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Scopos’ Intercollegiate Rifle League Results of Game 6

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MacKenzie Sookhoo just dropped a bombshell score of 614.5 to dominate Game 6 of the 2025-2026 Scopos National Intercollegiate Rifle League, propelling the University of Rhode Island to a commanding 2,328.8 aggregate that vaults their season average to 2,313.5—leaving the pack in the dust. Georgia Military College hung tough in second with 1,219.4, but this wasn’t just another match; it was a masterclass in precision under pressure, where URI’s squad turned the rifle range into their personal proving ground. Sookhoo’s near-flawless performance underscores the razor-sharp skills being honed at the collegiate level, blending smallbore and air rifle disciplines into a symphony of sub-MOA accuracy that would make any competitive shooter envious.

Digging deeper, this URI surge isn’t happening in a vacuum—it’s a direct ripple from the expanding footprint of collegiate rifle programs, fueled by Title IX equity and a pro-2A culture that’s quietly thriving amid anti-gun noise. With Scopos Tech’s innovative scoring platform making these events more accessible and data-rich, we’re seeing raw talent pipelines form that could feed straight into USA Shooting pipelines or even Olympic contention. For the 2A community, the implications are electric: every high score like Sookhoo’s chips away at the guns are only for rednecks narrative, showcasing marksmanship as a disciplined, intellectual pursuit embraced by top universities. Georgia Military’s solid runner-up finish reminds us that military academies are still breeding grounds for elite shooters, reinforcing why protecting campus carry and training rights matters—it’s not just about rights, it’s about nurturing the next generation of defenders who hit what they aim for.

As the season heats up, keep eyes on URI; if they sustain this average, they’re not just leading the league—they’re redefining collegiate excellence in a way that bolsters Second Amendment advocacy. These results aren’t mere stats; they’re ammunition in the cultural ammo dump, proving that safe, supervised rifle competition builds character, skill, and unassailable arguments for expanded access to the range. Who’s ready for Game 7?

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