Key Points

Young Indian shooter Raiza Dhillon made history by reaching her first World Cup final in the women's skeet event in Peru. Despite being a newcomer, she demonstrated remarkable skill by finishing fifth in a highly competitive field against world-class athletes. Her performance included an impressive start with 19 out of first 20 shots and securing her spot in the final through a shoot-off. The event highlighted India's growing prowess in international shooting competitions, with the team securing a strong second place behind China.

Key Points: Raiza Dhillon Shines in ISSF World Cup Skeet Final

  • - Raiza Dhillon made her first World Cup final with impressive performance
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Shooting: Raiza Dhillon finishes fifth in her maiden World Cup final

Indian shooter Raiza Dhillon impresses in maiden World Cup final, finishing fifth in competitive women's skeet event in Peru

"A solid final for a debutant in an awe-inspiring field - Article Description"

Peru, April 17

Paris Olympian Raiza Dhillon made it to her first World Cup final, finishing a credible fifth in the women's skeet event, as India ended competition day two of the second leg of the International Shooting Sport Federation (ISSF) World Cup Rifle/Pistol/Shotgun, with a tally of two golds, one silver and a bronze medal, second behind China in the standings.

Raiza, a former junior world championship silver medallist and a bronze winner at the Asian Championships last year, shot a solid final for a debutant in an awe-inspiring field, bowing out at the 30-shot stage of the 60-shot decider with 26 hits to her name.

She could not get the better of fourth-place finisher Jiang Yiting of China, a Paris Olympics mixed team bronze medallist, whom she had to beat given the disadvantage of having the highest bib number. She had shot 19 out of the first 20 to fend off the second Chinese finalist Che Yufei.

Shotgun legend Kimberly Rhode, a three-time Olympic champion and six-time Olympic medallist, won gold with 56-hits, leading an American 1-2-3 in the event, as Samantha Simonton went down 1-2 in a shoot-off with Rhode for gold and former world champion Dania Jo Vizzi won bronze.

Kimberly's effort at the Las Palmas range on Wednesday evening gave her a 19th individual World Cup gold and a staggering 26th gold across events including double trap and mixed team skeet.

Raiza was 10th overnight and needed two great rounds to make the top-six final cut. She began with a perfect 25 and followed it up with a 24 to tie for sixth with Kazakhstan's Zoya Kravchenko at 117. The latter missed her second shoot-off shot as the Indian clinched the sixth and final spot.

Teammate Ganemat Sekhon went the other way, starting at sixth overall and ending at ninth with 116. Darshna Rathore was further down in 15th with 110.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
Fifth in her first World Cup final is amazing! Raiza is showing so much promise. Can't wait to see her performance at Paris 🤩 The future of Indian shooting looks bright!
P
Priya M.
Kimberly Rhode is just legendary! 19 individual World Cup golds is insane. But huge props to Raiza for holding her own against such tough competition in her debut final.
A
Ankit S.
Respectful criticism - Raiza needs to work on consistency in the later stages. She started strong but couldn't maintain it. Still, great experience before Olympics!
S
Sneha R.
That shoot-off to make the finals must have been so intense! 25 and 24 in the last two rounds shows she can handle pressure. More experience and she'll be on the podium soon 💪
V
Vikram J.
India second in the standings behind China is impressive! Our shooters are really stepping up. Hope this momentum continues through to the Olympics.
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Neha P.
The fact that she beat a Chinese Olympian in the early stages shows her potential. With more experience in finals, she'll only get better. Go Raiza! 🇮🇳

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