ISSF 25 meter standard pistol

25 meter standard pistol is one of the ISSF shooting events, introduced at the ISSF World Shooting Championships in 1970. It has its roots in the conventional pistol competitions developed by the National Rifle Association of America.

ISSF 25 meter standard pistol
Men
Number of shots3x20
World ChampionshipsSince 1970
AbbreviationSTP

The standard pistol match is shot with a regular sport pistol (also called a standard pistol) in caliber .22 LR. As with all ISSF pistol disciplines, all firing must be done with one hand, unsupported.

The 60-shot match is divided into 5-shot strings with different timings:

  • 4 strings within 150 seconds each – competitor can begin the series in any fashion he/she chooses.
  • 4 strings within 20 seconds each – competitor must begin each string with pistol in one outstretched arm from the 45-degree angle starting position.
  • 4 strings within 10 seconds each – competitor must begin each string with pistol in one outstretched arm from the 45-degree angle starting position.

Just like 25 meter center-fire pistol, standard pistol is a non-Olympic event and so gains little attention. It is one of the few events where targets did not change in 1989, so no resetting of records has been made. As a result, many records are rather old.

World Championships, Men

Year Place Gold Silver Bronze
1970 United States Phoenix  Renart Suleimanov (URS)  Hynek Hromada (TCH)  William McMillan (USA)
1974 Switzerland Thun  Victor Torshin (URS)  Bonnie Harmon (USA)  Valeri Margasov (URS)
1978 South Korea Seoul  Ragnar Skanåker (SWE)  Seppo Saarenpää (FIN)  Hannu Paavola (FIN)
1982 Venezuela Caracas  Vladas Turla (URS)  Alexsander Melentiev (URS)  Aldo Andreotti (ITA)
1986 East Germany Suhl  Afanasij Kuzmin (URS)  Hermann Sailer (AUT)  Igor Basinski (URS)
1990 Soviet Union Moscow  Miroslav Ignatiuk (URS)  Finn Damkjaer (DEN)  Anton Kuechler (SUI)
1994 Italy Milan  Sang Hak Lee (KOR)  Hansrudolf Schneider (SUI)  Seppo Makinen (FIN)
1998 Spain Barcelona  Mikhail Nestruev (RUS)  Paal Hembre (NOR)  Yongde Jin (CHN)
2002 Finland Lahti  Rene Vogn (DEN)  Alexander Danilov (ISR)  Giovanni Bossi (AUT)
2006 Croatia Zagreb  Guohui Liu (CHN)  Jong Su Kim (PRK)  Jakkrit Panichpatikum (THA)
2010 Germany Munich  Seong Hwan Hong (KOR)  Yongde Jin (CHN)  Júlio Almeida (BRA)
2014 Spain Granada  Yusuf Dikeç (TUR)  João Costa (POR)  Christian Reitz (GER)
2018 South Korea Changwon  Pavlo Korostylov (UKR)  Gurpreet Singh (IND)  Kim Jun-hong (KOR)
2022 Egypt Cairo  Pavlo Korostylov (UKR)  Christian Reitz (GER)  Vijayveer Sidhu (IND)

World Championships, Men Junior

Year Place Gold Silver Bronze
1994 Italy Milan  Jaspal Rana (IND)  Ricardo Yuston (ARG)  Joseph Gonzalez (USA)
1998 Spain Barcelona  Manuel Jun Guevara (VEN)  Gregory Fouet (FRA)  Rinat Ishbaev (RUS)
2002 Finland Lahti  Denis Kulakov (RUS)  Vladimir Issachenko (KAZ)  Julien Dufour (FRA)
2006 Croatia Zagreb  Kyusang Park (KOR)  Leonid Ekimov (RUS)  Thibaut Sauvage (FRA)
2010 Germany Munich  Zhigou Zhou (CHN)  Aaron Sauter (GER)  Xuan Feng Long (CHN)
2014 Spain Granada  Alexander Chichkov (USA)  Dario Di Martino (ITA)  Pardeep Pardeep (IND)
2018 South Korea Changwon  Vijayveer Sidhu (IND)  Lee Gun-hyeok (KOR)  Zhu Haojie (CHN)
2022 Egypt Cairo  Udhayveer Sidhu (IND)  Liu Yangpan (CHN)  Sameer Sameer (IND)

World Championships, Men Team

Year Place Gold Silver Bronze
1970 United States Phoenix, Arizona United States United States
William Blankenship
William Mc Millan
Edwin Lee Teague
Charles Wheeler
Soviet Union Soviet Union
Igor Bakalov
Anatoli Spivakov
Vladimir Stolipin
Renart Suleimanov
Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia
Ladislav Falta
Hynek Hromada
Vladimír Hurt
Lubomír Nácovský
1974 Switzerland Thun Soviet Union Soviet Union
Afanasij Kuzmin
Valeri Margasov
Vladimir Stolipin
Victor Torshin
Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia
Vladimír Hyka
Milan Hyka
Hynek Hromada
Vladimír Hurt
United States United States
Marvin Black
Bonnie Harmon
Bobby Tiner
Charles Wheeler
1978 South Korea Seoul Finland Finland
Seppo Makinen
Hannu Paavola
Paavo Palokangas
Seppo Saarenpää
Italy Italy
Giuseppe Quadro
Alberto Sevieri
Roberto Vannozzi
Renato Zambon
Switzerland Switzerland
Marcel Ansermet
Otto Keller
Reinhard Ruess
Alex Tschui
1982 Venezuela Caracas Soviet Union Soviet Union
Anatoli Egrishin
Aleksandr Melentyev
Sergei Sumatokhin
Vladas Turla
Italy Italy
Aldo Andreotti
Giulio Mussini
Giuseppe Quadro
Renato Zambon
United States United States
Erich Buljung
John Kailer
Melvin Makin
Don Nygord
1986 East Germany Suhl Soviet Union Soviet Union
Igor Basinski
Afanasij Kuzmin
Sergei Pyzhianov
Austria Austria
Dieter Aggermann
Karl Pavlis
Hermann Sailer
Finland Finland
Seppo Makinen
Paavo Palokangas
Jouni Vainio
1990 Soviet Union Moscow Soviet Union Soviet Union
Igor Basinski
Miroslav Ignatiuk
Afanasij Kuzmin
China China
Hui Wang
Runxi Wang
Yifu Wang
United States United States
Erich Buljung
Jimmie Mc Coy
Don Nygord
1994 Italy Milan Finland Finland
Jari Koivu
Seppo Makinen
Jouni Vainio
China China
Gang Meng
Runxi Wang
Ruimin Zhang
Switzerland Switzerland
Eros de Berti
Andreas Schweizer
Hansrudolf Schneider
1998 Spain Barcelona China China
Yongde Jin
Gang Meng
Yifu Wang
Norway Norway
Paal Hembre
Petter Bratli
Johnny Nilsen
Austria Austria
Giovanni Bossi
Karl Pavlis
Gerhard Boehm
2002 Finland Lahti Austria Austria
Giovanni Bossi
Karl Pavlis
Heinz Koeltringer
South Korea Korea
Byung Taek Park
Sang Hak Lee
Seong Hwan Hong
China China
Yongde Jin
Yadong Liu
Guohui Liu
2006 Croatia Zagreb China China
Guohui Liu
Yongde Jin
Yadong Liu
Russia Russia
Mikhail Nestruev
Sergei Poliakov
Sergei Alifirenko
Ukraine Ukraine
Oleg Tkachyov
Roman Bondaruk
Oleksandr Petriv
2010 Germany Munich China China
Yongde Jin
Chuanlin Li
Zhenxiang Xie
Germany Germany
Pierre Michel
Christian Reitz
Michael Schleuter
South Korea Korea
Seong Hwan Hong
Yoon Sam Hwang
Dae Kyu Jang
2014 Spain Granada Ukraine Ukraine
Pavlo Korostylov
Roman Bondaruk
Oleksandr Petriv
China China
Yongde Jin
Chuanlin Li
Feng Ding
Turkey Turkey
Yusuf Dikeç
Fatih Kavaruk
Murat Kilinc
2018 South Korea Changwon  France
Clément Bessaguet
Boris Artaud
Alban Pierson
 South Korea
Kim Jun-hong
Kim Young-min
Jang Dae-kyu
 Ukraine
Pavlo Korostylov
Volodymyr Pasternak
Oleksandr Petriv

World Championships, Women

This event was held at World Championships in 1970 and 2022.

Year Place Gold Silver Bronze
1970 United States Phoenix  Judy Trim (AUS)  Gloria Vause (AUS)  Nina Stoliarova (URS)
2022 Egypt New Administrative Capital  Xiao Jiaruixuan (CHN)  Rhythm Sangwan (IND)  Chen Yan (CHN)

World Championships, Women Team

This event was held at World Championships in 1970.

Year Place Gold Silver Bronze
1970 United States Phoenix Australia Australia
E. Newton
Judy Trim
Gloria Vause
United States United States
Sally Carroll
Lucile Chambliss
M. Norkauer
West Germany West Germany
Ortrud Feickert
Karin Fitzner
Ruth Kasten

World Championships, Mixed Team

This event was held at World Championships in 2022.

Year Place Gold Silver Bronze
2022 Egypt New Administrative Capital  Germany
Doreen Vennekamp
Christian Reitz
 Korea
Kim Jang-mi
Kim Seo-jun
 Ukraine
Olena Kostevych
Pavlo Korostylov


World Championships, total medals

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Soviet Union112215
2 China55313
3 South Korea3115
4 Russia2215
5 United States2169
6 Finland2147
7 Austria1326
8 Denmark1102
9 India1012
 Turkey1012
 Ukraine1012
12 Sweden1001
 Venezuela1001
14 Italy0314
15 Czechoslovakia0213
 Germany0213
17 Norway0202
18  Switzerland0134
19 France0123
20 Argentina0101
 Israel0101
 Kazakhstan0101
 North Korea0101
 Portugal0101
25 Brazil0011
 Thailand0011
Totals (26 entries)32323296

Current World Records

Current world records in 25 metre standard pistol
Men Individual 584  Erich Buljung (USA) August 20, 1983 Caracas (VEN)
Teams 1725  Soviet Union (Kuzmins, Melentyev, Turla)
 Soviet Union (Kuzmins, Basinski, Pyzhianov)
September 10, 1985
September 8, 1986
Osijek (YUG)
Suhl (GDR)
Junior Men Individual 581  Pavlo Korostylov (UKR) July 30, 2017 Baku (AZE)
Teams 1707  India (Sidhu U., Sidhu V., Singh) July 13, 2019 Suhl (GER)

World champions

YearVenueIndividualTeam
1970 Phoenix, Arizona  Renart Suleimanov (URS)  United States
1974 Thun  Viktor Torshin (URS)  Soviet Union
1978 Seoul  Ragnar Skanåker (SWE)  Finland
1982 Caracas  Vladas Turla (URS)  Soviet Union
1986 Suhl  Afanasijs Kuzmins (URS)  Soviet Union Juniors
1990 Moscow  Miroslav Ignatiuk (URS)  Soviet Union Individual Team
1994 Milan  Lee Sang-hak (KOR)  Finland  Jaspal Rana (IND)  Moldova
1998 Barcelona  Mikhail Nestruyev (RUS)  China  Manuel Guevara Jr. (VEN)  Venezuela
2002 Lahti  René Vogn (DEN)  Austria  Denis Kulakov (RUS)  Russia
2006 Zagreb  Liu Guohui (CHN)  China  Park Kyu-sang (KOR)  Russia
2010 Munich  Hong Seong Hwan (KOR)  China  Zhou Zhiguo (CHN)  China
2014 Granada  Yusuf Dikeç (TUR)  Ukraine  Alexander Chichkov (USA)  Mongolia
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