through select dealer channels.
Comp-Tac Holsters has introduced the QD Holster which is a newly designed combination holster. It features both the versatility of the Q-Line and the concealability of the Dual Concealment Holster.
Daniel Defense announces its Limited Series Program, a collaboration with other world-class manufacturers to create small batches of unique, once-in-a-lifetime rifle builds.
HatsanUSA announced its new, pre-charged pneumatic air pistol, the JET. This new air pistol includes a removable and adjustable buttstock, making it an air rifle as well. Available in .177, .22, and .25 calibers, the JET is made for target practice, small game hunting, and just having fun.
Primary Arms Optics has just released new Flat Dark Earth variants of their best-selling SLx 3x Micro Magnifier. Weighing just 5.3 oz, the Primary Arms Optics SLx 3x Micro Magnifier helps marksmen achieve greater precision and range with a red dot or holographic sight.
For 2023, the EFLX pistol sight by EOTECH, will be available in Flat Dark Earth color to complement the large number of FDE pistols in the marketplace.
Bushnell announces the new Match Pro ED 15x56mm Binocular, a high-quality optic designed for long-range precision shooters looking to combine features of a high magnification binocular and an MRAD based reticle.
Media Lodge announced the launch of its annual “What’s Hot at SHOT” video series covering the sensational products in the firearms industry this year. Jenn Jacques, Brand Strategist and Editor-in-Chief of GetZone.com, announced the launch live from the SHOT Show floor - a first since the series’ inception.
Larry and Brenda Potterfield, co-founders of MidwayUSA, tell how they grew their once small gun shop into MidwayUSA — and how they, along the way, used their business acumen and dedication to the protection of our rights to help the NRA protect the 2nd Amendment.
RECOIL Magazine, a publication of CMG West, LLC, has released its latest issue, number 65. This issue covers the Staccato CS, the Dan Wesson DWX, as well as &W M&P12 Bullpup shotgun, POF’s new lever-action 9mm Tombstone, and more.
Exciting reads, new firearms, and technical clothing are highlighted this week on Tom Gresham's Gun Talk® Radio, the original nationally-syndicated radio talk show about guns and the shooting sports.
 

Today's feature is from the Civilian Marksmanship Program.

Distinguished Badges are presented to those exceptional marksmen and women who show continued excellence in the sport.

Ken Blaedel, 76, of Dublin, Calif., doesn’t let age get in his way. In 2022, he reached an ambition that was over a decade in the making – earning a Distinguished Rifleman Badge. With the accomplishment, he has become one of few marksmen in history to achieve the feat after age 70.

Some individuals spend decades in search of a Distinguished Badge, which is the highest individual award authorized by the U. S. Government for excellence in marksmanship competition. Badges, offered in several disciplines, are presented by the Civilian Marksmanship Program (CMP) after an individual receives at least 30 Excellence-In-Competition (EIC) “leg” points at qualifying matches.

“I never had any particular desire to go Distinguished,” Ken admitted.

CMP’s annual Western Games features rifle and pistol matches, held on the Arizona desert sand.

Ken’s own journey started out as an unexpected one. It began in 2007 when one of his colleagues talked him into going to the Western CMP Games, an annual event held in Phoenix. It was there that he shot an EIC match where, according to Ken, he “magically got points.”

“I really enjoyed the match,” he said, outside of earning points. “You unpack your rifle, shoot your record shots with no sighters and then pack up your rifle. There is no futzing around or shooting alibis. If you don’t know your rifle, you are out of business – right from the start.”

A few months later, he went on to earn 10 more points at his home club, the Coalinga Rifle Club in Fresno. Though he kept on competing, 2008 to 2014 lacked a repeat showing.

“It was simply due to poor shooting – what can I say,” he teased about his slump in earning points.

“As I continue to age, my body doesn’t willingly do what I tell it to do,” he went on. “A position that worked well last year may not work today. I’ve had to continually change position, not just in standing, but even more so in sitting. The change can be in small increments or become almost continual – just trying to stay ahead of the inflexibility that accompanies age.”

Luckily, in April 2014, another match at Coalinga brought 10 more points, with his final points earned in October 2022 at the same club.

“The leg matches in California are well attended by well-trained juniors,” he explained. “The consequence, however, is that they routinely steal my points at leg matches.”

During the October match, he bested the high-scoring junior by one point. Thankfully, both reached EIC points in the end.

The California Grizzlies have shown consistent prowess on the range, even holding current national records.

Coalinga is home to the California Grizzlies – a junior club filled with some of the most decorated and talented young marksmen in the country. Since its formalizing in 2003, the Grizzlies have accrued countless junior wins in National Matches events while holding numerous national records.

“I think everyone around here supports the junior program,” Ken said. “It’s absolutely the best.”

Though he doesn’t train juniors himself, Ken says there are lots of other ways to support the program – financially, emotionally, with donations or through plain, old-fashioned encouragement.

“Without a junior program, we don’t have a sport in the long run. It’s as simple as that,” he said.

After all, Ken was once a junior himself. As a child, he and his brothers shot a .22 rifle in the backyard during the summer and in the basement during the winter against backstops built by their father.

His grandfather was a country doctor and carried a revolver (always a Smith & Wesson) on his rounds. Eventually, he talked Ken’s parents into letting him have a revolver as well – heading to the local gun store where his grandfather bought a Smith & Wesson K-22 for Ken to use.

“I still shoot it occasionally,” he said.

Bo Kingshill (left) and Ken Blaedel (right) each earned leg points at Coalinga Rifle Club last October. Blaedel’s points were his final needed to earn a Distinguished Rifleman Badge at age 75.

Ken went on to compete informally in smallbore rifle at a small indoor range in Wisconsin, especially during the winter, and later shot bullseye pistol at the University of Wisconsin.

“Then life got in the way, and I didn’t start competing again until a few years before retiring,” he admitted.

Since highpower seemed to be quite popular in the San Francisco Bay Area, where Ken had moved, he decided to switch back to rifle. Ken’s career in Service Rifle began with an M14 before transitioning to the AR-15.

“We are incredibly lucky to have such an active community,” he said. “We can shoot three highpower matches a month and literally every weekend if you are willing to drive one hour or an hour-and-a-half. Because I’m retired, I can and do routinely compete in highpower three weekends a month. I shoot a practice session almost weekly and dry-fire maybe twice a week.”

“If you look at the really good shooters, they pick up a rifle daily – that’s every single day, no cheating or excuses – but I’m not there yet,” he joked.

The evolving world of marksmanship is partly what has made him able to stay competitive as the years go on.

“One aspect that has kept me shooting the Service Rifle is the telescopic sight,” he said. “This is certainly the most advantageous change to the rules for old people and old eyes.”

For those searching for a Distinguished Badge of their own, no matter the age, Ken has simple, yet effective advice.

“Don’t give up. Shoot the leg matches because they are wonderful matches,” he suggested. “If you leg out, great – if you don’t, it’s still a wonderful experience.”

“I certainly plan to continue shooting the individual matches that run concurrently with the leg matches. In the end, the most important thing is to shoot a good score – and secondly, to beat the juniors,” he joked once again.

Although he faces a knee replacement in the near future, which will certainly cause radical change in his sitting position, it won’t keep him from the range. He’ll do his best to stay out there – enjoying the sport that has given him a lifetime of experiences and memories.

“There is no way I am quitting highpower, but I may have to come to accept a couple-of-point decrease in score as a consequence – so be it!” he said. “I think the takeaway conclusion is that marksmanship is a wonderful sport in which you can participate for most of your life.”

Learn more about the Distinguished Badge program by visiting the CMP website at https://thecmp.org/competitions/distinguishedbadges/. Find local matches by searching our website at https://ct.thecmp.org/app/v1/index.php?do=matchRegistrationListUpcoming.

-- By Ashley Dugan, CMP Staff Writer

The Civilian Marksmanship Program is a federally chartered 501 (c) (3) non-profit corporation. It is dedicated to firearm safety and marksmanship training and to the promotion of marksmanship competition for citizens of the United States. For more information about the CMP and its programs, log onto www.TheCMP.org.

Restricted 18+ in CA in compliance with CA State Assembly Bill 2571 prohibiting the marketing of firearms to minors in the State of CA.

Shooting Wire - 2271 N Upton St., Arlington, VA 22207
Copyright © 2023, All Rights Reserved.