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Byron Ferguson, the internationally renowned longbow archer whose impossible shots drew standing-room crowds around the world, passed away early this month. A fixture of archery exhibitions for decades, Ferguson blended showmanship with old-school craftsmanship, turning a traditional bow into a precision instrument and inspiring generations to pick up the sport.
Ferguson’s feats became legend. Famous for his coin trick, he once shot eight dimes in a row out of the air. His most difficult shot came on the television program Super People in Tokyo, where he sent an arrow cleanly through a diamond ring. On American television, he became a household name for viewers of American Shooter on TNN, ESPN, ESPN2, and OLN, where his “Shot of the Week” segment was the most-watched portion of the show for a decade. He later appeared on Shooting USA on The Outdoor Channel and on Impossible Shots, and served as host and producer of TNN’s Everything Outdoors, billed as the world’s first “how-to” outdoor TV program.
His exhibitions spanned the globe, with performances in France, Japan, Chile, Italy, Spain, Canada, the United States, Sweden, Austria, Germany, Finland, and Brazil. He took traditional archery into mainstream pop culture with appearances on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Extreme Marksman, and Super Human, always with the calm, exacting presence that defined his stage persona.
A teacher as well as a performer, Ferguson authored Become the Arrow, a book that distilled his philosophy of focus, form, and follow-through. In 2023, he launched Byron Ferguson Productions, a full-service video production company dedicated to telling outdoor stories and passing on hard-earned lessons to a new generation of shooters and filmmakers.
Recognition followed a lifetime of dedication. In 2023, Ferguson was inducted into the Archery Hall of Fame, a fitting honor for a man whose name had become synonymous with instinctive shooting and precision under pressure. His legacy endures wherever a longbow is strung and a target hangs, and is proof that, in the right hands, traditional archery can still astonish.
The Council to Advance Hunting and the Shooting Sports joins the archery and outdoor communities in mourning the loss of a true icon. Byron’s skill, humility, and enduring passion for sharing the art of archery perfectly embodied the spirit of mentorship and inspiration that strengthens the outdoor traditions we cherish. His influence will continue to guide archers, hunters, and marksmen for generations to come. A reminder that with focus and heart, we too can “become the arrow.”
Byron Ferguson’s obituary is available online here.