![]() |
| . |
|
||||||||
| Enshrined on August 15, 1978 |
|
Mr. Clark received his first Grand American recognition in 1949 when he secured third place in the Champion of Champions race with 99. That same honor was his in 1952, that time with a perfect century and 25-23 in shootoff. The year before marked his first claim to fame in Grand twin-bird competition, when lie bested Hall of Fame enshrinee Mercer Tennille for the crown in the Doubles Championship by one overtime bird. In 1953 he outfired another enshrinee, Arnold Riegger, to recapture the same honors. Mr. Clark earned his initial Connecticut titles in
1937, two years after he registered his first targets. He led 1940 Eastern Zone singles and doubles scoring, and in 1950 he won the doubles and high-over-all, followed in 1952 by the all-around and H-O-A. In ‘51 and ‘52 Mr. Clark earned a place on the All-America men’s first team. He was also the Eastern representative to the ATA Executive Committee in 1952-53. It was 1950 when Mr. Clark smacked all 200 championship singles targets to set an unmatched Connecticut record. (Five 199s have been entered in the state’s history.) That year his streak also included the doubles and all-around crowns. His all-around score of 393 surpassed his previous all-around scoring record of 1941 by six (which then became second high), and only two others have matched that 1941 tally since. The singles, doubles and all-around were again Mr. Clark’s in 1952 and ‘53, and from that year through 1962 he swept up eight doubles, three all-around and two state singles crowns, taking at least one ATA title home in each of those years. During ‘53, ‘54 and ‘56 he placed again on All-America teams. In 1976, as a veteran, he bested the entire state handicap field to claim a championship he had earned 35 years earlier. Also in ‘76 he earned the newly-instituted veteran singles championship. Mr. Clark has registered 57,250 singles targets, with 6,100 targets of all three types being recorded in the 1977 target year. More on M. D. (Mink) Clark
|