Team Mathews just put on a masterclass in London, Kentucky, sweeping five of the six professional divisions at the latest ASA 3D stop and stacking eleven podium finishes in a single weekend. Kyle Douglas, Brady Myers, Sharon Wallace, Kaitlyn Bordwell, and Jack Wallace each walked away with a win, but the real story is how one manufacturer’s platform is consistently producing the gear that lets shooters dominate at the highest level. When a single brand’s athletes control the top of the leaderboard across men’s, women’s, and youth pro classes, it sends a clear market signal: the equipment works, the support system works, and the shooters who choose Mathews are choosing a proven edge.
For the broader 2A community, these results matter beyond the scorecards. Competitive archery is one of the most visible, family-friendly gateways into the shooting sports, and every podium photo that features a Mathews bow quietly reinforces the idea that responsible, skilled marksmanship is both accessible and aspirational. Sponsors and retailers watching these outcomes take note; when pro classes are dominated by one brand, demand follows at the retail level, keeping production lines humming and innovation dollars flowing into new platforms that eventually reach everyday concealed-carry and home-defense users. In short, the same engineering that lets Kyle Douglas post the winning score in Men’s Known Pro is the same commitment to precision that strengthens the entire Second Amendment ecosystem.
The takeaway is straightforward: consistent dominance at the pro level isn’t just good marketing—it’s tangible proof that American-made innovation in the shooting sports remains healthy and competitive. As the 2026 ASA season rolls on, expect more eyes on Team Mathews, more shooters asking for their gear, and a continued ripple effect that keeps ranges busy, families engaged, and the culture of responsible firearm and archery ownership thriving.