Michelle O'Donnell's aim is true with the crossbow
Michelle O'Donnell is a quick study.
In less than three years, the 36-year-old wife, mother and
full-time architect from Weston has rapidly risen in
archery to master the crossbow.
Ranked third in the nation, O'Donnell pulled off a
stunning victory at the July 14-21 World Target Crossbow
Championships in Bloomfield, N.J.
The left-handed O'Donnell won the gold medal in the
elimination matches and took a bronze in the two-day
championship event. She topped a field of 38 U.S. and
international archers including Carol Pelosi, 61, of
Greenbelt, Md., a veteran of the sport for 35 years with
60 indoor and outdoor victories and three world titles.
"The field was small but the competition was very fierce
... it was a real thrill winning a gold medal," said
O'Donnell, a member of the Fort Lauderdale Archers Club,
where she started out with lessons in compound and Olympic
recurve six years ago and switched to crossbow 2 1/2 years
ago.
In windy conditions, the final gold medal elimination
match came down to one arrow.
"I will never forget how windy it was. ... I saw the wind
flags, had everything lined up, took aim and fired right
through my sights," O'Donnell said. "I watched the wind
push the arrow into an eight. I thought then I left the
door wide open for [Carol] to walk in but the wind was
blowing harder and she shot a 7. I thought 'Oh my God.'
That was one of the most exciting matches I've been in."
There are 150 registered crossbow archers in the National
Crossbowmen of the United States organization, compared to
more than 10,000 archers who shoot recurve or compound
bows.
The sport is growing due in large part to athletes such as
O'Donnell, who took it up "because of the demanding nature
and precision of it."
Shooting a horizontally-held crossbow is different than
shooting the two forms of vertical archery — recurve and
compound. In those two styles, the string is pulled back
manually and released. In crossbow, the string is drawn
back, locked in place and released by a trigger.
In the world tournament, each competitor shot 90 arrows,
or "bolts," at targets 45, 55 and 65 meters away.
"It's not easy to get one perfect shot and be consistent
every single time," said O'Donnell, a former equestrian in
dressage who was looking for a change after the birth of
her daughter, Erin, now 6.
O'Donnell said she always had been fascinated with
archery. There was one defining moment that stayed with
her when she thought to herself "I need to get into it.
... It was at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics during the
Opening Ceremony," O'Donnell said. "I saw the archer light
the torch with his arrows. To me that was one of the most
impressive things I have ever seen in my life. They had
three or four archers do it and out of 700 shots there
were only three that didn't make it. That was it for me.
That one moment just fascinated me."
Her brother, R.L. Colina, an Apopka firefighter, got
involved in bow hunting. O'Donnell decided it was time to
pursue her fascination. She joined Fort Lauderdale Archers
and started shooting the compound bow for about two years.
She tried Olympic recurve but was looking for something a
little more challenging.
The equipment can be expensive, particularly at the
national and world-class level. Crossbows cost about
$3,000. She has no sponsors for equipment or travel.
O'Donnell, a 1988 alum of Our Lady of Lourdes in Miami,
was fortunate and found a left-handed crossbow for $1,000
and had it custom-fitted. She watched videos of top
archers. Bill Pimm, president of the National Crossbowmen
of the U.S., taught her the basics.
"It was just like the skies opened up when I found that
bow. ... It was meant to be," O'Donnell said. "Everything
else just fell into place for me. I have become obsessed."
Hal Hall, president of the Fort Lauderdale Archers, is a
certified archery instructor and bow mechanic with more
than 45 years of experience in the sport.
Hall teaches 280 kids, as young as 6, from different
schools through the Broward County Children's Society and
Memorial Regional Hospital. He has worked with O'Donnell
and is impressed with her progress.
"Michelle is an unusual young lady," Hall said. "When she
starts something she really puts everything into it. She
puts more into it than most people would. When she found
out she could shoot a crossbow here, she put 110 percent
into it."