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May 29th, 2025

Metal Madness Homecoming Match June 28-29 in Kentucky

metal madness .22 LR rimfire steel plate match

Metal Madness is a great rimfire shooting discipline where shooters engage dozens of steel targets set up in a grid. This fun, action shooting contest for all skill levels runs at the Grand Rivers Shooting Range in Kentucky. Next month, on June 28-29, 2025, the Metal Madness Shooting Sports Association (MMSSA) will hold its major event of the year, the Metal Madness Homecoming match at the Grand Rivers range.

Metal Madness is a fun and challenging form of rimfire shooting. Whether you’re young or just young at heart, you’ll love the satisfying ping of hitting steel targets — no prior experience or special equipment required. Most .22 firearms will do just fine! To learn more about Metal Madness, visit MMSSA.net. Watch the video below to learn about the course of fire and the scoring system. There are ten lanes with five targets in each lane.


MMSSA is a rimfire shooting sport offering the instant gratification of ringing steel targets. No special or fancy “raceguns” are needed — most any .22 LR firearm will work.

What is Metal Madness?

Metal Madness is a speed and accuracy-based shooting sport where participants shoot rimfire rifles or pistols at steel plates. Each competitor will shoot through 10 stages, moving to a new shooting lane each time. Each lane has randomized numbered metal plates, which must be shot in numerical order.

Scoring is time-based, plus penalties for missed plates or shooting plates out of sequence. With misses costing 2 seconds each, hitting plates in the proper order is extremely important. The eight fastest times from ten lanes fired are added together for each shooter’s bracket time.


This video shows action at the 2024 Metal Madness Homecoming event held last June in Kentucky.

metal madness steel plate .22 LR rimfire match

$40 Per Entry — Prizes for Registered MMSSA Members
At the June 2025 Metal Madness Homecoming event, competitors will fire through 10 different shooting lanes, with each lane featuring multiple steel targets. Entry fee is $40.00. Competitors may participate in multiple sessions, with the same gun or different guns. All .22 caliber firearms are allowed to shoot Metal Madness. Membership is required to participate in MMSSA prize events. Prizes are drawn (by random picks) on Sunday afternoon at the end of the event. CLICK HERE to Register.

metal madness midwayusa foundation .22 LR rimfire match

Grand Rivers Shooting Range Address: 787 Dover Road, Grand Rivers, Kentucky

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May 29th, 2025

Optimize Benchrest Rifle Balance with Removable Stock Weight

rifle weight Joe ring

rifle weight Joe ringCredit our buddy Joe Friedrich for this simple yet effective accessory for your benchrest rifle. Joe shoots a .22 LR benchrest rig with a barrel tuner. When he added weights to his tuner, he found his rifle no longer balanced well. He wanted to add some weight in the rear without drilling holes in the stock. He also wanted the weight to be removable, and easily placed on another rifle in his stable. He wanted a weight that could be moved from gun to gun as needed.

At a local sporting goods shop Joe found a 1.5-lb ankle weight that comes in a padded, tubular elastic cover. It’s like a 1.5-lb sausage in a soft, stretchy nylon cover. (Imagine a really fat, heavy bungee cord). Joe simply attached a plastic zip tie at the end to make a loop that fits perfectly over his buttstock. CLICK HERE for full-screen photo.

To “tune” the rifle’s balance, Joe just slides the ankle weight fore and aft on the stock. We have tried this moveable ankle weight on a variety of different BR stocks (including a McMillan Edge) and it worked perfectly. This is a great invention, and would work with sporter rifles and ARs just as well.

rifle weight Joe ring

NOTE: Obviously, this ring will increase the measured weight of your rifle. So, if you are competing in a registered match with weight restrictions, you have to ensure that your rifle still makes class weight limits with the ankle weight ring in place.

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May 29th, 2025

Miculek Hits Steel Plate at 400m, Shooting 9mm Pistol Off-Hand

jerry miculek 400m pistol shot

Could you hit an 18″ x 24″ target at a distance of 400 meters (437 yards)? Sure, you’re thinking, that would be easy with a good rifle fired from the bench or prone position. OK, now think about making that shot, OFF-HAND with a pistol. That’s something entirely different. We doubt many marksman would wager they could hit a plate 400 meters away with a handgun.

That’s exactly the challenge legendary shooter Jerry Miculek undertakes in this interesting video. Shooting a Smith & Wesson 9mm M&P pistol with a red-dot optic, Jerry makes the 400m shot look easy, hitting the steel plate with his first shot. This takes good eyes, a solid grip, perfect trigger control (and a bit of luck). Jerry was shooting 115gr Hornady HAP® ammunition.

jerry miculek 400m pistol shot

25 Feet Hold-over to Make Shot at 437 yards!
The shot wasn’t dead center, but Miculek still hit the steel plate on the first try. This is doubly impressive because Miculek had to hold well over the target. In fact Jerry figured he was aiming “25 feet over [the target]”. The lesson to be learned here is that a good pistol, in the hands of a master, may be capable of astonishing long-range accuracy — as long as you work out the ballistics in advance. Jerry knew that he had to hold high to arc the bullet into the target.

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