Gary
turned his sport shooting ambitions into reality at the World Shooting
Championships in Cairo, Egypt in October 1962. 700 shooters from 45 countries
participated. The Shooting Federation
of the host country (UAR) was supported and subsidized by the government and
this was the first World Championship ever on the African continent. Egypt at the time was a Soviet Union client
state so the Egyptian organizers did everything they could to glorify the
Soviet team that had dominated the previous 1958 World Championships. In this environment, Gary stunned the
sport-shooting world by winning four individual World Championships, setting
three World Records, beating the Russians on every range and also beating a
record set by his “hero,” Anatoli Bogdanov of the Soviet Union. (See “An Article from the Archives.”)
The identity card for the 38th World Shooting Championships in Cairo, Egypt 1962 |
Gary's
preparations for the Cairo World Championship were serendipitously connected
with his first new car that he purchased shortly before the World
Championship. While Gary was still on
active duty at Ft. Benning, his sister Karen shared some money with him that
she received through a bequest from a great aunt who did not want to include
Gary in her will because she objected to his joining the Army. It was enough for him to buy a new 1961
white Chevrolet Corvair. Shortly after
that and before the World Championship in Cairo, Gary left active duty in the
Army and returned to Nebraska to go back to college. When he went to his County Treasurer's office
to re-license his car from Georgia to Nebraska, he wanted to find a license
plate number that corresponded with his goals for the upcoming World
Championship. He wanted the number 1160
to use as a score goal for the 50m 3-position match. However, the closest number available was 1157. At the time the
World Record was 1149 so there was a great amount of audacity in saying he was
going to increase the World Record by 8 points in a World Championship. He chose the license plate with 1157 and nine months later that became
his World Record score.
Gary was
23 years old at the time and had been shooting only six years. The first World Championship competition was
the 50m prone rifle event. His 591 in
that event was just one point out of the medals. He remembers listening to the German national
anthem during the award ceremony for the gold medal winner Karl Wenk and saying
to himself, "tomorrow they will be listening to the Star Spangled
Banner." The next day was for
individual 50m position events. In the
standing position event, the World Record was 374 and Gary reached the last
series needing a 93 to break the record.
During his last shots, he recorded in his diary "I could hardly
contain my heart in my chest having never felt pressure more." He finished with a 94 to set his first World
Record with a 376 score.
Gary in Cairo, shooting prone Notice the leather glove mentioned in "Meeting Bogdanov Face to Face" |
Gary with Karl Wenk of Germany |
His
biggest goal, to win the 50m 3-position World Championship came on the next
day. He began with what then was an
excellent 388 kneeling and followed that with a 375 standing that nearly
duplicated his world record 376 of the previous day. He finished with a 394 prone and a new world
record total of 1157, the same score he predicted
with his license plate selection. Second
place went to his friend Marat Niasov from the USSR who finished 10 points
behind at 1147.
During
the 1960s, pension bonuses in the USSR were awarded for World Championship and
Olympic medal finishes. Gold medals were
worth 100 Rubles per month or more. Gary
has often wondered how many Rubles in pension payments Russian shooters lost
because they finished second to him in World Championship or Olympic
competitions. It happened at least six
times.
The 300m
matches followed the smallbore matches by a couple of days. They were fired in very windy conditions. He won the 300m prone event with a 395 where
all his nines were due to wind. Kneeling
almost became his undoing. He began with
a disastrous 91-95. He could not win
with scores like that. He took a break
and spoke with teammate Jim Hill (USMC).
Gary complained that the light 39 grain loads the Army provided were not
performing well in the wind. Hill
offered Gary some faster 41 grain loads that the Marines provided for him. He finished with a 96-100. The Marine ammo performed much better and
those scores saved the match for him. He
finished with a total of 1138 out of a possible 1200. That tied him with the USSR's Yevdokimov, but
the tiebreaker then was prone so he also won the 300m 3-position World
Championship.
Gary's scorecard from the 300m kneeling match. Notice the last string - score 100! |
When the
Cairo World Championship was finished, he won four gold medals (two more than anyone else) and set three World
Records; his 1157 50m 3-position score erased
the mark previously held by marksmen from three nations by eight points. His 376 in 50m standing was two
points over the old record that was held by a Russian, but it was nine points
ahead of the silver medal score. And his
395 prone broke a record held by his hero Bogdanov whose
previous record was a 394.
Gary on the victory stand (with a Pyramid in the background) for the small bore standing awards ceremony. |
The Gold Medals with "artistically valuable chains." |
A close up of the World Championship Gold Medal |
President
Eisenhower had signed an order in 1956 to form the Army Marksmanship Unit and
one of its missions was to challenge the USSR's domination of world
shooting. That effort began to bear
fruit in Cairo. Despite Gary's
individual victories, the USA team finished second to the USSR in most of the
team matches, but the full turn-around was to come in the 1966 World
Championship.
In these
competitions, the shooters used rifles of .22 and .308 caliber, shot at 50m and
300m without the aid of telescopic sights
at bull’s-eyes smaller than a dime at
50 meters, the size of a teacup at 300.
The normal course of fire lasted from five to six hours and consisted of
40 shots each in prone, kneeling and standing.
During a 3x40 rifle match a shooter would lift about three tons of
weight just to get the rifle to his shoulder.
And, a shooter would suspend
his breathing for a total period of 50 to 75 minutes.
The
pressure on the shooters was terrific.
Each shot was posted on a scoreboard immediately behind the shooter for
all to see as the match moved forward.
Crowds of spectators followed the progress of the best shooters and the
psychological effect on the individual shooter was very intense.
There
were some special challenges for the American shooters in Cairo – bad food, bad water, and wind from the Sahara desert near
the Pyramids. The Russians? They brought their own food. Most American team members were sick with
dysentery. Gary lost 10 pounds during
the Championships. He remembers
having dysentery during the 300m match that caused him to leave the range every
15 or 20 shots. Ten sighters per
position were allowed and they could only be taken at the beginning of each 10
shot series so each trip to the bathroom added new risk to the next record
shot.
Gary’s 300m rifle was build around a Remington action by Army
Marksmanship Unit gunsmiths. Gary used
that same gun in the Tokyo Olympics, but after the Olympics the Army shop tore
the gun apart and Gary ended up with the stock which he still has today. There were no left-handed actions then, and
being left handed, Gary had to remove the rifle from his shoulder to reload, a
distinct disadvantage.
Gary in Cairo with the 50m rifle provided by Dieter Anschütz |
Gary
received news before he left Cairo that he had been promoted from Corporal to
Sergeant in the Army Reserves. Upon
his return to his hometown of Axtell, Nebraska (population 450) the Axtell
Chamber of Commerce hosted a “Gary Anderson Night” where Gary showed his rifle, slides, and medals. He
returned to Hastings College, Nebraska as a second semester sophomore majoring
in history and joined the Nebraska National Guard shortly after that. Gary financed college with his National
Guard earnings, the GI Bill, working as a dorm counselor, Army active duty pay
during the summers and honoraria from speaking engagements.
Gary enjoys some free time after the competitions in Cairo! |
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