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Annie Elliott

When it comes to the shooting sports, there isn’t much benchrest shooter
Annie Elliott, of the ACT, hasn’t done. Her shooting bio reads like a
world-renowned surgeon’s CV - with page after page of awards and impressive
accomplishments.
Annie began shooting when she was 18, starting out on foxes and rabbits. Just a
few years later she turned her attention to shooting paper targets on the range.
It was there she became a world-class benchrest shooter, winning various
national and international medals and trophies. In 1981 she won her first
national benchrest medal. Eleven years later she became the Australian record
holder for the smallest group at the 500m Fly Shoot. In 1999 she won the
Australian national two-gun trophy and that same year finished 11th at the
benchrest world championships in Italy - ending her run there as the best
placing Australian. In 2000, she built upon that success, winning the Australia
Day benchrest two-gun trophy and being named the Australian Benchrest Shooter of
the Year. In 2002, Annie became the second-highest qualifier, so far, for the
world benchrest championships in Sweden in 2003.
Her shooter’s ‘resume’ culminates with an induction into the Benchrest Hall of
Fame just this year, which was something she had been striving to achieve for a
long time.
Annie’s love for the sport has taken her to many distant countries and
competitions and through her Level 1 coaching certificate, she has been able to
share her knowledge with young boys and girls entering the sport.
Annie is a multi-award-winning benchrest shooter who has given back to the sport
more than she has received. She is proof that in shooting, it is hard work,
tenacity and a passion for the sport that determines success rather than gender
or age, as she has surpassed many of her younger, older and male peers.
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