U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit Rifle Shooter to Join Fellow Soldiers at Olympics

   06.05.12

U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit Rifle Shooter to Join Fellow Soldiers at Olympics

A Soldier from the U.S. Army Marksmanship Unit is joining some of his battle buddies in London this summer after winning the U.S. Olympic Team Trial match for Men’s Rifle Prone today at Pool Range Complex here.

Staff Sgt. Michael McPhail qualified for his first Olympic games after a stellar three-day performance on his home range and will compete alongside a USAMU counterpart in hopes of bringing back a medal.

“I’ve been working at this for a real long time, so this feels good,” said McPhail. “I have had a lot of people help me along the way. I can’t tell you how many it takes to make an Olympian.”

Coming off a bronze medal-winning performance at the London World Cup, the stage was set for McPhail to continue his outstanding shooting and nail down an Olympic team berth. McPhail started the match off June 2 with a blistering 599 in the qualification round and followed it with a world-class score of 105.4 in the first day’s final, establishing himself as the man to beat from the very beginning.

“It doesn’t hurt to go into the Olympic Trials with quite a bit of confidence,” said McPhail. “The first day I really made a point to go out there and just do my job. After that I knew I was in front but I didn’t look at the scoreboard at all. I did well just staying in the moment, taking it shot by shot.”

Matthew Emmons, the 2004 Olympic Gold Medalist in the event and world record holder, and Sgt. 1st Class Jason Parker, McPhail’s teammate and a three-time Olympian himself, came back on the second day and put pressure on McPhail, outshooting the Darlington, Wisc. native by a few points but not enough to put a significant dent in his lead. Parker said all signs pointed to this being McPhail’s time and even though he lost this chance at another Olympic spot, he was glad his USAMU teammate secured his first Olympic berth.

“Sgt. McPhail has had a great spring leading up to this event so I was really looking at him to earn this spot,” said Parker. “He has a great chance of medaling at the Olympics so after the first day I was happy to see that he had built up a good lead. After he shot that first day score I just tried to do the very best I could and get prepared for the next event (in three days).”

On the third day, McPhail slammed the door on anyone else contemplating making a serious run on his Olympic dream. Despite Emmons tying the national record with a perfect 600, McPhail posted a 598 then settled into the final knowing a solid score would secure his trip to England. A relieved and excited McPhail stood up off the mat after taking the final shot of the match and was immediately swarmed with congrats from fellow competitors, observers and several of his USAMU brethren, signaling to him that he had made the team.

“When you work your entire adult life for something, I really wanted this one—bad,” McPhail said. “The first thing I felt was relief. It’s easy for people to say ‘he should win’ but when you are going up against my teammates from the unit and an Olympic Gold Medalist and world record holder, it’s anything but easy.”

McPhail will compete against and alongside USAMU teammate Sgt. 1st Class Eric Uptagrafft. Uptagrafft, who qualified for the games in 2011 after earning enough points in World Cup competition, is thrilled to have his friend and teammate along for the wild ride that is the Olympics.

“We’ve been preparing together for the past four years so it will not be a lot different than it is now,” said Uptagrafft about training from here on out. “He pushes me, I push him. After his first day and he shot a world-class score, I knew he was ready. I never thought that there was chance that he would crumble. After that first day, I knew this was his match to lose.”

McPhail is now the sixth Soldier from the unit who will shoot for gold in London. Besides himself and Uptagrafft, shotgun shooters Staff Sgt. Josh Richmond and Sgts. Glenn Eller and Vincent Hancock will represent the Army and U.S. at the Olympics. Sgt. 1st Class Josh Olson will compete in the Paralympics. The last slot on the Olympic Shooting team will be decided June 11 in Men’s Three-Position Rifle at Pool Range and USAMU Soldiers are considered to be favorites for the last spot.

“Yeah, six guys are going, but it took the entire unit to get us there,” McPhail said. “It shows how good the unit is. It stems from the commander all the way down to the lowest private. Our gunsmiths are truly world-class and they give us a huge advantage. And I am confident we aren’t done yet. I think we are going to put another Soldier on the team.”

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