Team Beretta’s sweep of podium spots at the 2026 World Speed Shooting Championship in Talladega wasn’t just another trophy haul—it was a master class in how purpose-built Italian steel continues to outrun the field when the timer starts. Salvador Luna’s Production Division world title with the APX A1 Full Size proved that a striker-fired platform can dominate a division historically ruled by 1911s and CZs, while his silver medals in Carry Optics and Limited showed the same gun family scaling across optics and minor-power rules without compromise. Cameron Templin’s third-place finishes in Carry Optics and Limited Optics with the 92 Elite LTT further underscored Beretta’s ability to deliver race-ready ergonomics straight from the box, turning what many still view as a “duty gun” into a legitimate competition weapon.
For the 2A community, these results carry weight beyond the scoreboard. Every time a factory-supported team posts wins with off-the-shelf models, it undercuts the tired narrative that only custom race guns or imported European exotics can compete at the highest level. It also sends a quiet but unmistakable message to legislators and regulators: the same firearms civilians can buy today are the ones setting world records in speed and precision, reinforcing that practical shooting sports are not some fringe hobby but a proving ground that keeps American gun culture sharp, skilled, and unapologetically competitive.