World Championships, Men Team
This event was held in 1962–2006.
| Year | Place | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1962 | Cairo | Sweden Christer Gustafsson Kurt Johansson Jan Emil Poignant Nils Johan Sundberg |
United States of America Gary Anderson James Enoch Hill Presley Kendall Verle Franklin Jun. Wright |
Federal Republic of Germany Rudolf Bortz Peter Kohnke Karl Wenk Klaus Zaehringer |
| 1966 | Wiesbaden | United States of America Donald Adams David Boyd Bill Krilling Lones Wigger |
Poland Janusz Kalmus Stanislaw Marucha Jerzy Nowicki Andrzej Trajda |
Soviet Union Vassily Borisov Alexander Gerasimenok Yuri Kudryashov Marat Niyazov |
| 1970 | Phoenix | Italy Giuseppe de Chirico Franco Donna Walter Frescura Luigi Testarmata |
Romania Marin Ferecatu Stefan Kaban Gheorghe Vasilescu Stefan Tamas |
Yugoslavia Dusan Epifanic Branislav Loncar Zdravko Milutinovic Miroslav Sipek |
| 1974 | Thun | Finland Jouko Ilmari Hietalahti Pauli Aapeli Janhonen Esa Einari Kervinen Leif Lajunen |
United States of America Victor Auer Presley Kendall Margaret Murdock Lones Wigger |
Czechoslovakia Karel Bulan Petr Kovarik Karel Skyba Jiri Vogler |
| 1978 | Seoul | United States of America Lanny Bassham John Comley Boyd Goldsby Lones Wigger |
Federal Republic of Germany Kurt Hillenbrand Ulrich Lind Karlheinz Smieszek Werner Seibold |
Switzerland Hans Braem Pierre Alain Dufaux Anton Mueller Robert Weilenmann |
| 1982 | Caracas | Soviet Union Victor Daniltchenko Gennadi Lushikov Alexander Mitrofanov Viktor Vlasov |
Federal Republic of Germany Hubert Bichler Peter Heinz Ulrich Lind Werner Seibold |
Austria Albert Deuring Lothar Heinrich Hannes Rainer Wolfram Waibel Sr. |
| 1986 | Suhl | Australia Donald Brook Warren Potent Alan Smith |
German Democratic Republic Bernd Hartstein Mario Gonsierowski Hellfried Heilfort |
Sweden Christian Heller Stefan Lövbom Hans Strand |
| 1990 | Moscow | Soviet Union Viatcheslav Botchkarev Gennadi Lushikov Sergei Martynov |
Czechoslovakia Jaromir Bures Vaclav Becvar Miroslav Varga |
Yugoslavia Rajmond Debevec Goran Maksimovic Nemanja Mirosavljev |
| 1994 | Milan | Ukraine Artur Ayvazyan Oleg Dementyev Andriy Sheykin |
France Jean-Pierre Amat Michel Bury Dominique Maquin |
Russia Viatcheslav Botchkarev Artem Khadjibekov Sergei Schedrin |
| 1998 | Barcelona | United States of America Thomas Tamas Glenn Dubis Lance Hopper |
Slovakia Peter Bubernik Miroslav Svorada Jozef Gönci |
Italy Roberto Vitobello Marco de Nicolo Roberto Facheris |
| 2002 | Lahti | Norway Espen Berg-Knutsen Vebjoern Berg Harald Stenvaag |
Ukraine Oleg Mikhailov Artur Ayvazyan Jury Sukhorukov |
Russia Konstantin Prikhodtchenko Sergei Kovalenko Artem Khadjibekov |
| 2006 | Zagreb | United States of America Michael Mcphail Eric Uptagrafft Matthew Emmons |
Austria Mario Knoegler Christian Planer Alexander Uhl |
Hungary Peter Sidi Tibor Gabor Mlinkovics Szabolcs Herczegh |
Read more about this topic: 50 Metre Rifle Prone
Famous quotes containing the words world, men and/or team:
“The timidity of the child or the savage is entirely reasonable; they are alarmed at this world, because this world is a very alarming place. They dislike being alone because it is verily and indeed an awful idea to be alone. Barbarians fear the unknown for the same reason that Agnostics worship itbecause it is a fact.”
—Gilbert Keith Chesterton (18741936)
“Newspaperman: That was a magnificent work. There were these mass columns of Apaches in their war paint and feather bonnets. And here was Thursday leading his men in that heroic charge.
Capt. York: Correct in every detail.
Newspaperman: Hes become almost a legend already. Hes the hero of every schoolboy in America.”
—Frank S. Nugent (19081965)
“I also heard the whooping of the ice in the pond, my great bed-fellow in that part of Concord, as if it were restless in its bed and would fain turn over, were troubled with flatulency and bad dreams; or I was waked by the cracking of the ground by the frost, as if some one had driven a team against my door, and in the morning would find a crack in the earth a quarter of a mile long and a third of an inch wide.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)