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Encyclopedia > Archery at the Summer Olympics

Archery at the Summer Olympics had its debut at the 1900 Summer Olympics and has been contested in 13 Olympiads. It is governed by the International Archery Federation.

Contents

History

The second Olympic games, Paris 1900, saw the first appearance of archery. 7 disciplines in varying distances were contested. The next Olympiad, St. Louis United States competed. At the 1908 Summer Olympics, there were 3 archery events. Archery was not featured at the 1912 Summer Olympics but reappeared in the 1920 Summer Olympics.


Between 1920 and 1972, archery was not contested at the Olympic games. The archery competition that was featured at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich consisted of a FITA Round competition with two events - men's individual and women's individual. This form of the archery competition was held until the 1988 Summer Olympics, when team competition was added and the Grand FITA Round format was used. Starting at the 1992 Summer Olympics, the Olympic Round with head-to-head matches was adopted, and has been used ever since.


Medals (from 1972 only)

Position Country: Gold: Silver: Bronze: Total:
1 Korea 14 7 4 25
2 United States 8 3 2 13
3 Soviet Union 1 3 3 7
4 Italy 1 1 3 5
5 Finland 1 1 2 4
6 Australia 1 0 1 2
7 France 1 0 0 1
7 Spain 1 0 0 1
9 China 0 4 0 4
10 Japan 0 2 1 3
11 Poland 0 2 0 1
11 Sweden 0 2 0 2
13 Ukraine 0 1 2 3
14 Chinese Taipei 0 1 1 2
14 Germany 0 1 1 2
16 Indonesia 0 1 0 1
17 Great Britain 0 0 4 4
18 Unified Team 0 0 2 2
19 Netherlands 0 0 1 1



Qualification

Qualification spots in archery are allotted to National Olympic Committees rather than to individual athletes.


There were four ways for NOCs to earn berths in Olympic archery. No NOC is allowed to enter more than three archers. For each gender, the host nation is guaranteed three spots. The most recent World Target Competition's top 8 teams (besides the host nation) each receive three spots, and the 19 highest ranked archers after the team qualifiers are removed also earn spots for their country. 15 of the remaining 18 spots are divided equally among the five Olympic continents for allocation in continental tournaments. The last three spots in each gender are determined by the Tripartite Commission invitation.


Each NOC that receives three places for individual archers (i.e., the host nation, the top 8 teams at the World Target Competition, and any other nation that is able to take 3 of the remaining 37 places) is able to have its three archers compete as a team in the team competition.


Competition

Modern Olympic archery consists of four medal events: men's individual, women's individual, men's team, and women's team. In all four events, the distance from the archer to the target is 70 metres.


Individual

In the individual competitions, 64 archers compete. The competition begins with the ranking round. Each archer shoots 72 arrows (in six ends, or groups, of 12 arrows). They are then ranked by score to determine their seeding for the single-elimination bracket. After this, final rankings for each archer is determined by the archer's score in the round in which the archer was defeated, with the archers defeated in the first round being ranked 33rd through 64th.


The first elimination round pits the first ranked archer against the sixty-fourth, the second against the sixty-third, and so on. In this match as well as the second and third, the archers shoot simultaneously 18 arrows in ends of 3 arrows. The archer with the higher score after 18 arrows moves on to the next round while the loser is eliminated.


After three such rounds, there are 8 archers remaining. The remaining three rounds (quarterfinals, semifinals, and medal matches) are referred to as the finals rounds. They consist of each archer firing 12 arrows, again in ends of 3 arrows. The two archers in the match alternate by arrow instead of firing their arrows simultaneously as in the first three rounds. The losers of the quarterfinals are eliminated, while the losers of the semifinals play each other to determine the bronze medal and fourth place. The two archers who are undefeated through the semifinals face each other in the gold medal match, in which the winner takes the gold medal while the loser receives the silver medal.


Team

Each country that has three archers in the individual competition also gets to compete as a team. The same three archers from the individual competition must compete as the country's team. Their scores in the individual ranking round are added to determine the team's ranking round score.


The first team round is the round of 16, but as the number of teams is usually between 9 and 15 the highest ranked teams typically get a bye in the first round. Matches consist of each team firing 27 arrows in 3 ends of 9 arrows, with each archer on the team firing 3 arrows per end. Advancement and medals are determined in the same manner as the individual competition.


Records

The Olympic records for archery have all been set in 1992 or later.


Men's

# of arrows Name Country Score Olympiad
72 (ranking) Im Dong-hyun Korea 687 2004
18 Park Kyung-mo Korea 173 2004
12 Oh Kyo-moon
Hiroshi Yamamoto
Tim Cuddihy
Korea
Japan
Australia
115
115
115
1996
2004
2004
36 (finals) Tim Cuddihy Australia 340 2004
216 (team ranking) Jang Yong-ho
Kim Bo-ram
Oh Kyo-moon
Korea 2031 1996
27 (team) Jang Yong-ho
Oh Kyo-moon
Kim Chung-tae
Korea 258 2000
52 (team finals) Justin Huish
Butch Johnson
Rodney White
United States 502 1996


Women's

# of arrows Name Country Score Olympiad
72 (ranking) Park Sung Hyun Korea 682 2004
18 Yun Mi Jin
Yun Mi Jin
Korea
Korea
173
173
2000
2004
12 Kim Soo-nyung Korea 114 1992
36 (finals) Kim Nam Soom Korea 334 2000
216 (team ranking) Park Sung Hyun
Lee Sung Jin
Yun Mi Jin
Korea 2030 2004
27 (team) Kim Soo-nyung
Kim Nam-soon
Yun Mi Jin
Korea 252 2000
54 (team finals) Kim Soo-nyung
Kim Nam-soon
Yun Mi Jin
Korea 502 2000



Archery at the Summer Olympics
1900 | 1904 | 1908 | 1920 | 1972 | 1976 | 1980 | 1984 | 1988 | 1992 | 1996 | 2000 | 2004



External links

  • Olympic.org (http://olympic.org/uk/sports/programme/index-uk.asp?SportCode=AR)
  • FITA homepage (http://www.archery.org/clients/fita/web/website.nsf)

  Results from FactBites:
 
World Almanac for Kids (1093 words)
The winter Olympics were begun in 1924 and were held in the same year as the summer games until the 1994 winter games in Lillehammer, Norway, when the alternating cycles began.
The 1992 Olympics in Barcelona, Spain, reflected a changed political landscape: the 172 participating nations and territories included the Unified Team (with athletes from 12 former Soviet republics), a reunited Germany, and South Africa, which was allowed to compete for the first time since 1960.
The Olympic games are competitions of individual athletes, not of nations, and the IOC does not keep national scores; however, the media of all nations report national standings according to one of two scoring systems.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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