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Spc. Walton Glenn Eller
III Sets Two Olympic Records En Route to Double Trap Gold
Aug. 13, 2008
Spc. Walton Glenn Eller III, of the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit, set two
Olympic records en route to winning a gold medal in double trap at the
Beijing Shooting Range here yesterday.
U.S.
Army Marksmanship Unit shotgun shooter Spc. Walton Glenn Eller III takes
his final shot to secure a gold medal with an Olympic record score of
190 in double trap Aug. 12, 2008, in Beijing.
Marksmanship unit teammate Spc.
Jeffrey Holguin finished fourth in the event.
Eller’s score of 145 in the qualification rounds eclipsed the previous
Olympic record of 144 set in the 2004 Athens Games by United Arab
Emirates shooter Ahmed Almaktoum, who finished seventh in Beijing.
In double trap, competitors fire their 12-gauge shotguns from five
adjacent shooting stations. At each station, two targets are thrown
simultaneously from an underground bunker at speeds up to 50 mph at set
angles and height. The targets are thrown with a variable delay of up to
one second, and competitors get one shot per target.
“I realized with my last pair to go, ‘Oh, the Olympic record is only
144. If I hit my last pair, I’m going to get the Olympic record.’”
When Eller did that, he said, he sensed he was on his way to a
spectacular day. He missed his first two targets in the final, but
settled down and missed only three shots the rest of the way.
“If you shoot the Olympic record [in qualification rounds] and you’ve
got a little bit of a lead, you expect to come out with gold,” Eller
said. “But after I went out there [in the final] and missed that first
pair, it was a little dicey there for a second, but I brought it all
back together.”
Eller’s final score of 190 topped Almaktoum’s world record of 189, also
set in Athens. Italy’s Francesco D’Aniello won the silver medal in
Beijing with a score of 187, and China’s Binyuan Hu took the bronze with
a 184 total.
“It’s incredible,” said Eller, 26, a native of Katy, Texas, who is
stationed at Fort Benning, Ga. “I finally made a final in the Olympics.
I came in like 12th [in Sydney] and 17th [in Athens], and finally came
out and put a good day together. This was the only thing I was worried
about for the last two years.”
Explaining his key to success, Eller reached into his vest and revealed
a handful of trading cards.
“Hard work,” the three-time Olympian said as he shuffled cards featuring
soldiers of the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit. “That, and I had my
teammates with me. The military has been great to me. They’ve helped me
fulfill a dream that, without them, I don’t think would’ve ever
happened. I owe everything to them.
“Joining the Army was an incredible gain for me,” he continued. “It gave
me a lot of discipline. I was fortunate enough to go into the Army
Marksmanship Unit. It’s great having those guys to train with every day.
They really pushed me along. Just working with them all day, every day,
it keeps you in it.
Being a soldier means he’s expected to do what’s asked of him, Eller
noted. “For right now, they asked me to come to the Olympics and win a
gold medal for the United States,” he said. “I don’t know how to better
represent them than with a gold medal in my hand.”
Eller said he couldn’t wait to give his parents a big bear hug.
“I’m going to go find my parents and celebrate,” he said. “They’ve been
here all week, and to the last two Olympics, watching me. To have them
here and to finally win a gold medal for them is incredible. The crowd
was amazing. The facilities were incredible.”
Holguin, 29, of Yorba Linda, Calif., finished fourth with a 182 total.
“I shot really well today, until the final,” Holguin said. “This game is
all about putting four good rounds together, and honestly, I could only
manage two. I had a mediocre round and a bad round. So when you’ve got
two good rounds, they don’t offset the mediocre and bad rounds.
“Finishing fourth,” he added, “that’s where you finish when you shoot
like I did in the final.”
On this day, Holguin tipped his cap to Eller.
“It’s all about him now,” Holguin said. “Glenn Eller and I started
shooting against each other a long, long time ago, and we actually
enlisted in the Army together in the fall of 2006. This was half of our
goal. We wanted gold and silver at the Olympics. We came really close,
but I’m happy for him.”
But during the competition, Holguin said, he did not pull any punches.
“When
we’re out on the shooting line, we take the gloves off and go at it as
hard as anybody else,” Holguin said. “I don't feel bad when he misses a
target. If he would have lost the gold medal, yeah, I would have felt
badly for him, but not if I was in the silver medal position. I’d be
chasing him the whole way.”
Holguin agreed with Eller that joining USAMU was their best move.
“Joining the Army was probably the best thing I could’ve done for my
shooting career, just because of the discipline and structure that comes
along with the Army,” Holguin said. “The Army Marksmanship Unit at Fort
Benning has world-class shooting facilities. We shoot with and against
some of the best in the world,” he said. “I’ve been training with the
2008 Olympic gold medalist for the last two years straight since I
joined the Army, so the Army has definitely taken my shooting to the
next level.
“My heartfelt thanks go out to everybody who has been behind me this
whole time, but it’s Glenn’s day,” Holguin said. “He earned it. He
deserves it.” |