sailors in the prone position during
service rifle qualification training In
competitive shooting, the prone position is the position of a shooter lying face down on the ground. It is considered the easiest and most accurate position as the ground provides extra stability. It is one of the positions in
three positions events. For many years (1932–2016), the only purely prone
Olympic event was the
50 meter rifle prone; however, this has since been dropped from the Olympic program. Both men and women still have the
50 meter rifle three positions as an
Olympic shooting event. Prone position is often used in
military combat because the prone position provides the best accuracy and stability (as well as shrinking the shooter's profile). Many
first-person shooter video games also allow the
player character to go into the prone position, again with similar benefits.
Fullbore target rifle firing fullbore target rifles prone The non-ISSF fullbore disciplines governed by the
International Confederation of Fullbore Rifle Associations (ICFRA) are exclusively shot from the prone position over distances of 300–1,200 yards. These disciplines are popular in Commonwealth countries, and are heavily influenced by the British
National Rifle Association.
Biathlon In Biathlon, prone is one of two positions that athletes shoot from during competition, the other being standing. In the prone position biathletes, set the their poles down to their side or rear, flip open their snow covers, load their rifle, and lay on a designated shooting mat at a designated lane to perform their shooting stage. Using a system of kneeling and removal of the rifle from the athletes back, the biathlete loads their rifle and takes off their poles all on this shooting mat at a designated shooting lane. Prone lanes are specified by a visual sign., typically showing the position and an arrow. These lanes are typically assigned to the further half or right half of the range. The biathlete takes aim at 5 targets with diameters of 115mm but hit zones of only 45mm. Hitting these targets allows biathletes to avoid either, the use of spare rounds of ammunition which must be hand loaded into the chamber, the skiing of mandatory penalty loops or the imposition of time penalties depending on the biathlon event in which the shooter is participating. The number of penalties, or loops to ski directly corresponds with the missed targets in the stage however, only 3 cartridge are given for any prone stage when spare rounds are available. ==Pilots==