Archery at the 2004 Summer Olympics

Archery at the 2004 Summer Olympics was held at Panathinaiko Stadium (Kallimarmaro). The archery schedule began on 12 August and ended on 21 August.
There were four gold medals contested, with individual and team events for men and the same for women.
All archery at the Olympics was done from a range of 70 meters. The target's total diameter was 122 cm. An archer had 40 seconds to fire each arrow. 64 archers took part in the Olympics, with each National Olympic Committee being able to enter a maximum of three archers. Each archer fired six ends, or groups, of 12 arrows per end in the ranking round. The score from that round determined the match-ups in the elimination rounds, with high-ranking archers facing low-ranking archers. There were three rounds of elimination that used six ends of three arrows, narrowing the field of archers to 32, then to 16, then to 8. The three final rounds (quarterfinals, semifinals, and medal matches) each used four ends of three arrows.
13 men's and 15 women's teams took place in the team competition. The teams consisted of the country's three archers from the individual round, and the team's initial ranking was determined by summing the three members' scores in the individual ranking round. Each round of eliminations consisted of each team firing 27 arrows (9 by each archer).
Qualification
There were four ways for National Olympic Committees (NOCs) to qualify individual archers for the Olympics in archery. No NOC was allowed to enter more than three archers of each gender. For each gender, the host nation (Greece) was guaranteed three spots. The 2003 World Target Competition's top 8 teams (besides the host nation) each received three spots, and the 19 highest ranked archers after the team qualifiers were removed also received spots. 15 of the remaining 18 spots were divided equally among the five Olympic continents for allocation in continental tournaments. The last three spots in each gender were determined by the Tripartite Commission.
Each NOC that received three places for individual archers (i.e., the host nation, the top 8 teams at the World Target Competition, and any other nation that was able to take 3 of the remaining 37 places) was able to have its three archers compete as a team in the team competition.
Medallists
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Men's individual: | Marco Galiazzo ![]() |
Hiroshi Yamamoto ![]() |
Tim Cuddihy Australia Australia |
Women's individual: | Park Sung Hyun ![]() |
Lee Sung Jin Template:FlagIOC-x |
Alison Williamson ![]() |
Men's team: | Korea Korea Im Dong-hyun Jang Yong-ho Park Kyung-mo |
Chinese Taipei Chinese Taipei Chen Szu Yuan Liu Ming-huang Wang Cheng-pang |
Ukraine Ukraine Dmytro Hrachov Viktor Ruban Oleksandr Serdyuk |
Women's team: | Template:Country IOC alias KOR Korea Lee Sung Jin Park Sung Hyun Yun Mi-Jin |
![]() He Ying Lin Sang Zhang Juanjuan |
Template:Country IOC alias TPE Chinese Taipei Chen Li Ju Wu Hui Ju Yuan Shu Chi |
Top eight table by country
Position | Country | Gold | Silver | Bronze | 4th | 5th | 6th | 7th | 8th | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | ![]() |
3 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 7 |
2 | ![]() |
1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
3 | ![]() |
0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 5 |
4 | ![]() |
0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
![]() |
0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 | |
6 | ![]() |
0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
7 | ![]() |
0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
![]() |
0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | |
9 | ![]() |
0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
10 | ![]() |
0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
11 | ![]() |
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
12 | ![]() |
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
13 | ![]() |
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
14 | ![]() |
0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Korea continued its domination of the sport, winning three of the four gold medals as well as a silver. Marco Galiazzo won the men's individual competition, earning Italy the nation's first gold medal in Olympic archery, blocking Hiroshi Yamamoto's attempt to win Japan's first gold medal. Chinese Taipei, which had never before won a medal in archery, won a silver and a bronze.
Men's individual
Gold: | Silver: | Bronze: |
Marco Galiazzo ![]() |
Hiroshi Yamamoto ![]() |
Tim Cuddihy Australia Australia |
Men's individual final standings
The three medalists of the 2000 Summer Olympics, Simon Fairweather, Vic Wunderle, and Wietse van Alten, all competed in 2004. None placed higher than 14th in the ranking round (van Alten) in the ranking round and only Wunderle made it to the quarterfinals.
Men's individual ranking round
The Korean archers, medal favorites in both men's and women's competition, ranked 1st (Im Dong-hyun), 4th (Park Kyung-mo), and 5th (Jang Yong-ho) in the men's individual ranking round. Im's score of 687 set a new world record for 72 arrows, breaking the previous one set in 1995 by fellow Korean Shim Young-sung. It is not recognized by the International Olympic Committee as an Olympic record, however, as the ranking round took place on 12 August, before the 2004 opening ceremony. The round was held at Dekelia Air Force Base.
The bracket setup (with 4th- and 5th-ranked archers facing off in the quarterfinals if undefeated and the winner of that match facing the 1st-ranked archer in the semifinals) meant that the Korean men could do no better than gold and bronze. Marco Galiazzo of Italy in 2nd and Magnus Petersson of Sweden in 3rd rounded out the top five, with Dmytro Hrachov in 6th with the same score as 5th-ranked Jang of Korea.
Rank | Name | Nation | Score |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Im Dong-hyun | Korea | 687 (WR) |
2 | Magnus Petersson | Sweden | 673 |
3 | Marco Galiazzo | Italy | 672 |
4 | Park Kyung-mo | Korea | 672 |
5 | Jang Yong-ho | Korea | 671 |
6 | Dmytro Hrachov | Ukraine | 671 |
7 | Balzhinima Tsyrempilov | Russia | 668 |
8 | Hasse Pavia Lind | Denmark | 666 |
9 | Hiroshi Yamamoto | Japan | 664 |
10 | Chen Szu Yuan | Chinese Taipei | 663 |
11 | Liu Ming-huang | Chinese Taipei | 663 |
12 | Tim Cuddihy | Australia | 663 |
13 | Jocelyn de Grandis | France | 663 |
14 | Wietse van Alten | Netherlands | 661 |
15 | Viktor Ruban | Ukraine | 660 |
16 | Butch Johnson | United States | 660 |
17 | Yuji Hamano | Japan | 660 |
18 | Wang Cheng-pang | Chinese Taipei | 659 |
19 | Ilario di Buo | Italy | 659 |
20 | Simon Fairweather | Australia | 658 |
21 | Michael Frankenberg | Germany | 657 |
22 | Majhi Sawaiyan | India | 657 |
23 | Jacek Proć | Poland | 657 |
24 | Michele Frangilli | Italy | 654 |
25 | Oleksandr Serdyuk | Ukraine | 654 |
26 | Jonas Andersson | Sweden | 653 |
27 | Xue Haifeng | China | 653 |
28 | Yong Fujun | China | 652 |
29 | Stanislav Zabrodskiy | Kazakhstan | 651 |
30 | Juan Rene Serrano | Mexico | 651 |
31 | Laurence Godfrey | Great Britain | 650 |
32 | Tarundeep Rai | India | 647 |
33 | Alexandros Karageorgiou | Greece | 647 |
34 | Hasan Orbay | Turkey | 647 |
35 | Eduardo Avelino Magana | Mexico | 646 |
36 | Pieter Custers | Netherlands | 646 |
37 | Takaharu Furukawa | Japan | 646 |
38 | Jorge Pablo Chapoy | Mexico | 645 |
39 | David Barnes | Australia | 641 |
40 | Felipe López | Spain | 641 |
41 | Lockoneco Lockoneco | Indonesia | 641 |
42 | Yavor Hristov | Bulgaria | 641 |
43 | Vic Wunderle | United States | 639 |
44 | Dmitry Nevmerzhitskiy | Russia | 639 |
45 | Anton Prylepau | Belarus | 638 |
46 | Mattias Eriksson | Sweden | 637 |
47 | John Magera | United States | 637 |
48 | Satyadev Prasad | India | 634 |
49 | Ron van der Hoff | Netherlands | 633 |
50 | Jonathan Ohayon | Canada | 632 |
51 | Ricardo Merlos | El Salvador | 630 |
52 | Tashi Peljor | Bhutan | 627 |
53 | Thomas Naglieri | France | 626 |
54 | Ken Uprichard | New Zealand | 623 |
55 | Jeff Henckels | Luxembourg | 623 |
56 | Franck Fisseux | France | 622 |
57 | Ismail Essam | Egypt | 602 |
58 | Georgios Kalogiannidis | Greece | 601 |
59 | Maged Youssef | Egypt | 599 |
60 | Apostolos Nanos | Greece | 585 |
61 | Rob Elder | Fiji | 583 |
62 | Sifa Taumoepeau | Tonga | 563 |
63 | Phoutlamphay Thiamphasone | Laos | 557 |
64 | Yehya Bundhun | Mauritius | 494 |
Men's individual round of 64
The first round of elimination, held on 16 August, narrowed the field from 64 archers to 32 in a standard single-elimination bracket. The loser of each match received a final rank between 33 and 64, depending on his score in the round. Each archer fired six ends of three arrows, for a total possible score of 180. Oleksandr Serdyuk of Ukraine had the highest score in the round, with 164.
The first upset of the day belonged to 43rd-ranked Vic Wunderle of the United States, who defeated 22nd-ranked Majhi Sawaiyan of India. The United States were on the losing end of an even larger upset, though, when Butch Johnson lost to Ron van der Hoff of the Netherlands. The biggest upset occurred when 52nd-ranked Tashi Peljor of Bhutan defeated 13th-ranked Jocelyn de Grandis of France to become the lowest ranked archer to advance.
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Im Dong-hyun, Korea | 152-109 | Yehya Bundhun, Mauritius |
Alexandros Karageorgiou, Greece | 147-143 | Tarundeep Rai, India |
Satyadev Prasad, India | 155-150 | Yuji Hamano, Japan |
Ron van der Hoff, Netherlands | 145-135 | Butch Johnson, United States |
Hiroshi Yamamoto, Japan | 155-147 | Franck Fisseux, France |
Michele Frangilli, Italy | 153-141 | Lockoneco Lockoneco, Indonesia |
Oleksandr Serdyuk, Ukraine | 164-141 | Felipe López, Spain |
Hasse Pavia Lind, Denmark | 158-110 | Ismail Essam, Egypt |
Jang Yong-ho, Korea | 162-131 | Apostolos Nanos, Greece |
Takaharu Furukawa, Japan | 146-143 | Yong Fujun, China |
Michael Frankenberg, Germany | 140-135 | Dmitry Nevmerzhitskiy, Russia |
Tim Cuddihy, Australia | 148-127 | Thomas Naglieri, France |
Tashi Peljor, Bhutan | 161-136 | Jocelyn de Grandis, France |
Anton Prylepau, Belarus | 141-137 | Simon Fairweather, Australia |
Stanislav Zabrodskiy, Kazakhstan | 145-141 | Pieter Custers, Netherlands |
Park Kyung-mo, Korea | 154-138 | Rob Elder, Fiji |
Marco Galiazzo, Italy | 156-122 | Sifa Taumoepeau, Tonga |
Juan Rene Serrano, Mexico | 148-138 | Eduardo Avelino Magana, Mexico |
Ilario di Buo, Italy | 151-146 | Mattias Eriksson, Sweden |
Wietse van Alten, Netherlands | 152-151 | Ricardo Merlos, El Salvador |
Liu Ming-huang, Chinese Taipei | 148-145 | Ken Uprichard, New Zealand |
Vic Wunderle, United States | 145-128 | Majhi Sawaiyan, India |
Xue Haifeng, China | 162-153 | Jorge Pablo Chapoy, Mexico |
Dmytro Hrachov, Ukraine | 154-128 | Maged Youssef, Egypt |
Balzhinima Tsyrempilov, Russia | 148-133 | Georgios Kalogiannidis, Greece |
Jonas Andersson, Sweden | 160-151 | David Barnes, Australia |
Yavor Hristov, Bulgaria | 133-132 | Jacek Proć, Poland |
Chen Szu Yuan, Chinese Taipei | 136-132 | Jeff Henckels, Luxembourg |
Viktor Ruban, Ukraine | 157-140 | Jonathan Ohayon, Canada |
Wang Cheng-pang, Chinese Taipei | 159-144 | John Magera, United States |
Laurence Godfrey, Britain | 157-155 | Hasan Orbay, Turkey |
Magnus Petersson, Sweden | 158-95 | Phoutlamphay Thiamphasone, Laos |
Men's individual round of 32
As in the round of 64, archers fired six ends of three arrows in the second round of elimination. This round, on 18 August, narrowed the field from 32 to 16 archers, with winners advancing and losers receiving a final rank between 17 and 32 depending on their score in the round. Im Dong-hyun of Korea scored the highest in the round, missing the Olympic record by 1 point with a score of 171. 48th-ranked Satyadev Prasad of India was the lowest ranked archer to advance.
Vic Wunderle of the United States continued to have success in head-to-head competition, eliminating 11th-ranked Wang Cheng-pang of Chinese Taipei. In an astonishing match, 31st-ranked Laurence Godfrey, Great Britain eked out a victory over 2nd-ranked Magnus Petersson of Sweden. Two other of top ten ranked archers fell when 27th-ranked Xue Haifeng of China defeated 6th-ranked Dmytro Hrachov of Ukraine and 25th-ranked Hasse Pavia Lind lost to Oleksandr Serdyuk.
One of the Korean archers, Park Kyung-mo, nearly fell to the Kazakhstani Stanislav Zabrodskiy when Zabrodskiy tied Park through the first 18 arrows and scored a 10 on the first tie-break. Park also scored a 10, and followed it up with a second 10 which Zabrodskiy could not match. A tie-break was also needed in the match between Viktor Ruban of Ukraine and Wang Cheng-pang of Chinese Taipei, which Ruban won 9-8.
Winner | Score | Loser | Tie-breaker |
---|---|---|---|
Im Dong-hyun, Korea | 171-159 | Alexandros Karageorgiou, Greece | |
Satyadev Prasad, India | 158-155 | Ron van der Hoff, Netherlands | |
Hiroshi Yamamoto, Japan | 162-154 | Michele Frangilli, Italy | |
Oleksandr Serdyuk, Ukraine | 165-164 | Hasse Pavia Lind, Denmark | |
Jang Yong-ho, Korea | 166-163 | Takaharu Furukawa, Japan | |
Tim Cuddihy, Australia | 164-163 | Michael Frankenberg, Germany | |
Anton Prylepau, Belarus | 155-152 | Tashi Peljor, Bhutan | |
Park Kyung-mo, Korea | 164-164 | Stanislav Zabrodskiy, Kazakhstan | 10-10, 10-9 |
Marco Galiazzo, Italy | 164-163 | Juan Rene Serrano, Mexico | |
Ilario di Buo, Italy | 164-160 | Wietse van Alten, Netherlands | |
Vic Wunderle, United States | 164-160 | Liu Ming-huang, Chinese Taipei | |
Xue Haifeng, China | 162-161 | Dmytro Hrachov, Ukraine | |
Balzhinima Tsyrempilov, Russia | 162-160 | Jonas Andersson, Sweden | |
Chen Szu Yuan, Chinese Taipei | 170-159 | Yavor Hristov, Bulgaria | |
Viktor Ruban, Ukraine | 167-167 | Wang Cheng-pang, Chinese Taipei | 9-8 |
Laurence Godfrey, Great Britain | 163-162 | Magnus Petersson, Sweden |
Men's individual round of 16
The round of 16 was held on 19 August and followed the same 18-arrow format as the previous two rounds as it narrowed the field to eight quarterfinalists. 19 August
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Im Dong-hyun, Korea | 167-165 | Satyadev Prasad, India |
Hiroshi Yamamoto, Japan | 168-160 | Oleksandr Serdyuk, Ukraine |
Tim Cuddihy, Australia | 166-165 | Jang Yong-ho, Korea |
Park Kyung-mo, Korea | 173-166 | Anton Prylepau, Belarus |
Marco Galiazzo, Italy | 162-155 | Ilario di Buo, Italy |
Vic Wunderle, United States | 165-164 | Xue Haifeng, China |
Chen Szu Yuan, Chinese Taipei | 169-161 | Balzhinima Tsyrempilov, Russia |
Laurence Godfrey, Great Britain | 167-162 | Viktor Ruban, Ukraine |
Men's individual quarterfinals
The first round of 12-arrow matches was the quarterfinals on 19 August. Winners advanced to the semifinals while losers received a final rank between 5 and 8 depending on score in the quarterfinals. The high score of the round was notched by Tim Cuddihy, with 112.
In a see-saw battle, Marco Galiazzo took a lead over Vic Wunderle in the third end. In a tense final end, Wunderle closed the gap. Galiazzo, needing an 8 to tie on the last arrow, shot a 9 to advance and end Wunderle's run. In a surprise, both of the remaining Korean archers fell to Hiroshi Yamamoto and Tim Cuddihy in 1-point matchs eliminating them from medal contention. Laurence Godfrey had the most decisive victory of the round, a still-close 2-point victory of Chen Szu Yuan.
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Hiroshi Yamamoto, Japan | 111-110 | Im Dong-hyun, Korea |
Tim Cuddihy, Australia | 112-111 | Park Kyung-mo, Korea |
Marco Galiazzo, Italy | 109-108 | Vic Wunderle, United States |
Laurence Godfrey, Great Britain | 110-108 | Chen Szu Yuan, Chinese Taipei |
Men's individual semifinals
Yamamoto and Cuddihy both tied the Olympic record for a 12-arrow match (set by Oh Kyo-moon in 1996) by tying their semifinal match at 115 on 19 August. In the tie-breaker, Yamamoto shot first and hit a 10. Cuddihy was unable to match this, shooting a 9 to drop out of gold medal contention.
Winner | Score | Loser | Tie-breaker |
---|---|---|---|
Hiroshi Yamamoto, Japan | 115-115 | Tim Cuddihy, Australia | 10-9 |
Marco Galiazzo, Italy | 110-108 | Laurence Godfrey, Great Britain |
Men's individual bronze medal match
The bronze medal match was held on 19 August. The winner received the bronze medal while the loser took fourth place. Cuddihy defeated Godfrey in a close match.
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Tim Cuddihy, Australia | 113-112 | Laurence Godfrey, Great Britain |
Men's individual gold medal match
The gold medal match on 19 August pitted a first-time-Olympian Italian against a veteran Japanese archer, with the favored Koreans being conspicuously absent. The match consisted of 12 arrows, with the winner taking gold and the loser receiving a silver medal.
With a pair of 10s in the first end, Hiroshi Yamamoto took a quick lead of 1 point over Marco Galiazzo. In the second end, Galiazzo missed perfection by only 1 point, scoring 29 to Yamamoto's 27 to reverse the lead. He hit another pair of 10s in the third end, increasing his lead to 2 points going into the final end. Galiazzo maintained the lead through the final three arrows, winning Italy's first Olympic gold medal in archery. Yamamoto's silver was his second Olympic medal, joining the bronze medal that he won in 1984.
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Marco Galiazzo, Italy | 111-109 | Hiroshi Yamamoto, Japan |
Women's individual
Gold: | Silver: | Bronze: |
Korea Park Sung Hyun | Korea Lee Sung Jin | Great Britain Alison Williamson |
Women's individual final standings
The heavily favored Korean women, who had taken the top three spots in the ranking round, won gold and silver medals as well as setting a new world record for a 72-arrow round. Park Sung Hyun and Lee Sung Jin defeated every opponent they faced until their final match against each other, which Park won for the gold medal. Alison Williamson of Great Britain, who was ranked only 21st after the ranking round, was able to win a number of upsets to make it to the semi-finals. After losing that match, she pulled off one more upset to finish with a bronze medal.
Final place |
Ranking rank |
Name | Nation | Ranking score |
R64 | R32 | R16 | Quarter- finals |
Semi- finals |
Finals |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | Park Sung Hyun | Korea | 682 (WR) |
154 | 165 | 171 | 111 | 110 | 110 |
2 | 2 | Lee Sung Jin | Korea | 675 | 164 | 166 | 165 | 104 | 104 | 108 |
3 | 21 | Alison Williamson | Great Britain | 637 | 147 | 154 | 165 | 109 | 100 | 105 |
4 | 6 | Yuan Shu Chi | Chinese Taipei | 658 | 162 | 158 | 166 | 107 | 98 | 104 |
5 | 3 | Yun Mi-Jin | Korea | 673 | 162 | 173 (=OR) |
168 | 105 | ||
6 | 10 | Wu Hui Ju | Chinese Taipei | 649 | 156 | 156 | 160 | 103 | ||
7 | 8 | Evangelia Psarra | Greece | 652 | 138 | 163 | 160 | 101 | ||
8 | 4 | He Ying | China | 667 | 141 | 158 | 156 | 89 | ||
9 | 19 | Jennifer Nichols | United States | 638 | 160 | 163 | 162 | |||
10 | 5 | Zhang Juanjuan | China | 663 | 135 | 166 | 161 | |||
11 | 17 | Naomi Folkard | Great Britain | 638 | 139 | 156 | 159 | |||
12 | 15 | Margarita Galinovskaya | Russia | 639 | 153 | 158 | 154 | |||
13 | 24 | Almudena Gallardo | Spain | 631 | 148 | 152 | 152 | |||
14 | 7 | Justyna Mospinek | Poland | 657 | 162 | 163 | 151 | |||
15 | 43 | Reena Kumari | India | 620 | 153 | 134 | 148 | |||
16 | 52 | Kirstin Jean Lewis | South Africa | 606 | 141 | 157 | 142 | |||
17 | 25 | Zekiye Keskin Satir | Turkey | 631 | 135 | 161 | ||||
18 | 14 | Tetyana Berezhna | Ukraine | 640 | 160 | 160 | ||||
19 | 29 | Melissa Jennison | Australia | 628 | 132 | 158 | ||||
20 | 28 | Iwona Marcinkiewicz | Poland | 628 | 119 | 157 | ||||
21 | 23 | Anja Hitzler | Germany | 632 | 163 | 156 | ||||
22 | 18 | Cornelia Pfohl | Germany | 638 | 146 | 156 | ||||
23 | 26 | Viktoriya Beloslydtseva | Kazakhstan | 629 | 150 | 155 | ||||
24 | 20 | Sumangala Sharma | India | 638 | 142 | 153 | ||||
25 | 49 | Mari Piuva | Finland | 615 | 136 | 151 | ||||
26 | 53 | Sayoko Kawauchi | Japan | 601 | 137 | 150 | ||||
27 | 56 | Jasmin Figueroa | Philippines | 600 | 132 | 150 | ||||
28 | 35 | Sayami Matsushita | Japan | 624 | 165 | 149 | ||||
29 | 27 | Małgorzata Sobieraj | Poland | 628 | 151 | 149 | ||||
30 | 33 | Natalia Bolotova | Russia | 625 | 143 | 148 | ||||
31 | 34 | Elpida Romantzi | Greece | 624 | 151 | 146 | ||||
32 | 54 | Tshering Chhoden | Bhutan | 600 | 159 | 134 | ||||
33 | 59 | Kateryna Palekha | Ukraine | 595 | 158 | |||||
34 | 30 | Alexandra Fouace | France | 627 | 157 | |||||
35 | 51 | Fotini Vavatsi | Greece | 609 | 156 | |||||
36 | 11 | Lin Sang | China | 647 | 156 | |||||
37 | 62 | Hanna Karasiova | Belarus | 588 | 155 | |||||
38 | 42 | Damla Gunay | Turkey | 620 | 152 | |||||
39 | 38 | Thin Thin Khaing | Myanmar | 622 | 151 | |||||
40 | 22 | Kristine Esebua | Georgia | 636 | 149 | |||||
41 | 39 | Deonne Bridger | Australia | 620 | 145 | |||||
42 | 58 | Maydenia Sarduy | Cuba | 595 | 145 | |||||
43 | 31 | Berangere Schuh | France | 626 | 143 | |||||
44 | 32 | Mon Redee Sut Txi | Malaysia | 626 | 143 | |||||
45 | 55 | Narguis Nabieva | Tajikistan | 600 | 142 | |||||
46 | 46 | Puspitasari Rina Dewi | Indonesia | 616 | 141 | |||||
47 | 50 | Elena Dostay | Russia | 609 | 136 | |||||
48 | 40 | Wiebke Nulle | Germany | 620 | 135 | |||||
49 | 16 | Natalia Nasaridze | Turkey | 639 | 133 | |||||
50 | 45 | Chen Li Ju | Chinese Taipei | 617 | 133 | |||||
51 | 41 | Khatuna Narimanidze | Georgia | 620 | 132 | |||||
52 | 13 | Dola Banerjee | India | 642 | 131 | |||||
53 | 9 | Natalia Valeeva | Italy | 650 | 130 | |||||
54 | 61 | Helen Palmer | Great Britain | 594 | 130 | |||||
55 | 12 | Nataliya Burdeyna | Ukraine | 643 | 129 | |||||
56 | 47 | Marie-Pier Beaudet | Canada | 616 | 128 | |||||
57 | 48 | Olga Pilipova | Kazakhstan | 616 | 128 | |||||
58 | 63 | Bahnasawy Lamia | Egypt | 564 | 127 | |||||
59 | 60 | Aurore Trayan | France | 594 | 122 | |||||
60 | 44 | Janet Dykman | United States | 619 | 121 | |||||
61 | 36 | Stephanie Arnold | United States | 623 | 121 | |||||
62 | 57 | Jo-Ann Galbraith | Australia | 596 | 116 | |||||
63 | 37 | Yukari Kawasaki | Japan | 622 | 106 | |||||
64 | 64 | Mansour May | Egypt | 536 | 102 |
Women's individual ranking round
August 12 09:00 at Dekelia Air Force Base
In the 72 arrow ranking round, the Korean women dominated the field, taking the top three spots and setting a world record with Park Sung Hyun's score of 682. The Chinese women also did well, placing 4th, 5th, and 11th. Yuan Shu Chi and Wu Hui Ju of Chinese Taipei finished 6th and 10th.
Rank | Name | Nation | Score |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Park Sung Hyun | Korea | 682 (WR) |
2 | Lee Sung Jin | Korea | 675 |
3 | Yun Mi-Jin | Korea | 673 |
4 | He Ying | China | 667 |
5 | Zhang Juanjuan | China | 663 |
6 | Yuan Shu Chi | Chinese Taipei | 658 |
7 | Justyna Mospinek | Poland | 657 |
8 | Evangelia Psarra | Greece | 652 |
9 | Natalia Valeeva | Italy | 650 |
10 | Wu Hui Ju | Chinese Taipei | 649 |
11 | Lin Sang | China | 647 |
12 | Nataliya Burdeyna | Ukraine | 643 |
13 | Dola Banerjee | India | 642 |
14 | Tetyana Berezhna | Ukraine | 640 |
15 | Margarita Galinovskaya | Russia | 639 |
16 | Natalia Nasaridze | Turkey | 639 |
17 | Naomi Folkard | Great Britain | 638 |
18 | Cornelia Pfohl | Germany | 638 |
19 | Jennifer Nichols | United States | 638 |
20 | Sumangala Sharma | India | 638 |
21 | Alison Williamson | Great Britain | 637 |
22 | Kristine Esebua | Georgia | 636 |
23 | Anja Hitzler | Germany | 632 |
24 | Almudena Gallardo | Spain | 631 |
25 | Zekiye Keskin Satir | Turkey | 631 |
26 | Viktoriya Beloslydtseva | Kazakhstan | 629 |
27 | Małgorzata Sobieraj | Poland | 628 |
28 | Iwona Marcinkiewicz | Poland | 628 |
29 | Melissa Jennison | Australia | 628 |
30 | Alexandra Fouace | France | 627 |
31 | Berangere Schuh | France | 626 |
32 | Mon Redee Sut Txi | Malaysia | 626 |
33 | Natalia Bolotova | Russia | 625 |
34 | Elpida Romantzi | Greece | 624 |
35 | Sayami Matsushita | Japan | 624 |
36 | Stephanie Arnold | United States | 623 |
37 | Yukari Kawasaki | Japan | 622 |
38 | Thin Thin Khaing | Myanmar | 622 |
39 | Deonne Bridger | Australia | 620 |
40 | Wiebke Nulle | Germany | 620 |
41 | Khatuna Narimanidze | Georgia | 620 |
42 | Damla Gunay | Turkey | 620 |
43 | Reena Kumari | India | 620 |
44 | Janet Dykman | United States | 619 |
45 | Chen Li Ju | Chinese Taipei | 617 |
46 | Puspitasari Rina Dewi | Indonesia | 616 |
47 | Marie-Pier Beaudet | Canada | 616 |
48 | Olga Pilipova | Kazakhstan | 616 |
49 | Mari Piuva | Finland | 615 |
50 | Elena Dostay | Russia | 609 |
51 | Fotini Vavatsi | Greece | 609 |
52 | Kirstin Jean Lewis | South Africa | 606 |
53 | Sayoko Kawauchi | Japan | 601 |
54 | Tshering Chhoden | Bhutan | 600 |
55 | Narguis Nabieva | Tajikistan | 600 |
56 | Jasmin Figueroa | Philippines | 600 |
57 | Jo-Ann Galbraith | Australia | 596 |
58 | Maydenia Sarduy | Cuba | 595 |
59 | Kateryna Palekha | Ukraine | 595 |
60 | Aurore Trayan | France | 594 |
61 | Helen Palmer | Great Britain | 594 |
62 | Hanna Karasiova | Belarus | 588 |
63 | Bahnasawy Lamia | Egypt | 564 |
64 | Mansour May | Egypt | 536 |
Women's individual round of 64
In the first round of elimination on 15 August, archers competed head-to-head. Each fired six ends of three arrows. Winners advanced to the round of 32, while losers received a final ranking between 33 and 64 based on their score in the round. Sayami Matsushita had the highest score of the round with 165.
The first big surprise of the round came when Tshering Chhoden of Bhutan, who had been ranked 54th, defeated 11th-ranked Lin Sang of China. This set Chhoden up for a round of 32 match with 43rd-ranked Reena Kumari of India, who had also won in an upset. One archer from the top ten, Natalia Valeeva of Italy, lost in the first round, to 56th-ranked Jasmin Figueroa of the Philippines.
Perhaps the most exciting match of the day was between Malgorzata Sobieraj and Thin Thin Khaing, who tied with 151. Each archer shot a 9 on the first tie-breaking arrow and another 9 on the second. When the third tie-breaker resulted in an 8 for each archer, it was not possible to separate the two archers, even by measuring the distance to the centre of the target. It was only the second time in Olympic history [1] that a fourth arrow was required to separate two archers, the first having been in Atlanta. Sobieraj's fourth arrow was better, giving her the win. Wiebke Nulle and Zekiye Keskin Satir also were tied after 18 arrows, with Satir winning on the first tie-breaker 10-7
Winner | Score | Loser | Tie-breaker |
---|---|---|---|
Park Sung Hyun, Korea | 154-102 | Mansour May, Egypt | |
Natalia Bolotova, Russia | 154-143 | Mon Redee Sut Txi, Malaysia | |
Naomi Folkard, Great Britain | 139-128 | Olga Pilipova, Kazakhstan | |
Mari Piuva, Finland | 136-133 | Natalia Nasaridze, Turkey | |
Jasmin Figueroa, Philippines | 132-130 | Natalia Valeeva, Italy | |
Almudena Gallardo, Spain | 148-132 | Khatuna Narimanidze, Georgia | |
Zekiye Keskin Satir, Turkey | 135-135 | Wiebke Nulle, Germany | 10-7 |
Evangelia Psarra, Greece | 138-116 | Jo-Ann Galbraith, Australia | |
Zhang Juanjuan, China | 135-122 | Aurore Trayan, France | |
Iwona Marcinkiewicz, Poland | 119-106 | Yukari Kawasaki, Japan | |
Alison Williamson, Great Britain | 147-121 | Janet Dykman, United States | |
Sayoko Kawauchi, Japan | 137-129 | Nataliya Burdeyna, Ukraine | |
Kirstin Jean Lewis, South Africa | 141-131 | Dola Banerjee, India | |
Sumangala Sharma, India | 142-133 | Chen Li Ju, Chinese Taipei | |
Melissa Jennison, Australia | 132-121 | Stephanie Arnold, United States | |
He Ying, China | 141-130 | Helen Palmer, Great Britain | |
Yun Mi=Jin, Korea | 162-155 | Hanna Karasiova, Belarus | |
Sayami Matsushita, Japan | 165-157 | Alexandra Fouace, France | |
Jennifer Nichols, United States | 160-141 | Puspitasari Rina Dewi, Indonesia | |
Tetyana Berezhna, Ukraine | 160-156 | Fotini Vavatsi, Greece | |
Tshering Chhoden, Bhutan | 159-156 | Lin Sang, China | |
Reena Kumari, India | 153-149 | Kristine Esebua, Georgia | |
Małgorzata Sobieraj, Poland | 151-151 | Thin Thin Khaing, Myanmar | 9-9, 9-9, 8-8, 9-7 |
Yuan Shu Chi, Chinese Taipei | 162-158 | Kateryna Palekha, Ukraine | |
Justyna Mospinek, Poland | 162-145 | Maydenia Sarduy, Cuba | |
Viktoriya Beloslydtseva, Kazakhstan | 150-145 | Deonne Bridger, Australia | |
Anja Hitzler, Germany | 163-152 | Damla Gunay, Turkey | |
Wu Hui Ju, Chinese Taipei | 156-142 | Narguis Nabieva, Tajikistan | |
Margarita Galinovskaya, Russia | 153-136 | Elena Dostay, Russia | |
Cornelia Pfohl, Germany | 146-128 | Marie-Pier Beaudet, Canada | |
Elpida Romantzi, Greece | 151-143 | Berangere Schuh, France | |
Lee Sung Jin, Korea | 164-127 | Bahnasawy Lamia, Egypt |
Women's individual round of 32
Held on 17 August, the second round of elimination, like the first, was a head-to-head competition in which each archer fired six ends of three arrows. Winners advanced to the round of 16, while losers received a final rank between 17 and 32 based on their scores in the round. Yun Mi-Jin of Korea scored 173 in the round, tying the Olympic record she set at the 2000 Summer Olympics.
52nd-ranked Kirstin Jean Lewis pulled off her second upset of the tournament, defeating 20th-ranked Sumangala Sharma to become the lowest ranked archer to advance. Jennifer Nichols, ranked 19th, was the only other archer to win an upset, against 14th-ranked Tetyana Berezhna.
4th-ranked He Ying, however, nearly became the third upset victim and the only top ten archer of the day to fall when Melissa Jennison forced a tie-breaker that He won 9-8. Tshering Chhoden, who had won a major upset in the first round, nearly pulled off another, forcing Reena Kumari into a tie-breaker, which Kumari won.
Winner | Score | Loser | Tie-breaker |
---|---|---|---|
Park Sung Hyun, Korea | 165-148 | Natalia Bolotova, Russia | |
Naomi Folkard, Great Britain | 156-151 | Mari Piuva, Finland | |
Almudena Gallardo, Spain | 152-150 | Jasmin Figueroa, Philippines | |
Evangelia Psarra, Greece | 163-161 | Zekiye Keskin Satir, Turkey | |
Zhang Juanjuan, China | 166-157 | Iwona Marcinkiewicz, Poland | |
Alison Williamson, Great Britain | 154-150 | Sayoko Kawauchi, Japan | |
Kirstin Jean Lewis, South Africa | 157-153 | Sumangala Sharma, India | |
He Ying, China | 158-158 | Melissa Jennison, Australia | 9-8 |
Yun Mi-Jin, Korea | 173-149 | Sayami Matsushita, Japan | |
Jennifer Nichols, United States | 163-160 | Tetyana Berezhna, Ukraine | |
Reena Kumari, India | 134-134 | Tshering Chhoden, Bhutan | 7-4 |
Yuan Shu Chi, Chinese Taipei | 158-149 | Małgorzata Sobieraj, Poland | |
Justyna Mospinek, Poland | 163-155 | Viktoriya Beloslydtseva, Kazakhstan | |
Wu Hui Ju, Chinese Taipei | 156-156 | Anja Hitzler, Germany | 9-8 |
Margarita Galinovskaya, Russia | 158-156 | Cornelia Pfohl, Germany | |
Lee Sung Jin, Korea | 166-146 | Elpida Romantzi, Greece |
Women's individual round of 16
The third round of elimination, on 18 August, was the final one that used the 18 arrow match. Winners advanced to the quarterfinals, while the losers received final rankings between 9 and 16 depending on their score in the round. Park Sung Hyun had the highest score of the round, as the three Koreans continued to win.
The Chinese women were handed another defeat at the hands of Alison Williamson of Great Britain, who at 21st was the only archer not from the top ten to qualify for the quarterfinals. The archers from Chinese Taipei both continued into the quarterfinals, as did Evangelia Psarra of Greece.
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Park Sung Hyun, Korea | 171-159 | Naomi Folkard, Great Britain |
Evangelia Psarra, Greece | 160-152 | Almudena Gallardo, Spain |
Alison Williamson, Great Britain | 165-161 | Zhang Juanjuan, China |
He Ying, China | 156-142 | Kirstin Jean Lewis, South Africa |
Yun Mi-Jin, Korea | 168-162 | Jennifer Nichols, United States |
Yuan Shu Chi, Chinese Taipei | 166-148 | Reena Kumari, India |
Wu Hui Ju, Chinese Taipei | 160-151 | Justyna Mospinek, Poland |
Lee Sung Jin, Korea | 165-163 | Margarita Galinovskaya, Russia |
Women's individual quarterfinals
With 8 archers left, the quarterfinal matches on 18 August consisted of each archer firing four ends of three arrows. Winners advanced to the semifinals while the losers received final rankings between 5 and 8. The highest score of the round again was notched by Park Sung Hyun, with 111 points.
Alison Williamson continued a great run, defeating 4th-ranked He Ying to advance to the semifinals. He missed the target with two arrows, but would have needed to score perfect 10s on each of those arrows to even tie Williamson and force a tie-breaker. Park Sung Hyun easily defeated Evangelia Psarra, scoring no less than 27 in any end of three arrows. In two matches between Korean archers and archers from Chinese Taipei, Yun Mi-Jin was the only Korean to lose so far in the women's competition, falling to Yuan Shu Chi. Lee Sung Jin, however, was able to come from behind to defeat Wu Hui Ju to keep Korea in contention for two medals.
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Park Sung Hyun, Korea | 111-101 | Evangelia Psarra, Greece |
Alison Williamson, Great Britain | 109-89 | He Ying, China |
Yuan Shu Chi, Chinese Taipei | 107-105 | Yun Mi-Jin, Korea |
Lee Sung Jin, Korea | 104-103 | Wu Hui Ju, Chinese Taipei |
Women's individual semifinals
With only four archers left, the semifinals featured 12-arrow matches. The two winners faced each other in the gold medal match, while the losers of the semifinals faced off for the bronze medal. For the third round in a row, Park Sung Hyun posted the high score, this time with a 110.
Lee Sung Jin and Yuan Shu Chi were the first two archers to compete. The first end resulted in a tie at 27. Lee began to pull away in the second end, scoring 26 to Shu's 24. In each of the third and fourth ends, Lee increased his lead, finishing with a safe 6 point victory to advance to the final.
Park and Alison Williamson were next. Williamson's surprising run for gold came to a crash, as Park continued to be nearly perfect. Once again, Park did not score lower than 27 in any end of three arrows, dominating each end and advancing to face fellow Korean Lee in the finals.
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Park Sung Hyun, Korea | 110-100 | Alison Williamson, Great Britain |
Lee Sung Jin, Korea | 104-98 | Yuan Shu Chi, Chinese Taipei |
Women's individual bronze medal match
The bronze medal match pitted Yuan Shu Chi, who had started with a 6th place in the ranking round, against Alison Williamson, who had started at 21st. Each archer fired four ends of three arrows, with the winner receiving a bronze medal while the loser would go home with a 4th place finish and no medal.
The first end was a good one for both archers, with Yuan scoring a 10 and two 9s while Williamson matched the score with two 10s and an 8. Yuan kept up the pace with another 28 in the second end, as Williamson faltered slightly and dropped 3 points behind with a 25. Williamson caught up in the third end, however, with a 27 to Yuan's 25. Yuan took the lead again with the first arrow of the last end, but again Williamson brought it back to a tie with the second arrow. With the score tied and one arrow remaining, Williamson shot an 8 to Yuan's 7, claiming the bronze medal.
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Alison Williamson, Great Britain | 105-104 | Yuan Shu Chi, Chinese Taipei |
Women's individual gold medal match
The women's gold medal match pitted two Koreans against each other. The two had dominated the competition from the beginning, with Park Sung Hyun placing 1st in the ranking round and Lee Sung Jin placing 2nd.
In the first end, Park shot a rare 26, breaking a long string of ends no lower than 27. Lee matched the score, then hit a perfect 30 in the second end. Park returned to form in the second end with a 27, but this still left her 3 points behind. Park continued to build on her scores with a 28 in the third end, bringing the match to 2 points when Lee shot a 27. The fourth end was Park's best of the match while it was Lee's worst, as Park reversed the deficit with a 29-25 final end to take the gold, 110-108. Lee received a silver medal.
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Park Sung Hyun, Korea | 110-108 | Lee Sung Jin, Korea |
Men's team
The men's team competition was the last archery event to be held, on 21 August. The Korean team, after having been kept from winning any individual medals, won by successively larger margins as the rounds went by.
Men's team final standings
Final place |
Ranking rank |
Nation | Ranking score |
R16 | Quarter- finals |
Semi- finals |
Finals |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | Korea | 2030 | Bye | 252 | 242 | 251 |
2 | 2 | Chinese Taipei | 1985 | Bye | 250 | 244 | 245 |
3 | 4 | Ukraine | 1985 | 243 | 242 | 239 | 237 |
4 | 11 | United States | 1936 | 246 | 243 | 243 | 235 |
5 | 9 | Netherlands | 1940 | 244 | 249 | ||
6 | 7 | Australia | 1962 | 248 | 247 | ||
7 | 3 | Italy | 1985 | Bye | 240 | ||
8 | 5 | Japan | 1970 | 254 | 236 | ||
9 | 6 | Sweden | 1963 | 242 | |||
10 | 12 | France | 1911 | 241 | |||
11 | 10 | India | 1938 | 236 | |||
12 | 8 | Mexico | 1942 | 234 | |||
13 | 13 | Greece | 1833 | 225 |
Men's team ranking round
The team ranking round consisted merely of summing the scores of the team's three competitors from the individual ranking round.
Rank | Nation | Score 1 | Score 2 | Score 3 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Korea | 687 | 672 | 671 | 2030 |
2 | Chinese Taipei | 663 | 663 | 659 | 1985 |
3 | Italy | 672 | 659 | 654 | 1985 |
4 | Ukraine | 671 | 660 | 654 | 1985 |
5 | Japan | 664 | 660 | 646 | 1970 |
6 | Sweden | 673 | 653 | 637 | 1963 |
7 | Australia | 663 | 658 | 641 | 1962 |
8 | Mexico | 651 | 646 | 645 | 1942 |
9 | Netherlands | 661 | 646 | 633 | 1940 |
10 | India | 657 | 647 | 634 | 1938 |
11 | United States | 660 | 639 | 637 | 1936 |
12 | France | 663 | 626 | 622 | 1911 |
13 | Greece | 647 | 601 | 585 | 1833 |
Men's team round of 16
The United States and the Netherlands both pulled off minor upsets in this round, which the Korean, Italian, and Taiwanese teams sat out due to their high rankings.
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Korea | — | Bye |
Netherlands | 244-234 | Mexico |
Japan | 254-241 | France |
Ukraine | 243-225 | Greece |
Italy | — | Bye |
United States | 246-242 | Sweden |
Australia | 248-236 | India |
Chinese Taipei | — | Bye |
Men's team quarterfinals
The Netherlands almost stopped Korea from winning a single match in the team tournament, losing by only 1 point after the 27 arrow match was over. Italy was consigned to that fate, however, by the United States.
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Korea | 250-249 | Netherlands |
Ukraine | 242-236 | Japan |
United States | 243-240 | Italy |
Chinese Taipei | 250-247 | Australia |
Men's team semifinals
Korea's margin of victory in the semifinals was somewhat larger than in the quarterfinals, though this was more due to a weaker performance by their opponent than anything else as Korea shot 8 points fewer than they had in the previous round. Chinese Taipei narrowly defeated the United States to avoid the upset.
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Korea | 242-239 | Ukraine |
Chinese Taipei | 244-243 | United States |
Men's team bronze medal match
Both teams in the bronze medal final shot their lowest score of the competition. The United States, who had outscored Ukraine in each of the previous rounds, was unable to do so in direct competition with the Ukrainians and fell to fourth place while the Ukrainians collected their first archery medal of the year.
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Ukraine | 237-235 | United States |
Men's team gold medal match
The final turned out to be the easiest victory for the Korean team in the entire tournament, a 6-point win over Chinese Taipei.
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Korea | 251-245 | Chinese Taipei |
Women's team
Gold: | Silver: | Bronze: |
Korea Korea Lee Sung Jin Park Sung Hyun Yun Mi Jin |
China China He Ying Lin Sang Zhang Juanjuan |
Chinese Taipei Chinese Taipei Chen Li Ju Wu Hui Ju Yuan Shu Chi |
The women's team archery was held on 20 August, after all of the individual competition had finished but before the men's team competition.
Women's team final standings
Final place |
Ranking rank |
Nation | Ranking score |
R16 | Quarter- finals |
Semi- finals |
Finals |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | Korea | 2030 (WR) |
Bye | 244 | 249 | 241 |
2 | 2 | China | 1977 | 248 | 241 | 230 | 240 |
3 | 3 | Chinese Taipei | 1924 | 240 | 233 | 226 | 242 |
4 | 13 | France | 1847 | 226 | 228 | 234 | 228 |
5 | 8 | Greece | 1885 | 230 | 232 | ||
6 | 10 | Ukraine | 1878 | 244 | 230 | ||
7 | 6 | Germany | 1890 | 238 | 230 | ||
8 | 5 | India | 1900 | 230 | 227 | ||
9 | 11 | Russia | 1873 | 234 | |||
10 | 7 | Turkey | 1890 | 234 | |||
11 | 15 | Australia | 1844 | 233 | |||
12 | 12 | Great Britain | 1869 | 228 | |||
13 | 9 | United States | 1880 | 227 | |||
14 | 14 | Japan | 1847 | 226 | |||
15 | 4 | Poland | 1913 | 224 |
Women's team ranking round
The team ranking round consisted merely of summing the scores of the team's three competitors from the individual ranking round.
Rank | Nation | Score 1 | Score 2 | Score 3 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Korea | 682 | 675 | 673 | 2030 (WR) |
2 | China | 667 | 663 | 647 | 1977 |
3 | Chinese Taipei | 658 | 649 | 617 | 1924 |
4 | Poland | 657 | 628 | 628 | 1913 |
5 | India | 642 | 638 | 620 | 1900 |
6 | Germany | 638 | 632 | 620 | 1890 |
7 | Turkey | 639 | 631 | 620 | 1890 |
8 | Greece | 652 | 629 | 604 | 1885 |
9 | United States | 638 | 623 | 619 | 1880 |
10 | Ukraine | 643 | 640 | 595 | 1878 |
11 | Russia | 639 | 625 | 609 | 1873 |
12 | Great Britain | 638 | 637 | 594 | 1869 |
13 | France | 627 | 626 | 594 | 1847 |
14 | Japan | 624 | 622 | 601 | 1847 |
15 | Australia | 628 | 620 | 596 | 1844' |
Women's team round of 16
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Korea | — | Bye |
Greece | 230-227 | United States |
India | 230-228 | Great Britain |
France | 226-224 | Poland |
Chinese Taipei | 240-226 | Japan |
Germany | 238-234 | Russia |
Ukraine | 244-234 | Turkey |
China | 248-233 | Australia |
Women's team quarterfinals
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Korea | 244-232 | Greece |
France | 228-227 | India |
Chinese Taipei | 233-230 | Germany |
China | 241-230 | Ukraine |
Women's team semifinals
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Korea | 249-234 | France |
China | 230-226 | Chinese Taipei |
Women's team bronze medal match
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Chinese Taipei | 242-228 | France |
Women's team gold medal match
Winner | Score | Loser |
---|---|---|
Korea | 241-240 | China |
Schedule
- August 12
- Men's and Women's individual ranking round
- August 15
- Women's individual 1/32 Eliminations
- August 16
- Men's indiviudal 1/32 Eliminations
- August 17
- Women's individual 1/16 Eliminations
- Men's individual 1/16 Eliminations
- August 18
- Women's individual 1/8 Eliminations, Quarterfinals, Semifinals, Gold medal final, Bronze medal final, and Medal Ceremony
- August 19
- Men's individual 1/8 Eliminations, Quarterfinals, Semifinals, Gold medal final, Bronze medal final, and Medal Ceremony
- August 20
- Women's team 1/8 Eliminations, Quarterfinals, Semifinals, Gold medal final, Bronze medal final, and Medal Ceremony
- August 21
- Men's team 1/8 Eliminations, Quarterfinals, Semifinals, Gold medal final, Bronze medal final, and Medal Ceremony