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Mackintosh Results

The Mackintosh Trophy International Teams event has been conducted annually since 1939. The prestigious event is held between the Commonwealth Countries and Ireland in a postal format. The event is shot over 100 targets DTL points score. There are Open, Ladies. Junior and Veterans sections. Super-veterans was added for the first time in 2017. Australia holds the perpetual trophy and administers the event. The Mackintosh Cup is a trophy named in honour of Mr. Donald Mackintosh, an Australian shooter of World renown. Donald Mackintosh travelled the world shooting both live birds and clay targets, and won Australia's first ever Gold Medal at an Olympics.

Donald Mackintosh started shooting rabbits and hares not long after he first attended primary school, going after them with a flask of black power, a few pounds of lead and an ancient muzzle loader. He joined the Bacchus Marsh Shooting Club at the age of 10, and soon established himself as a fine shot.

At 23 he was a member of Melbourne Gun Club, and within six months was placed on the most difficult handicap, 30yds. In 25 years of competitive shooting he never moved closer to the target in handicap events.

His major wins in Australia were in the 1890 Melbourne Gun Club £1000 Cup Handicap, during which he killed 33 birds straight from the back mark of 30yds, and three successive wins in the Melbourne Gun Club's £50 Challenge Cup, which he won in three successive years.

Australia had three representatives at the 1900 Paris Olympic Games, Fred Lane (swimming), Stan Rowley (athletics) and Mackintosh and they shared much success. The IOC now accords all three of them symbolic gold medal status, even though the Olympic gold medal did not arrive until 1904.

Mackintosh was by then travelling around the Continent on a circuit that embraced France, Belgium, Spain, and Italy. In some ways, he was unusual for a sportsman, in that he was an educated man who wrote poetry, but the most astonishing fact about him was that he was completely blind in the left eye.

That June, accompanied by his wife, he happened to be in Paris for the Paris Exhibition pigeon shooting. Earlier on the same tour he had been successful in the Grand Prix du Casino at Monte Carlo, one of the most prestigious events of all.

Mackintosh was, in a sense, a casualty of the confusion that marred the Paris Games. Acclaimed in his prime as the finest shot in the world, he went to Paris for a day of live pigeon shooting organised by the Paris Exhibition for June 25. Like many competitors in an assortment of sports, he did not realise that he was involved in the Olympic Games. He won one event, the Prix Centenaire de Paris, and tied for third in another, the Grand Prix de l'Exposition. In both events Mackintosh shot at live birds, killing 22 pigeons from 22 shots for his victory and 18 pigeons for his third place. He collected more than 7500 francs (£300) and a medal to add to his vast assembly of trophies, and headed off to shoot in other parts of the Continent.

During his lifetime Mackintosh was never listed as an Olympic medallist but in 1987, the IOC declared that Mackintosh had won gold and bronze medals at the 1900 Olympics.

Among his other major wins were the London Gun Club Challenge Cup three times in a row, the Melbourne Gun Club Challenge Cup three times in a row, the Grand Prize of Italy, the Grand Prize Aix les Bains, the Belgian championships, the Milan Grand Prix, and the Madrid Grand Prize. He also won the Grand Prix at Monte Carlo again.

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