Participants in the Bangkok 2017 World Shooting Para Sport World Cup will see it as a trial run for Tokyo 2020 ©IPC

Athletes will get one final chance this year to earn points towards next year’s World Championships, when the Bangkok 2017 World Shooting Para Sport World Cup is due to get underway tomorrow.

The World Cup runs until Saturday (November 11) and will see more than 120 shooters from 17 countries, who are expected to compete in over 14 medal events in the Thai capital.

South Korea, who will host next year's event, will have the largest delegation in Bangkok, with many of its athletes returning to the range for the first time since the Rio 2016 Paralympic Games. 

Geunsoo Kim is their top athlete, having won the silver medal in the R5 mixed 10 metres air rifle prone SH2 and bronze in the R4 mixed 10m air standing SH2 in Rio.

Three Paralympic bronze medallists from South Korea are also among the ones to watch in Bangkok. 

Su Wan Kim made the Paralympic podium in the R1 men’s 10m air rifle standing SH1 and will look to do likewise in Bangkok.

Two-time Paralympic champion Yunri Lee will try to get back to her gold-medal winning ways after capturing bronze in the R8 women’s 50m sport rifle 3 positions SH1 from Rio, becoming her nation’s lone female Paralympic medallist in the sport at those Games. 

Jangho Lee showed promise in his Paralympic debut last year when he finished third in the R3 mixed 10m air rifle prone SH1. 

In Bangkok, he could record his first major victory ahead of his home World Championships next year.

Other contenders to look out for include reigning R3 world champion Jinho Park. 

The Bangkok 2017 World Shooting Para Sport World Cup will feature over 120 shooters from 17 countries in over 14 medal events in the Thai capital  ©World Shooting Para Sport/Facebook
The Bangkok 2017 World Shooting Para Sport World Cup will feature over 120 shooters from 17 countries in over 14 medal events in the Thai capital ©World Shooting Para Sport/Facebook

The South Korean is looking for a return to the podium in the R6 mixed 50m rifle prone after missing out in Rio, as is New Zealand’s multi-world and Paralympic champion Michael Johnson.

The United States' rising star McKenna Dahl will take on her third World Shooting Para Sport competition this year. 

The 21-year-old is coming off a victory from the USA Shooting National Championships in R5, the very event in which she captured bronze in Rio and became her country’s first female shooter to win a Paralympic medal.

United Arab Emirates’ Abdulla Sultan Alaryani is fresh off two individual medals from the last World Cup in September in Osijek, Croatia. 

The Rio 2016 silver medallist remains undefeated in the R7 men’s 50m rifle 3 positions SH1. 

He will also try to do one better than his second-place finish in Osijek in the R1.

The Bangkok World Cup will give athletes an opportunity to earn minimum qualification standard  points towards the 2018 World Shooting Para Sport Championships in Cheongju, South Korea, to be held  from May 1 to 12.