David Lange Earns Distinguished Air Pistol and Revolver Badge #1s in Same Year

David Lange Earns Distinguished Air Pistol and Revolver Badge #1s in Same Year

Camp Perry, Ohio– November 2022–David Lange, 54, of Glen Rock, N.J., is number one – in fact, he’s number one three times over. A talented marksman, Lange holds five Distinguished Badges: Pistol (2001), .22 EIC Pistol (2015), and Rifle (2018), along with his new Air Pistol and Service Revolver Badges he claimed in 2022. Three of those (Air Pistol, Service Revolver, and .22 EIC) were Badge #1s.

See more CMP & Competition Shooting News on The Gun Bulletin!

Distinguished Badges are the highest individual award authorized by the U. S. Government for excellence in marksmanship competition. A program that has been around since the late 1800s, the realm of badge possibilities has grown from simply rifle and pistol to a range of other disciplines – each individual badge branded with a number specific to when its holder claimed it and held in high regard, especially the coveted Badge #1.

“The thing that I like about marksmanship is that it is very fair. It takes hard work and dedication,” Lange said. “The reward, at any level, is in achieving your own goals.”

During his career, Lange’s been a member of several national championship teams and holds numerous individual successes, such as becoming the 2015 Indoor National Champion, Revolver National Champion, Standard Pistol National Champion, and the National Matches National Trophy Individual Champion and Civilian Champion. He also earned spots on the National Matches President’s 100 in both pistol and rifle in 2021. Additionally, he has set several individual national records and was a firing member of a record-setting team.

His wife is Kathy Chatterton – a sponsored athlete, captain of the Les Baer Custom Pistol Team, and Distinguished Pistol Shot with a High Master classification who also happens to hold several national and international titles and records.

“It’s an unfair advantage,” Lange joked of the pairing. “It was Kathy’s knowledge, wisdom, experience, and 100 percent support that helped me to achieve my goals. Kathy also introduced me to a network of national and international champions whose friendship and support have both encouraged and inspired me.”

Lange grew up hunting with his family. When he realized he had a knack for shooting, he joined a local club bullseye pistol league and began competing with a Ruger MK II. He went on to purchase a Colt Gold Cup and fired his first match in April 1998.

“In my first year of shooting, I shot a lot,” he said. “I shot three, sometimes four, leagues during the week and at least one match on the weekends.”

During that first year, he earned an Expert classification and went to Camp Perry for the experience with a goal of returning to Camp Perry as a Master in 1999.

“Both years it was suggested that I hold back and stay in the lower class until after Camp Perry,” he explained. “I never did hold back, and I was proud to shoot with the Masters in 1999. Even though I was shooting scores at the bottom of the higher classification, I believe it made me a better shooter.”

“Shooting against better shooters caused me to work harder and improve faster,” he added.

When Lange began to learn more about competitive shooting, he realized dry firing aided in improving his scores just as much as live firing. He combined each with mental training learned from Lanny Bassham’s “Mental Management System,” and his scores rose to the High Master Class and above 2650 (his first time in May 2002 after having reached 2600 less than a year before).

“Shooting as many Regionals and State Championships as possible helped me to become more comfortable at bigger matches,” he said. “At first, I just shot in the six or seven nearby states. Eventually, I was shooting Regionals from Florida to Maine and as far west as Phoenix. I shot at matches where I didn’t know anyone, and no one knew me. Shooting in a strange place far from home is a great way to gain match experience.”

From 2003 to 2006, he was a member of Team UltraDot before joining Springfield Armory in 2007. He also began shooting revolver in June 2006 and became the seventh person to receive the NRA Distinguished Revolver award.

In 2009, he competed on the Mountain Competition Pistol Team with Aimpoint, Atlanta Arms and Ammo, and KKM Barrels as supporting sponsors. The following year, he joined his current team, Zero Bullet Company’s bullseye pistol team, sponsored by the Zero Bullet Company and Lapua.

“I have had the good fortune of shooting on teams with some of the best and most famous shooters in the country,” he said. “I am proud to be a member of the Zero Bullet Company team and owe much of my success to the bullets and ammunition from the sponsored companies.”

Lange’s also the vice president of the Riverdale Police Pistol Club and an officer and range trustee in the Association of NJ Rifle and Pistol Clubs (ANJRPC), the NJ NRA state rifle and pistol association.

“Some of these sponsors are not giant companies and spend much of their marketing budget supporting shooters through teams, picnics, prizes, and donations,” he explained. “I hope that all competitors will support the shooting industry companies that give something back to our sport.”

He went on, “Please also remember that sponsored shooters are not professional shooters, and their support is limited. The real reward is in the glory and achievement that comes from working hard and being part of a team. I encourage all shooters to participate in team matches and seek out new sponsors. I believe that mutual support and involvement will help to strengthen this sport. The possibility of being on a highly visible team is an incentive for new shooters to improve and gives them an additional goal.”

Since his beginnings, he’s maintained the same lofty competition schedule. His location in New Jersey has allowed him to compete indoors in the winter and outdoors in the summer within an hour of his house – sometimes two matches within the same weekend, with others still available if he wanted to shoot more.

“My most intense training comes in the spring when I am on the range six days per week, practicing for Match Pistol, up until the Camp Perry matches in July,” he said. “My main focus on the range is rapid-fire, while at home I dryfire and use mental training techniques like visualization and rehearsal.”

Even though pistol competition is his primary focus, Lange still participates in service rifle matches in the summer and trains offhand at an indoor range with a .22 upper in the winter. Admittedly, earning the Distinguished Rifleman Badge was his hardest to achieve. Lange also believes that the most elite shooters are the ones who have earned the original three Distinguished Badges, Service Rifle, Service Pistol and International.

“I enjoy shooting service rifle with my wife and friends and helping them to achieve their goals of becoming Service Rifle Distinguished,” he said.

His advice to other athletes looking to obtain their own marksmanship objectives?

  • Concentrate your practice on just that event.
  • Dryfire!
  • Seek out help from any of the various clinics that can be found around the country including CMP Marksmanship 101 classes or Small Arms Firing School (SAFS) at Camp Perry.
  • If you don’t already have leg points, participate in SAFS and Marksmanship 101 EIC matches for a chance to earn your first 4 points.
  • You are allowed to fire in five EIC matches plus the National Championship each year. Make sure you shoot all of those matches each year (you have to be in it to win it).
  • Bring a friend with you. If everyone brought a friend, there would be twice as many legs at each match.

Next on Lange’s list is to reach a score of 2670. It’s an ambition he’s held for a long time, having gotten as close as 2666 three different times. No matter where his career leads him, Lange will forever be rooted in history – paving the way for fellow marksmen and women, one badge at a time.

“I have done these things far from alone,” he said. “Almost all of my friends are shooters, and this great sport is filled with great people.”

 

About the Distinguished Badge Program:

To earn a Distinguished Badge, a competitor must earn 30 Excellence-In-Competition (EIC) points or more in a qualifying competition. Individuals earn the 4, 6, 8 or 10 “leg” points based on score and a percentage of match participation, with at least one “hard” leg, worth 8 or 10 points. Learn more about the Distinguished Badge Program and how to earn one (or several!) on the CMP website at https://thecmp.org/competitions/distinguishedbadges/.

— By Ashley Dugan, CMP Staff Writer

The Civilian Marksmanship Program is a federally chartered 501 (c) (3) non-profit corporation. It is dedicated to firearm safety and marksmanship training and to the promotion of marksmanship competition for citizens of the United States. For more information about the CMP and its programs, log onto www.TheCMP.org.

About The Author

CMP Competition Shooting news