From January 19th-27th Ontario held it is first of two annual indoor provincial championships, the indoor Field Championships. This annual tournament is hosted by many sites across the province with mail-in scoring. Since indoor tournaments do not have varying weather conditions, you can facilitate a larger target population and multiple host clubs as long as you employ provincial level judges.
This tournament consists of two rounds of 6 ends, with five arrows per end. The target is a 5 ring IFAA target with a white center and four blue rings. The center white is worth 5 points and contains an inner X ring used for tiebreakers. Scoring is 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. You can choose to shoot a single spot, or a 5 spot with only the 4, 5 rings. This a good option for consistent archers who want to avoid breaking arrows, similar to selecting a 3-spot in a FITA tournament.
These indoor championships follow IFAA rules which are slightly different from FITA rules. The most significant in my opinion is the scoring. I will not explain all of them however two of the differences are the shorter distances for younger archers and age divisions. To start peewee and pre-cub archers, like my little brother Cole, are able to compete at 10 yards (8M) instead of 20 yards (18M) which is better suited for their poundage. Next the age division you compete under is determined by your age on the tournament date rather than how old you will be at the end of the year.
Personally I enjoy the field championships and I find it a great way to start a season and benchmark your shooting status at the beginning of the season. Next year, if you have an opportunity, I would strongly recommend you sign-up for an indoor field championship; you will not be disappointed, it’s a lot of fun.
Thanks for this information, it’s very helpful.
Im shooting my state indoor field tournament in 2 weeks. Im really excited. Did you shoot this tournament, how did you shoot?
I have not competed in any US state championships since I am a Canadian. However I have participated in the US National NFAA Championships in Kentucky twice winning it in 2009 and placing second in 2011.