Moose Jaw Express.com

Moore, Leduc preparing for 3D Archery World Championsh­ips

Local competitor­s to represent Canada in barebow at worlds in Lac La Biche, Alta.

- Randy Palmer - Moose Jaw Express

Tyler Moore and Heather Leduc are hoping being a little closer to home will make for career-best results when they represent Canada at the World 3D Archery Championsh­ips in Lac La Biche, Alta. at the beginning of September. The Thunder Creek Archery Club standouts were recently confirmed as national team competitor­s after putting together top-three finishes at the Canadian championsh­ips Aug. 2-4 in Prince Albert. “We’re on our own home ground, so they’re targets that we’re used to shooting,” said Moore, who with Leduc will be making their second appearance at worlds. “It’s a little different than going around and seeing the targets the first time and having to experience a whole world championsh­ip for the first time. We have a better idea of what it’s going to be like and hopefully that helps out.” Moore is coming off a third-place finish in the men’s barebow at nationals, where he shot 652 through the four rounds of targets including a high of 180 in his third round of shots.

Leduc finished second in women’s barebow with a 490 total and high of 142 in her final round.

The barebow discipline is essentiall­y as described – bows are single-string recurve affairs with no aiming or balance accruement­s attached, making them a modern equivalent of a traditiona­l bowand-arrow set-up compared to the multiple strings, pulleys, cams, sites and balance devices seen on compound bows. “It’s all hand-eye co-ordination… you have to be able to look at the target and know the distance to the target,” Leduc explained of the difference shooting a barebow. “Then you have to be able to calculate the distance and get down on the string where you have to be to shoot that distance and make the arrow go exactly to the point where your eye is on the target, without the aid of sites or magnifiers and any other equipment.” That focus on shot precision is one of the aspects that has barebow becoming one of the fastest growing 3D discipline­s in the world.

“You have to be right in the zone and thinking about the shot process, you can’t be thinking about ‘oh what I’m going to score’, you have to trust the process and be as precise as possible,” Moore added.

A total of 28 countries and over 300 athletes will be competing in Lac La Biche, with qualifying rounds beginning Monday, Sept. 2 and running through Wednesday, Sept. 4 before eliminatio­n matches begin that Thursday. The championsh­ip finals are Saturday, Sept. 7. The event will mark the second trip to worlds for both competitor­s following an appearance in Robion, France in 2017. There Moore finished 35th in the instinctiv­e division – an even stricter class that requires further stripped-down single-piece recurve bows compared to barebow. Leduc landed 26th overall in the longbow class, which goes further still in a traditiona­l direction and doesn’t allow recurve bows.

This time around, the goal is a top 22 finish through qualificat­ion to reach the eliminatio­n rounds, with the duo hoping that being closer to home than France this time around will make a difference. “When we went to Europe, there’s jetlag and getting accustomed to food and things like that,” Leduc said.

“And this time around, Team Canada has their own practice range, where if we wanted to practice in France we’d have 200 to 300 archers at a time,” added Moore. “So you’re trying to work on something and trying to get on to the shooting line. You could do it, but it was tough.

This time there will be 24 Canadians and that’s going to make a big difference in practice and preparatio­n time.”

In order to offset costs of representi­ng Canada and Moose Jaw at a world championsh­ip, the Thunder Creek Archery Club is holding a steak night at the Crushed Can Sports Bar and Night Club on Thursday, Aug. 22. The event will run from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. and will feature an eight-ounce steak dinner. Tickets are $20 each.

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 ??  ?? Heather Leduc and Tyler Moore of the Thunder Creek Archery Club will be competing at the World 3D Archery Championsh­ips in Lac La Biche in September.
Heather Leduc and Tyler Moore of the Thunder Creek Archery Club will be competing at the World 3D Archery Championsh­ips in Lac La Biche in September.
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