News
LONDON — Kim Rhode had been up on an Olympic medal podium before, but each time, the feelings never seem entirely familiar or easy to process. There she was again Sunday — just like in Atlanta ...
Rhode said she will not return a gun that had been given to her to replace her stolen one. "Everyone stepped up to get me that gun," Kim laughed, "and I plan to use it, along with my old gun.
Kim Rhode discharges shells from her shotgun duing woman’s skeet qualifications. (Reuters) The skeet shooting competition Friday carried the intrigue and tension of any great Olympic event.
This Friday Kim Rhode (pronounced row-de) will pick up her Perazzi shotgun to compete for her sixth Olympic medal in as many Olympics. Just after Rhode won gold in skeet in the London Olympics, I ...
Kim Rhode, photographed at Oak Tree Gun Club in Newhall, was still in high school when she won her first Olympic medal. (Christina House/Los Angeles Times) By ALICE SHORT .
It wasn’t the first time Kim Rhode had faced a do-or-die moment at the Olympics. L.A.'s most unsung Olympian continues to excel in her sixth Olympics - Los Angeles Times ...
Kim Rhode is, by any objective measure, Olympic royalty. Or should be. She has won medals in each of the past five Olympic games, starting at age 17, when she earned a gold during the 1996 ...
— Kim Rhode (@KimRhode) August 27, 2016 Even then, Rhode isn’t expecting to land a big sponsor—there’s too much of a stigma attached to her sport, she admits.
US Olympic Gold Medal shooter Kim Rhode is wading into the gun control debate and defended the Second Amendment ahead of her competition in Brazil. “We should have the right to keep and bear ...
Olympian Kim Rhode has six Olympic medals in skeet shooting, ... LOS ANGELES — At the Oak Tree Gun Range near Los Angles, skeet shooter Kim Rhode is so known they have a range with her name on it.
Rhode's 99 out of 100 targets hit equaled the world mark, and she hit all 25 targets in the final. Just 33 years old, she is the first American to medal in five consecutive Olympics.
US Olympic Gold Medal shooter Kim Rhode is wading into the gun control debate and defended the Second Amendment ahead of her competition in Brazil. “We should have the right to keep and bear ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results