Schedule Release: 2021-22 Shooting Sports

By Jacob Knabel on Jul. 19, 2021 in Shooting Sports

2021-22 Shooting Sports Schedule

SEWARD, Neb. – The Concordia University Shooting Sports program has announced its full schedule for the 2021-22 season (officially unveiled on July 19). The slate includes 11 official events, including eight during the fall portion of the season. The final three events will be contested during the spring of 2022. Officially, the new campaign gets started at the Fort Hays State Fall Intercollegiate Shoot on Sept. 11-12.

Oak Creek Sporting Club in Brainard, Neb., continues to serve as the home of Head Coach Scott Moniot’s program. That venue will host the sixth annual Concordia Bulldog Sporting Invitational, set to take place Oct. 2-3. The Bulldog Invite is one of several events that Concordia also competed in last season. The Prairie Circuit Conference Championships will be held on Sept. 24-26. The season concludes next spring with the ACUI National Championships in San Antonio, Texas (March 19-26).

Moniot’s program keeps raising the bar while resetting school standards. While finishing the 2020-21 season at the ACUI Collegiate Clay Target National Championships (March 25-27), the Bulldogs broke program records in the disciplines of skeet, trap and super sporting. Concordia placed seventh out of 12 teams in a loaded Division 2 grouping at the national championships. From an individual perspective, the highlights included graduate student Erin Lokke (skeet) and freshman Wayne Moore (trap) shooting perfect 100/100 scores. Lokke won the women’s skeet national title while Moore tied for first in trap with five others (lost the tiebreaker for first). Moniot’s program competed in eight separate competitions throughout the 2020-21 season. Some highlights from the fall included a conference championship at the Prairie Circuit Classic, team titles at the Midland Ice Out and the Hastings Invite and a second place claim at the fifth annual Concordia Bulldog Sporting Invitational. Lokke garnered the individual crown at the conference championships.