Sports / Sporting / Sporting Clays

Sporting Clays

"Golf with a shotgun" - A dynamic clay shooting sport

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50-100 targets per round
10-15 stations over natural terrain
Governed by NSCA

What is Sporting Clays?

Sporting Clays is a form of clay target shooting often described as "golf with a shotgun" because courses include 10-15 different shooting stations laid out over natural terrain - just like golf holes.

Unlike trap and skeet which have repeatable target presentations, sporting clays simulates the unpredictability of live-quarry shooting with a variety of trajectories, angles, speeds, elevations, distances, and target sizes.

Each station is unique and designed to replicate hunting scenarios like flushing pheasants, crossing doves, springing teal, or even bouncing rabbits. The sport offers endless variety.

History

Sporting clays originated in England when shooting schools adopted clay targets to practice for driven-game shoots. The sport was introduced to American shooters and has since grown rapidly.

The National Sporting Clays Association (NSCA) was formed to provide governance and promote the sport. The NSCA is the official governing and sanctioning body for sporting clays in the United States.

Today, the NSCA has thousands of members across all 50 U.S. states and multiple foreign countries, with hundreds of member clubs hosting both registered and recreational shoots.

Why It's Popular

Most Like Hunting

Simulates real hunting scenarios better than any other clay sport

Endless Variety

No two courses are the same - always new challenges

Beginner Friendly

Can compete immediately with classification system

Social & Fun

Squad-based format encourages camaraderie

Course Format

Typical Round

  • Stations: 10-15 per course
  • Targets per station: 4-12 (typically 6-8)
  • Total targets: 50 or 100 per round
  • Squad size: Up to 6 shooters
  • Course size: Varies by location and terrain

Target Pairs

  • True Pair: Both targets launched simultaneously
  • Report Pair: Second launches at sound of first shot
  • Following Pair: Second launches after first (timed)

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