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Home » Junior Feature: Elie Arkin

Junior Feature: Elie Arkin

Adam Green By Adam Green August 23, 2024 6 Min Read
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Junior Feature: Elie Arkin

Elie Arkin doesn’t spend much time shooting bullseye competition. For the past three years, he has competed in International Pistol shooting, a shooting discipline that focuses only on events offered at the Olympics. But he decided to travel to the National Matches at Camp Perry this summer as an opportunity to cross train and improve his skills.

He walked away with a G.P. Perry DeFino Trophy after winning the Junior .22 National Trophy Individual Pistol Match, and he was the Overall High Junior .22 Pistol in the CMP Match Pistol 2700 Aggregate.

Arkin has competed in International-style air pistol for the last three years.

Sixteen-year-old Arkin is a member of the NoVa Sharpshooters Youth Shooting Sports Program in Virginia. He competes at the Jr. Olympics and at the USA Shooting Nationals each year.

“I try to go to USA Shooting Nationals as much as I can, but I’ve been getting my toes into bullseye to see how that world works,” he said.

He didn’t expect to achieve much at Camp Perry. He entered the matches with the goal of simply becoming familiar with the competition. If he liked it, he planned to return next year with a more serious focus.

At the 2024 National Matches, Arkin competed in bullseye pistol, simply, to try something new.

“I was honestly a little bit surprised by my wins. Everything went really well,” he said. “I didn’t even realize I won the trophy until they said my name at the ceremony.”

Although Arkin was surprised by his strong performance at the National Matches, his success was the result of dedicated training.

Before excelling in the National Trophy Matches, Arkin earned the High Junior title in the Match Pistol 2700 Aggregate.

“My training is not a straight plan. I build up before a competition. In the months before, I try new things and swap pieces of equipment,” he said. “As I get nearer to the match, I solidify everything and decide just how I want it to be. I don’t switch things close to a match because I want everything to be subconscious and click naturally. I want everything to be as consistent as possible.”

Arkin said he has been working on the mentality of shooting as well, which he believes is highly impacted by experience.

“You can’t replace experience,” he said.

Arkin is a member of the NoVa Sharpshooters Youth Shooting Sports Program.

Arkin said he shot well below his average at his first Jr. Olympics competition because he didn’t have the experience to draw on for his mental game. On the other hand, his confidence became grounded after achieving a personal best score and tying for first place with an OSU pistol team assistant coach at a USA Shooting National competition. Arkin’s X scores put him in second place, but the experience opened his mind to his own potential.

“A lot of it is just experience. If you train enough, you reach a level where it becomes automatic,” Arkin said. “Things click and fall into place, and you can just let it happen.”

Arkin (standing in blue) says drawing from the experience of others is key for skill development.

Arkin also draws from the experience of other marksmen. He talks to as many experienced competitors as possible.

“I’ve talked to members of the Army Marksmanship Unit and Olympians, and the main piece of advice they give me about the mental aspect is: train a lot and talk to people,” Arkin said. “And I read books. Again, that’s advice from other people.”

But Arkin still incorporates mental training into his shooting regiment. A big part of his mental game involves following an unchangeable competition routine.

“I have a shot process. It’s like a lab procedure with every individual step,” he said. “It’s how I pick up my gun, the level of my gun when I shoot, how I stand, and the breaths I take at each step. It’s very, very meticulous.”

Arkin encourages marksmen to develop their own mental shooting technique.

“Form your own mental outlook. Your training is not going to be the same,” he said. “You are your own person with your own needs. You have to figure it out for yourself.”

And, in the end, his mental game relies on a realistic view of competition.

“In the grand scheme of things, it’s just one match,” he said. “This match is just training for the next one.”

Learn more about the NoVa Sharpshooters Youth Shooting Sports Program at https://wp.arlingtonfairfax-iwla.org/nova-sharpshooter-youth-pistol-program/ or find a local Junior Marksmanship Club at https://thecmp.org/clubs/search-clubs/.

Visit the CMP website at https://thecmp.org/competitions/cmp-pistol-program/ to learn more about Bullseye Pistol Shooting.

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.



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