Sunshine State Games on the Range, on the Lanes and on the Course
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – A Sunshine State Games original sport (archery), one that has not been contested in 14 years (bowling) and a new entry sport to the annual Olympic-style Sports Festival (footgolf) closed out the month of July and opened up the month of August.
Archery has been a mainstay of the Sunshine State Games since 1980 and Gainesville has hosted the event seven times in the last 11 years. The Easton Newberry Archery Center hosted the 900 and 720 rounds while the Gator Bowman Archery Center hosted the International and 3-D Rounds on Saturday, August 8 and Sunday, August 9.
A total of 100 archers, ranging in age from 10-year old Sophia Drewke, from Palm Harbor, to 85-year old Anna Hartman, of The Villages, were in competition both days in the two locations.
Dunnellon’s Eric Helfritz posted the overall high score at the International Round, with a 286 of a possible 300, on Saturday at Gator Bowman. His score of 858 was also the overall best of the 900 round at the Easton Newberry Archery Center on Sunday.
His International Round score set a record in the Senior (55+) Male Freestyle Division and was the second-best score in the history of the Sunshine State Games, three points shy of the overall top score of 289, set by David Brimlow, in 2001.
“My goal was setting the record,” said Helfritz, who has been competing in the Sunshine State Games since 2002. “I saw the record for my age group before the Games and have shot higher scores before.”
His biggest surprise was achieving the overall high score in the 900 round.
“I struggled,” Helfritz admitted. “The 858 is much lower than I historically shoot. I focused on the sight like in pistol shooting and not on the target like you should in archery. I was doing the opposite of what I should have done. I didn’t figure out until near the end of the round.”
Setting two Sunshine State Games records was Tatyana Muntyan, of Delray Beach, in the 720 and 900 Rounds. Muntyan’s score of 600 in the 720-round set the record in the 50+ Recurve (Olympic) Class and her 822 in the 900 Round set a new mark in the Senior (55+) Female Recurve Division.
Overall, Muntyan holds four Sunshine State Games Recurve Archery Records and a Florida Senior Games Recurve record.
Footgolf made its Sunshine State Games debut on Saturday, August 8 at Mallards Landing Golf Course, in Melbourne. The 18-hole competition consists of playing a #5 soccer ball with the foot from the starting place, usually called “Teeing zone”, until the ball is inside the 21-inch diameter hole.
Like Golf, Footgolf has a pre-determined Par for the course and consists of par 3’s, par 4’s and Par 5’s. A par 3 is generally less than 100 yards, a par 4 between 100- 150 yards, and a Par 5 is over 150 yards.
Mario Calderon, of Melbourne, won the Open Division (18-45 years old) gold medal with a score of 60. He finished two strokes ahead of silver medalist Mariano Copella, of Miami, and five strokes ahead of bronze medalist Julian Carlo Giantiempo.
Calderon and Copella were ranked seventh and eighth, respectively, in the 2019 American Footgolf League national rankings.
Bowling was held for the first time since 2005 at the River Lanes Family Entertainment Center in Titusville on Wednesday, July 29.
Emily Holland, a 16-year old member of the Titusville High School team, won a pair of gold medals, rolling a handicapped-aided 771 in the Singles Division 2, 136-179 average group.
She returned to action in doubles competition to earn a gold medal with William Gibson, of Titusville, as the pair rolled a total score of 1418.
The best overall singles score was turned in by Brandon Fackler, a bowler for Cocoa High School, with a three-game score of 781, in the Division 3, 180+ average division.
Florida Sports Foundation
Jason Hendrix, Director of Communications
Phone: 850-488-1422
Email: jhendrix@flasports.com
Gainesville Sports Commission
Joleen Cacciatore Miller, Executive Director
Phone: 352-338-9300
The Florida Sports Foundation
The Florida Sports Foundation, a 501(C) 3 non-profit corporation, is the official sports promotion and development organization for the State of Florida. It is charged with the promotion and development of professional, amateur, recreational sports, and physical fitness opportunities that produce a thriving Florida sports industry and environment. With a seemingly endless list of sporting ventures and venues, the Florida Sports Foundation strives to promote Florida’s unique sports industry. The Foundation’s staff is dedicated to serving the needs and interests of Florida’s sports community and assists with all questions concerning Florida sporting activities and issues.
About the Gainesville Sports Commission
Founded in 1988, the Gainesville Sports Commission (GSC) is a not-for-profit organization that strives to promote tourism through sports while creating a positive economic impact on Gainesville and Alachua County. The Gainesville Sports Commission is a liaison that brings sporting events to our local community and assists with hosting, creating and supporting over 45 events annually. Since its inception, Gainesville Sports Commission has directly contributed more than 300 million dollars of economic growth. By bringing participants and spectators to sporting events, Gainesville Sports Commission creates approximately 20 million dollars annually of direct economic impact for our community.