I agree that there's an obvious issue here.
The main - not for profit - airgun events attract fairly large numbers of shooters. However they are only run for indoor 10 Meter, three position competition. For example, 300 competitors in this recent event: 2025 USA Shooting Winter Air Gun Championships - Hard Air Magazine
Well, OK, there's Field Target in it's various forms of competition, as represented by AAFTA, for example. AAFTA but that's hardly a high participation discipline in the grand scheme of things.
To fill the vacuum for other types of airgun competition - such as benchrest, NRA-style, speed silhouette, etc, commercial companies have stepped-in. Of course that's AoA, Pyramyd and Utah.
And thanks to them for doing this!
Given that these companies are spending their own money on these events and running them with their own staff, I feel it's perfectly reasonable for them to gain whatever marketing and sales benefits they can. If not, why should they bother?
Obviously what is missing is something like Extreme Benchrest or the Pyramyd Cup but run by a not-for-profit organization like the CMP at Camp Perry. Home - Civilian Marksmanship Program with their High Power Rifle events. But - as stated above, they only recognize airguns as an indoor, 10 Meter discipline.
Then the question becomes how to change their perspective and who will make it happen. I don't know...
The main - not for profit - airgun events attract fairly large numbers of shooters. However they are only run for indoor 10 Meter, three position competition. For example, 300 competitors in this recent event: 2025 USA Shooting Winter Air Gun Championships - Hard Air Magazine
Well, OK, there's Field Target in it's various forms of competition, as represented by AAFTA, for example. AAFTA but that's hardly a high participation discipline in the grand scheme of things.
To fill the vacuum for other types of airgun competition - such as benchrest, NRA-style, speed silhouette, etc, commercial companies have stepped-in. Of course that's AoA, Pyramyd and Utah.
And thanks to them for doing this!
Given that these companies are spending their own money on these events and running them with their own staff, I feel it's perfectly reasonable for them to gain whatever marketing and sales benefits they can. If not, why should they bother?
Obviously what is missing is something like Extreme Benchrest or the Pyramyd Cup but run by a not-for-profit organization like the CMP at Camp Perry. Home - Civilian Marksmanship Program with their High Power Rifle events. But - as stated above, they only recognize airguns as an indoor, 10 Meter discipline.
Then the question becomes how to change their perspective and who will make it happen. I don't know...