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| Enshrined on August
19, 1980
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Rudy Etchen’s string of 31 Grand American trophies started in 1936 when he won the sub-junior award in the Clay Target Championship. He successfully defended that title the following year and won the junior trophy in the same race for two more years. Etchen earned the Doubles Championship in 1942, 1943 and 1945 and placed second in ’44 after tieing for the crown. In 1945 he and dad Fred—captain of the U.S. trapshooting team which won the gold medal in the 1924 Olympics—finished second in the Parent-Child race, and that same year Rudy led High-Over-All scoring. Rudy Etchen became an industry representative the following year, winning 15 trophies in that category in five years, including two titles in Doubles, two in the Grand American Handicap, three in the H-O-A, and one each in the All-Around, Clay Target and Dayton Homecoming Championships. His 980x1,000 in the 1950 H-O-A on 600 singles, 300 handicap and 100 doubles was never topped in industry ranks, and it stood as an all-time record until 1966 when amateur Dan Orlich hit 982. Etchen’s perfect century in doubles at Vandalia, just the fifth recorded in ATA history at any location, was during a prelim-day race in 1950. Back to amateur status in 1952, he posted 200 straight to earn the Clay Target crown, won the All-Around, and paced scoring in the H-O-A. Rudy Etchen earned his initial state crowns in
Kansas, where he headed junior singles standings In Golden West Grand action in 1953, Rudy Etchen topped the singles, doubles, all-around (with a record 394x400) and high-over-all, while he ended second in the GWG handicap. The next year he again headed the field in H-O-A scoring. Rudy Etchen was named to 12 All-America teams—three junior, three industry and six men’s. He was industry co-captain in 1951 and 1952, and he was captain of the men’s team in 1945 and again in 1954. In 1940 and 1952 Etchen was high average leader in doubles, and he paced singles averages back-to-back in 1952-’53. Rudy passed away on August 27, 2001. |