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Team Beretta’s Vincent Hancock Claims Men’s Skeet National Championship Title

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Vincent Hancock’s flawless 36-for-36 performance at the 2026 Shotgun Nationals isn’t just another trophy for the four-time Olympic champion—it’s a master class in why the right to keep and bear arms still matters at the highest levels of American sport. Shooting his Beretta DT11, Hancock turned the final round into a clinic on precision under pressure, reminding everyone that competitive shotgun sports are built on the same constitutional foundation that protects everyday citizens’ access to firearms for recreation, training, and self-defense. When an athlete of his caliber chooses American-made ammunition, domestic ranges, and a platform that celebrates marksmanship, he quietly reinforces the argument that the Second Amendment isn’t an abstract clause—it’s the infrastructure that lets champions emerge in the first place.

What makes Hancock’s win especially resonant for the 2A community is how it bridges the gap between elite competition and grassroots shooters. Every weekend across the country, local trap and skeet clubs host the next generation of competitors who cut their teeth on the same equipment and safety culture that produced an Olympic legend. By publicly crediting his Beretta and locking down a roster spot on the U.S. Men’s Skeet National Team, Hancock signals that the firearms industry’s investment in training programs, youth leagues, and range development isn’t charity—it’s the pipeline that keeps America dominant on the world stage. That pipeline only exists because private citizens can still own, transport, and compete with the very shotguns used in international events.

The larger implication is hard to ignore: as regulatory pressure on semi-automatic platforms intensifies, victories like Hancock’s serve as living proof that sporting arms remain a vibrant, constitutionally protected category. They generate economic activity, foster discipline, and create ambassadors who demonstrate responsible ownership to a wider audience. In an era when some policymakers treat all firearms as suspect, a national champion resetting the bar at 36 straight reminds the 2A community that excellence on the range is still the most persuasive argument for keeping those rights intact.

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