Monday, July 22, 2013

KEPUTUSAN MENEMBAK 2013

KEPUTUSAN PERTANDINGAN
KEJOHANAN MENEMBAK NSAM PRESIDENT ALLY T.H ONG TROPHY 2013
BIL
NAMA
PERTANDINGAN
KEPUTUSAN
1.
CHOO WEN YAN
10M AIR PISTOL MEN-INDIVIDUAL
KE - 7
10M AIR PISTOL MEN - TEAM
KE - 1
2.
NIK MUHAMMAD AIMULLAH
50M RIFLE 3 POSITION MEN
KE -1
50M RIFLE PRONE MEN INDIVIDUAL
KE - 6
3.
RAZI AIZAT B. ADZHA
50M RIFLE 3 POSITION MEN
KE-7
4.
SITI NURHANA BT. HAZMI
10 M AIR PISTOL WOMEN
KE-17
5.
ZUL HAZIQ
50M RIFLE 3 POSITION MEN
KE - 8


KEPUTUSAN PERTANDINGAN
KEJOHANAN SELANGOR SHOOTING CHAMPIONSHIP
BIL
NAMA
PERTANDINGAN
KEPUTUSAN
1.
CHOO WEN YAN
10M AIR PISTOL MEN-INDIVIDUAL
KE – 6
10M AIR PISTOL MEN – TEAM
KE – 3
2.
NIK MUHAMMAD AIMULLAH
50M RIFLE 3 POSITION MEN
KE -10
50M RIFLE PRONE MEN INDIVIDUAL
KE – 2
3.
RAZI AIZAT B. ADZHA
50M RIFLE 3 POSITION MEN
KE-2
4.
SITI NURHANA BT. HAZMI
10 M AIR PISTOL WOMEN
KE-3
5.
ZUL HAZIQ
50M RIFLE 3 POSITION MEN
KE – 12
6.
ABDUL HADI B. MALEK
10M AIR PISTOL MEN – INDIVIDUAL
KE - 7


KEPUTUSAN PERTANDINGAN
KEJOHANAN MENEMBAK TUN HANIF TROPHY 2013
BIL
NAMA
PERTANDINGAN
KEPUTUSAN
1.
CHOO WEN YAN
10M AIR PISTOL MEN-INDIVIDUAL
KE – 7
10M AIR PISTOL MEN – TEAM
KE – 1
2.
NIK MUHAMMAD AIMULLAH
50M PRONE-MEN
KE -2
10M RIFLE –MEN
KE – 3
4.
SITI NURHANA BT. HAZMI
10 M AIR PISTOL WOMEN
X
5.
ZUL HAZIQ
50M RIFLE 3 POSITION MEN
KE – 12
6.
ABDUL HADI B. MALEK
10M AIR PISTOL MEN – INDIVIDUAL
KE - 12
10 M AIR PISTOL MEN- TEAM-
KE - 1


KEPUTUSAN PERTANDINGAN
KEJOHANAN MENEMBAK TUN HANIF TROPHY 2013
BIL
NAMA
PERTANDINGAN
KEPUTUSAN
1.
CHOO WEN YAN
10M AIR PISTOL MEN-INDIVIDUAL
KE – 2
50 M PISTOL MEN -INDIVIDUAL
KE – 1
2.
NIK MUHAMMAD AIMULLAH
50M PRONE-MEN
KE - 2
10M RIFLE –MEN
KE – 3
3.
RAZI AIZAT B. ADZHA
50M RIFLE 3 POSITION MEN
KE-   3
4.
SITI NURHANA BT. HAZMI
25 M AIR PISTOL WOMEN
KE-  7
5.
ZUL HAZIQ
50M RIFLE 3 POSITION MEN
KE – 8
10 M AIR RIFLE - MEN
KE-  2
6.
ABDUL HADI B. MALEK
10M AIR PISTOL MEN – INDIVIDUAL
KE - 6
50 M PISTOL MEN -INDIVIDUAL
KE - 3
7.
NUR DAYANA HIJRA
10 M AIR RIFLE - WOMEN
KE - 3



Saturday, July 20, 2013

Pregnant Nur Suryani Mohd Taibi leaves London with a special record

LONDON -- Even though she didn't advance to the finals of the 10-meter air rifle Saturday morning, Nur Suryani Mohd Taibi managed to shatter a record: most pregnant Olympian ever. The 29-year-old naval logistics officer from Malaysia is nearly eight months pregnant, well farther along than any previous Olympian.
A first time Olympian and first time mother, Suryani, as she prefers to be called, is learning as she goes. When asked if she felt any pain during the morning's competition -- she placed 34th of 56 competitors -- Suryani cocked her head, raised her eyebrows, and answered the question with one of her own: "Is it pregnant women will feel pain?" The gaggle of male journalists suddenly stupefied into silence, Suryani responded to herself. "I don't think so," she said, "or, not yet."
After a transient bout of morning sickness earlier in her pregnancy, Suryani has felt fantastic, she says. And while some shooters try to shoot between heartbeats, Suryani shoots between her daughter's kicks. "I talked to her before shooting," Suryani said. "I told her, OK, don't move so much, behave yourself, Mommy's ready to shoot, help Mommy to shoot."
"I feel only three or four kicks today during the competition," she added. When the kicks came while Suryani's finger was on the trigger, she lowered the rifle, stepped back, took a deep breath, and then took aim again. "She always listens," she says of her daughter.
As to the idea of shooting between heartbeats, only some shooters attempt to employ that strategy, and it probably wouldn't have been a fruitful path for Suryani anyway. "The problem during pregnancy is your resting heart rate goes up," says Dr. Jim Pivarnik, who studies pregnant athletes. "Let's say it's 65 before pregnancy, it could easily be 80 at eight months. So that gives much less time between beats to fire a shot." Olympic shooters wear inflexible canvas and leather pants and coats to deaden the reverberations that their pulse might have on their head or hands.
But Suryani said that she didn't feel disadvantaged in any way, "even though the score is not so high as I expected it to be." As to the heartbeat, she said, cheerfully, "I have two hearts, so maybe I'm stronger." In fact, Suryani suggested that her weighty belly actually made her feel more stable at times when she leaned backward to sight the rifle. "It's balanced in the front and back now," she said.
Says Pivarnik, "the center of gravity in a pregnant woman is definitely a bit lower, there's no doubt about that." But as pregnant women get closer to delivery, they also secrete a hormone called relaxin that loosens the hip joint for delivery. Lisa Leslie, U.S. basketball gold medallist in '08, said at those Games that she felt "unstable" in her hips after giving birth to her daughter. But Suryani, who used the widest stance of any competitor, said she felt fine, and that she adjusted as her belly grew, even getting a custom made shooting suit. "I asked a man in Malaysia to make it so it will fit until I'm eight months pregnant," Suryani said. "He said, OK, I have a wife who is eight months, I can do it in one week!"
As far as any performance effect of pregnancy on shooting, the jury is way out. "It's not like we've done a study and said, 'Let's have every woman who's eight months pregnant shoot and then shoot again when they're not pregnant,'" Pivarnik says.
When Suryani found out she was pregnant in January, her doctor was surprised, she said, but after examining her, decided she could still go to the Olympics. The most precarious part of the journey thus far was probably the flight to London, and that went off without a hitch. For unknown reasons, the pressure change of air travel has a tendency to induce labor in pregnant women. But Suryani appeared immune to any anxiety about giving birth either on the flight or at the Olympics. "I told [my daughter] to wait until we get back to Malaysia, and I think she listens," she said. "If I had to go to a labor room during competition, I just accept it with an open heart...I'm quite stubborn, and when I say I want to go [to the Olympics], I want to go."
Her police officer husband, though ... not so immune to pregnancy anxiety. He's in London with the proverbial hospital bag ready, and Suryani said he's already freaking out. "He said, you better go for a caesarian. I don't want you screaming in pain. I don't want to see you like that, or else I will kick the doctor." If the baby does come in London, Suryani said the Malaysian prime minister pledged to cover the medical costs of delivery.
(Suryani had no answer for a few other bizarre questions she was posed this morning, so here they are: No, Britain does not do as the U.S. does and grant citizenship to any baby born on its soil. And, no, the "international zone" in the athlete's village is not some sort of international embassy inside which newborns instantly become citizens of the Olympics.)
As she left the competition -- officials loaded her into a golf cart -- Suryani smiled and said that she looked forward to telling her daughter "that there's many challenges I had to face to bring you to London, and you were in the Olympics before you were born!"

And so, on to more challenges. Suryani has her heart set on the name: Dayana Widyan. "But my husband wants to put Isabella. But I don't know where. It's already very long!"

THE CAMPS





Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Shooting
Shooting is the act or process of firing firearms or other projectile weapons such as bows or crossbows. Even the firing of artillery, rockets, and missilescan be called shooting. A person who specializes in shooting is a marksman. Shooting can take place in a shooting range or in the field in hunting, inshooting sports, or in combat.

Technique and safety consideration
Shooting technique differs depending on factors like the type of firearm used (from a handgun to a sniper rifle; the distance to and nature of the target; the required precision; and the available time. Breathing and position play an important role when handling a handgun or a rifle. Some shooting sports, such asIPSC shooting, make a sport of combat style shooting. The prone position, kneeling position, and standing position offer different amounts of support for the shooter. Holding the gun sideways, as is sometimes seen in movies and on television, is poor gun handling; it makes the weapon likely to jam as any ejected case may fail to leave the weapon completely. There is an exception to this, however. "Bandit Shooting", so called because of its use with Chinese bandits of the early to mid-1900s, is where the gun (generally a handgun with a high rate of fire) is tilted on its side and aimed, the index finger is placed on the frame, and the trigger is pulled using the middle finger. It is used for "clean up" indoors or at very short range post-operation, as it is fairly inaccurate.
The utmost consideration for many shooters is gun safety. Like many activities such as mountain climbing, skiing, or sky-diving, there is an element of danger involved. And especially here, this danger demands a sober understanding and respect for firearms and the specific rules for the safe handling of them. This is compounded by the fact that the danger can easily extend beyond the participants—a stray bullet can injure or kill people other than those actually firing or handling the arms involved. At public ranges, the safety of all participants depends on the knowledge of everyone at the range.

Shooting is used for hunting upland game birds such as grouse or pheasant, rabbits, culling, deer hunting, or other wild game animals, or shooting pest animals. Sometimes "shooting" refers to the hunting activity itself.
Shooting is also used in warfare, self-defense, crime, and law enforcement. Duels were sometimes held using guns. Shooting without a target has applications such as celebratory gunfire, 21-gun salute, or firing starting pistols, incapable of releasing bullets.
Entertainment shooting
Because shooting is an activity enjoyed not only by enthusiasts that do not own their own equipment or live in areas where firearms use is heavily regulated, an emerging solution is the entertainment shooting industry. For many years clay shooting with shotguns has been the primary entertainment shooting offering. Now, some shooting ranges in large cities rent guns to customers, and businesses utilize ranges in providing entertainment shooting offerings.
Competitive shooting
Marksmanship has inspired competition, and in several countries rifle clubs started to form in the 19th century. Soon international shooting events evolved, including shooting at the Summer Olympics (from 1896) and World Championships (from 1897). The International Shooting Sport Federation still administers Olympic and non-Olympic rifle, pistol, shotgun, and running target shooting competitions, although there is also a large number of national and international shooting sports controlled by unrelated organizations.
Shooting supplies

Government legislation in most countries requires shooters to have some form of shooting licence, and firearms are typically only available from registered firearms dealers