"Definitely this is a sport where men and women can compete on an equal playing field and that's the great thing about it. Doesn't matter what's your size, your stature, you are a man or a woman. Up until 1992, men and women did compete equally, a lady did win, so it is very feasible to do and very possible," Rhode said.
For the uninitiated, Rhode is a skeet shooter par excellence, an outspoken critic of gun-control laws in the United States and a staunch Donald Trump supporter.
She is the champion the world was not talking about prior to last summer's Rio Olympics, where she reaffirmed her greatness, having done the same in London four years earlier when she became the first American athlete to win five medals in five consecutive Olympic Games.
Her incredible sporting achievements notwithstanding, Rhode willingly wades into questions on contentious issues such as guns, gun-control laws, and their role in American society. She did so after winning in Beijing, did so after winning in London and did so again in Rio.
"They have a lot of laws passing right now in the state of California and some of them passed, we are fighting them in the court because they infringe on our second amendment right (which allows people in US to keep arms) and a right is a right," the 37-year-old Rhode said in the capital, two days after winning yet another gold medal in an ISSF World Cup.
"Now we are moving in a direction that is not educational and I think that's a mistake," the Californian added.
The role of guns in American society and her own family history is deeply intertwined.
"Some of the laws they are passing in the state of California they will limit the ability for me to be able to inherit some of my father's guns and for me to pass them down to my son. Those are things that have a lot of value and hold a lot of meaning to me and to my family."
"I hope to educate people about our sport, it truly is a great sport, it teaches you a lot about responsibility, discipline, focus, determination, things that you use in your everyday life.
When Rhode first claimed an Olympic gold in 1996, she was just 16, a high schooler competing against the world's best. She bagged silver in Sydney and won in Athens, and then the Olympics opted to get rid of double trap.
So Rhode switched to skeet, and continued her incredible journey. She won silver in Beijing and set a world record with a 99 out of 100 rounds in London.
While her Olympics and World Championship medals are in a safe, Rhode doesn't keep her old medals and had them re-engraved and awarded to younger shooters to motivate them. The one in Delhi was Rhode's 26th World Cup medal, besides the six Olympic, five World Cup finals and one World Championship medals.
Rhode said she and her husband currently own a recording studio in Los Angeles, and they record all kinds of famous bands and musicians.
Talking about her priorities, she said, "Priority number one is my family and my friends and after that comes my shooting, so you have to put it in perspective that this is just a game. You love what you do but at the end of the day your family is more important so for me, I go to all the family events.
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