Building On Worlds Breakout, Para Shooter YanXiao Gong Heads ...

19 Nov 2023
Worlds

Going into the Para shooting world championships two months ago in Lima, Peru, American shooter YanXiao Gong has a sense of what was to come.

“I usually get a general ‘feel’ of my upcoming performance within a time frame as a larger competition approaches,” said the 25-year-old Gong of Malibu, California. “The weeks leading up to the Lima trip, I felt challengingly comfortable.

“I anticipated medals, but obviously the ‘feel’ can never be as precise as knowing what exact color each one would end up being.”

As it turned out, Gong ended up having a hand in all three medals won by Team USA, winning a gold medal and a pair of bronze medals in the pistol events.

His gold medal came in the individual P3 mixed 25-meter pistol SH1, in which he shot an Americas record 26 while earning a 2024 Paralympic quota in the event for Team USA. He also took an individual bronze in the P1 men’s 10-meter air pistol SH1 and a team bronze in the mixed 25-meter pistol SH1 event, where he and U.S. teammates Marco De La Rosa and Michael Tagliapietra shot a combined 1686-34x, another new Americas mark.

The hope is that Gong will carry his podium-ascending “feel” to the 2023 Parapan American Games, which take place Nov. 17-26 in Santiago, Chile. It will be his debut at the event, but he seems to be experiencing no additional pressure.

“As hard and easy as it may sound, I plan to simply do my routine, discard as much ‘performance’ as possible, and enjoy myself in Santiago,” Gong said, via email. “I’m not very acquainted with most of the teams from the Americas.”

Gong acknowledged that flying to Chile may produce some jitters, but he also has a plan for that.

“I start packing many days in advance, as I tend to get a lot of anxiety about traveling and being on the move,” he said. “I usually try to taper down as a competition approaches, going back to my all-time favorite playlists and albums, and I like to start assembling a new one that sets and reflects the moods.”

A lifelong interest in firearms led Gong into the sport.

Before getting into competitive shooting, Gong said one of his passions was collecting historical pieces ranging from World War I to the Cold War era.

After shooting mostly for fun as a kid, he found his way to competitive shooting around 10 years ago after he suffered Surfer’s myelopathy, an over-extension of his back, during the last months of his high school freshman year.

“At the time of the injury, there were only 33 officially reported global cases of this nature, if my memory serves me correctly,” he said. “In the years of running back and forth between home school and therapies, I went to some shooting matches as a leisure.”

Read more
Similar news
This week's most popular news