Los Angeles Times

Olympic road ends for Rhode

Rhode’s streak comes to an end when skeet shooter doesn’t make Summer Games team.

- By David Wharton

Six-time medalist fails to qualify for skeet shooting in Tokyo.

Laughter erupts from the other end of the phone line. It is not what one expects to hear from Kim Rhode.

“I know,” she said. “A lot of people thought I’d be crying.”

Those people know Rhode as an Olympian of historic proportion­s, a skeet shooter who won medals at six consecutiv­e Summer Games. Her streak came to a shocking end Sunday when she failed to make the American team headed for Tokyo.

“I have no excuses,” she said.

The morning after falling short at a grueling, four-day USA Shooting trials in Tucson, the 40-year-old Southern California­n did not hesitate to discuss her stumble, talking by cellphone during a long drive home.

Skeet can be intense and unforgivin­g, with competitor­s firing shot after shot at clay targets launched from various angles. Any slip, anything short of a perfect score in each round, can mean defeat.

In Tucson, Amber English and Austen Smith got off to fast starts and held onto the top two spots. This will be the first Olympics for both.

“I’m just in shock, really,” Smith told the USA Shooting website. She added that Rhode had been “my idol ever since the start. She’s who I aspire to be, really.”

Less than 24 hours after finishing fourth, it wasn’t clear what went wrong for Rhode, who as recently as last year was on the goldmedal U.S. team at the world championsh­ips.

While some countries give preferenti­al treatment to veterans, the U.S. traditiona­lly forces even its best athletes to earn a roster spot before each Games.

“It’s something you can’t take for granted,” Rhode said. “Every time, you have to qualify.”

Her tale began in 1996 when, as a teenager, she won gold at the Summer Olympics in Atlanta.

Success continued from there, repeating in four-year cycles.

There were three golds, a silver and two bronzes over the next two decades of firing a shotgun in skeet and double trap.

Along the way, Rhode gave birth to a son in 2013 and suffered complicati­ons, eventually having her gall bladder removed. Still, she rebounded to finish third at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games.

That experience is now helping her deal with a different sort of obstacle and the unfamiliar pain of losing.

“It makes my journey even more amazing,” she said. “I don’t see the end in sight.”

Shooters can compete at a world-class level well into their 40s, so at this point Rhode intends to try for the 2024 Summer Games in Paris and 2028 in Los Angeles.

Her life has also been busy away from competitio­n as she helps launch a local shooting range that she hopes will become a national training center. As a board member for the National Rifle Assn., she has lobbied to change California’s ammunition restrictio­ns which, she says, make it tough for her to train daily.

Television might also be a possibilit­y.

As a recent guest on the “Project Runway” reality show, the self-professed “blue-jeans-and-baseballca­p kind of girl,” found herself modeling a custommade gown and hoping she would not trip over her high heels.

Now, with her summer schedule open, she might land back on the air in Tokyo.

“Maybe I’ll end up commentati­ng,” she said. “You never know.”

In the meantime, there is a birthday party to plan for six-year-old Carter — Nerf guns are a strong possibilit­y. Her husband asked what else she might do with her unexpected free time.

“I’m going to the range,” she told him. “I’m going to shoot.”

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