Amber Rutter’s remarkable story of Olympic redemption was overshadowed by controversy in a sudden-death shoot-off after a gripping women’s skeet final in the scorching heat of Chateauroux.
Three years after missing the Tokyo Games due to a positive Covid test, and just over three months after giving birth to her baby son Tommy, Rutter settled for a silver medal after being edged out by Chile’s Francisca Crovetto.
Rutter was surprised by her son and husband James moments after the final concluded when she missed her sixth extra shot, despite television replays appearing to show that she had clipped the target.
Rutter questioned the absence of VAR-style technology, which is used in some international competitions including last year’s European Championship, but said she was determined not to put a dampener on an achievement that she conceded she had not even considered so soon after starting a family.
“It (video techology) is something we had the last time I competed, so I’m not sure where it’s gone,” said Rutter. “I think it’s so important because in moments like these you want the true result, and I’m sure the viewers at home will be asking questions about why the judges haven’t seen it.
Rutter had blazed a trail through the first day of qualifying, and sat joint top of the standings after the conclusion of the preliminary phase on Sunday afternoon, having hit all but three of her 125 targets.
Three hours later she returned to the six-shooter final, a format in which the lowest-scoring shooter is eliminated after the initial 25 shots, and then every 10 shots thereafter, until two remain to fight it out for Olympic gold.
Ten shots later, when American Austen Smith was next to buckle, only Chilean Crovetto, who was two shots better off, stood in the way of Olympic gold.
In a first dramatic twist, Crovetto missed two of her last four shots with the gold at her mercy, forcing the shoot-out in which each shooter exchanged misses, before Rutter’s protested effort gave the Chilean the chance to seal a first shooting gold for her country.
“I’m so glad they made the journey,” added Rutter. “I didn’t spot them, thank God, because I said to my whole family, ‘you’re not coming, I’m focusing on me and if I hear Tommy cry, that will be it, my focus will be straight on him’.
“I wish I could say it was easy, but it was really hard, just battling with those nerves for two days. When you get to the end and you secure that medal, it’s a feeling like no other.
“Then to turn around and see my son there and my husband, he completely surprised me. I had no idea he was coming. I know Tommy might not remember it but it is a moment in time that I will certainly remember and I know my husband James will, too.”
“He came to Rio with me but he passed away a few years later due to cancer. Even when he was really sick he always had the iPad up watching me wherever I was in the world. His dream was to see me win an Olympic medal, and I know he was watching up there. This medal is for him as well.”