Archery at the 2010 Commonwealth Games – Women's recurve individual

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Women's recurve individual
at the 2010 Commonwealth Games
Medalists Deepika Kumari (centre), Alison Williamson (left), and Dola Banerjee (right) during the medal presentation ceremony.
VenueYamuna Sports Complex
Dates4–10 October
Competitors22 from 10 nations
Medalists
gold medal    India
silver medal    England
bronze medal    India
← 1982

The women's recurve individual archery event at the 2010 Commonwealth Games was a competition held as part of the archery programme at the Yamuna Sports Complex in Delhi, India, from 4 October to 10 October 2010. It was the second time that the recurve individual event for women had been included in the Commonwealth Games and the first time it had been contested since the 1982 Games in Brisbane, Australia.

India's Deepika Kumari and Dola Banerjee won the gold and bronze medal respectively, with Alison Williamson of England winning the silver medal, all firsts for their nations in the women's recurve individual event.

Background

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A women's individual archery event had only taken place once before at the Commonwealth Games. As part of the 1982 Games held in Brisbane, Australia, a programme of two competitions using recurve bows took place over a four day period, with the women's individual event being held in parallel with a similar event for male archers. As one of sixteen designated optional commonwealth sports, archery's inclusion in a Commonwealth Games meeting is determined by the candidate host city on a Game-by-Game basis,[1] subject to approval by the Executive Committee of the Commonwealth Games Federation. In 2006, India's Commonwealth Organising Committee was successful in its application to host individual and team archery events for its forthcoming Games in Delhi in 2010;[2] the 28-year gap marked the longest period of absence for any returning Commonwealth sport.[3] In addition to the men's and women's individual recurve events, six other archery competitions were approved — the men's and women's team recurve, and men's and women's individual and team compound events — each making their debut Commonwealth Games appearance.

22 competitors from 10 nations qualified for the event. Australia, Canada, England, Malaysia, Singapore, and host nation India each entered a full berth of three archers. Kenya, Mauritius, Scotland, and Sri Lanka each qualified one athlete. Of the entrants, eight were former Olympians: India's Dola Banerjee and Bombayla Devi Laishram, England's Naomi Folkard and Alison Williamson, Australia's Deonne Bridger and Alexandra Feeney, Canada's Marie-Pier Beaudet, and Veronique Marrier of Mauritius. Only Williamson entered as an Olympics medalist, having won bronze at the 2004 Games in Athens.[4] India's Deepika Kumari, the reigning women's recurve individual youth champion, entered as the highest ranked athlete at world number 5.[5][6]

Seven months before the competition began a four-day international test event was held at the Yamuna Sports Complex in March 2010 to evaluate the venue's preparedness ahead of the Games. Indian archers dominated the women's recurve individual competition, Kumari taking the gold medal in a five-set final ahead of teammates Chekrovolu Swuro and Pranitha Vardhineni, who finished with the silver and bronze medals respectively.[7]

Two days after the opening ceremony in Delhi it was announced that all archery events were to be removed from the schedule of the succeeding 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow due to time constraints.[3] As of the 2022 Commonwealth Games, this remains the last time archery was contested at a Commonwealth Games.[8]

Format

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An official FITA target is divided into ten evenly-spaced concentric rings. An arrow landing in the outermost ring wins one point; striking the centre yellow circle earns the maximum ten points.

The event was an outdoor target archery competition held under International Archery Federation (Fédération Internationale de Tir à l'Arc, FITA) rules, with each archer shooting at a 122 cm-wide target from a 70-metre distance. Between one and ten points were awarded for each arrow depending on how close it landed to the centre of the target.

The competition consisted of six stages. A 72-arrow ranking round took place on 4 October with the total cumulative score of each archer, out of a maximum of 720, used to determine the seedings for the five elimination rounds.[9] The twelve athletes with the lowest total score from their 72 arrows advanced to the 1/16 elimination round, while the 10 highest scoring athletes received a bye to the 1/8 elimination round. If two or more athletes posted the same total score, the number of arrows landing in the 10 ring was taken into account. If the number of 10s was tied, then the number of arrows landing within the inner-10 ring (noted as Xs) was used as a tiebreaker.

A single elimination tournament consisting of five rounds followed, each round using the set system introduced by FITA earlier in 2010. A set consists of a total of six arrows, each archer shooting three arrows. The highest scoring archer from their three arrows earned two set points with the losing archer receiving zero points. In the event of a tied score both archers received one point. The 1/16 and 1/8 elimination rounds consisted of a maximum of three sets, with the first archer scoring four set points declared the winner, while the quarter-final, semifinal, and two medal-deciding matches consisted of up to five sets, the first archer to six set points winning the match. If the set points were tied after the maximum number of sets had been played, a single tie-breaker arrow was used, the archer shooting closest to centre of the target winning the match.[9]

Schedule

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The women's individual recurve began on 4 October with the ranking round, the results of which were also used to determine the seedings for the women's team recurve event. The first two elimination rounds took place the following day on 5 October, matches in the 1/16 and 1/8 elimination matches respectively taking place simultaneously. A break of four days then followed to allow the team recurve and the individual and team compound events to conclude. On the morning of 10 October the four quarter-final, two semifinal, and two medal matches were held in a staggered schedule each commencing thirteen minutes apart, the first quarter-final match beginning at 09:00, the first semifinal match at 09:52, and the gold medal match at 10:31. The medal presentation followed at 10:45.[citation needed]

The event was the seventh of the eight competitions on the archery schedule to conclude, the final rounds of the men's individual recurve following on the afternoon of 10 October.[10]

Day Date Start Time Round
Day 1 Monday, 4 October 2010 10:00 Ranking round
Day 2 Tuesday, 5 October 2010 09:00 1/16 eliminations
09:40 1/8 eliminations
Day 7 Sunday, 10 October 2010 09:00 Quarter-finals
09:52 Semifinals
10:18 Bronze medal match
10:31 Gold medal match
All times are India Standard Time (UTC+05:30)
Source:
[10]

Venue

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Plans to hold the final rounds of the competition at India Gate were abandoned for financial and security reasons.

All archery events took place at the Yamuna Sports Complex in a 1,500-seat outdoor facility constructed for the Games.[11][12] Originally the complex was to host only the practice and ranking rounds, with the subsequent elimination rounds taking place within a temporary 3,000-seat facility on the lawns of India Gate in central Delhi.[13] These plans were however abandoned in June 2010 after spiralling construction costs and the failure to obtain security clearance for the India Gate site due to its proximity with the centrepiece Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium.[14]

Records

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  • 70 metres - 72 arrow ranking round
Archer Score Location Date Ref
World record  Park Sung-hyun (KOR) 682 Athens, Greece 12 August 2004 [15]

At the time of the 2010 Commonwealth Games, South Korea's Park Sung-hyun held the world record for a 72-arrow total score shot from a 70-metre distance, shooting a total of 682 one day before the start of the 2004 Summer Olympics. Because the 2010 Games were the first to use the 72-arrow ranking round format at any stage of the competition, no existing Commonwealth record in this category had been set prior to this event.

Report

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Dola Banerjee was the pre-event favourite for the gold medal.[16]

Strong winds made shooting difficult on the final day of competition. Banerjee blamed the blustery conditions on her semi-final defeat to sixth seed Alison Williamson, in which she surrendered a one-set lead with three successive set losses, losing 6-2. She would however come back from one set down to defeat Malaysia's Anbarasi Subramaniam in the bronze medal match after Subramaniam shot poorly in the fourth set.[17][18] Williamson was joined by top seed Deepika Kumari in the final, who had failed to win just one set in the previous three matches, thereby guaranteeing a maiden women's individual recurve medal for both nations.

The final marked the third time Kumari and Williamson had met competitively. Kumari had won both of their previous match-ups, in the women's team recurve event two days prior and in the second stage of the Archery World Cup in Antalya, Turkey four months earlier.[18] The match was a lop-sided affair, and in a performance described by The Hindu as "flawless", Kumari outshot the Englishwoman in a straight sets victory, scoring a maximum 30 points in the third set while Williamson faltered with a score of 7 on her last arrow.[19][20] Kumari's win earned her a second Commonwealth gold medal in three days following India's victory in the women's team recurve event two days before, making her the most successful recurve archer at the Games. After her defeat Williamson praised Kumari's shooting and the behaviour of the home crowd, whose conduct in the women's team final had come under criticism by fellow English archer Amy Oliver for excessive volume and poor sportsmanship.[21][22]

Results

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Ranking Round

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Rank Athlete Half Total 10s Xs Notes
1st 2nd
1  Deepika Kumari (IND) 332 330 662 29 11 Advances to the
1/8 elimination round
2  Dola Banerjee (IND) 328 330 658 30 5
3  Naomi Folkard (ENG) 318 324 642 20 6
4  Deonne Bridger (AUS) 316 321 637 20 3
5  Anbarasi Subramaniam (MAS) 315 322 637 19 4
6  Alison Williamson (ENG) 328 307 635 21 4
7  Amy Oliver (ENG) 315 312 627 19 4
8  Alexandra Feeney (AUS) 311 314 625 12 3
9  Laishram Bombayala Devi (IND) 311 313 624 20 7
10  Alana Macdougall (CAN) 304 310 614 17 6
11  Khang Cheok (SIN) 307 301 608 17 3 Advances to the
1/16 elimination round
12  Veronique Marrier (MRI) 302 306 608 13 5
13  Vanessa Loh (SIN) 296 307 603 12 6
14  Kateri Vrakking (CAN) 304 294 598 8 4
15  Ng Sui (MAS) 289 296 585 10 3
16  Wendy Tan (SIN) 302 283 585 6 1
17  Dilhara Salgado (SRI) 300 282 582 7 2
18  Dawn Nelson (AUS) 295 284 579 8 4
19  Lilian Downie (SCO) 287 287 574 13 3
20  Marie-Pier Beaudet (CAN) 274 300 574 12 4
21  Shahira Abdul (MAS) 286 283 569 7 1
22  Shehzana Anwar (KEN) 279 238 517 5 1
Source:[23]

Elimination rounds

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Top half

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1/16 elimination 1/8 elimination Quarter-finals Semifinals
            
1  Deepika Kumari (IND) 4
16  Wendy Tan (SIN) 0
17  Dilhara Salgado (SRI) 2
16  Wendy Tan (SIN) 4
1  Deepika Kumari (IND) 6
8  Alexandra Feeney (AUS) 0
9  Laishram Bombayala Devi (IND) 2
8  Alexandra Feeney (AUS) 4
1  Deepika Kumari (IND) 7
5  Anbarasi Subramaniam (MAS) 1
5  Anbarasi Subramaniam (MAS) 4
21  Shahira Abdul (MAS) 2
21  Shahira Abdul (MAS) 4
12  Veronique Marrier (MRI) 0
5  Anbarasi Subramaniam (MAS) 7
13  Vanessa Loh (SIN) 3
13  Vanessa Loh (SIN) 4
20  Marie-Pier Beaudet (CAN) 0
13  Vanessa Loh (SIN) 5
4  Deonne Bridger (AUS) 1

Bottom half

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1/16 elimination 1/8 elimination Quarter-finals Semifinals
            
3  Naomi Folkard (ENG) 0
14  Kateri Vrakking (CAN) 4
19  Lilian Downie (SCO) 1
14  Kateri Vrakking (CAN) 5
14  Kateri Vrakking (CAN) 0
6  Alison Williamson (ENG) 6
11  Khang Cheok (SIN) 4
22  Shehzana Anwar (KEN) 0
11  Khang Cheok (SIN) 0
6  Alison Williamson (ENG) 4
6  Alison Williamson (ENG) 6
2  Dola Banerjee (IND) 2
7  Amy Oliver (ENG) 4
10  Alana Macdougall (CAN) 2
7  Amy Oliver (ENG) 2
2  Dola Banerjee (IND) 6
15  Ng Sui (MAS) 4
18  Dawn Nelson (AUS) 0
15  Ng Sui (MAS) 2
2  Dola Banerjee (IND) 4

Finals

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Gold medal match
   
1  Deepika Kumari (IND) 1st place, gold medalist(s) 6
6  Alison Williamson (ENG) 2nd place, silver medalist(s) 0
Bronze medal match
   
2  Dola Banerjee (IND) 3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 6
5  Anbarasi Subramaniam (MAS) 2

Source:[23]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Constitutional Documents of the Commonwealth Games Federation (PDF) (Report). Commonwealth Games Federation. 2018. p. 36. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 July 2019. Retrieved 13 July 2019.
  2. ^ "ARCHERY returns to Commonwealth Games". Lausanne: World Archery. 23 November 2006. Retrieved 13 July 2019.
  3. ^ a b "About Archery in Commonwealth Games". Lausanne: World Archery. 5 October 2010. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
  4. ^ "Lots of stars for archery's return at Commonwealth Games". Lausanne: World Archery. 30 September 2010. Retrieved 12 July 2019.
  5. ^ "Jharkhand archer dreams of Olympic medal". The Hindu. Chennai. 10 October 2010. Retrieved 13 July 2019.
  6. ^ "Indians could be on target in recurve section". The Hindu. Chennai. 4 October 2010. Retrieved 13 July 2019.(subscription required)
  7. ^ Hicks, Carole; Antille, Vanahé (12 March 2010). "Archery Test Event concludes with 9 more medals for India". Lausanne: World Archery. Retrieved 16 July 2019.
  8. ^ Morgan, Liam (19 January 2018). "Decision to omit shooting from Birmingham 2022 defended as archery step up reinstatement effort". Inside the Games. Dunsar Media Company. Retrieved 18 July 2019.
  9. ^ a b "Guide to Archery". BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 20 September 2010. Retrieved 15 July 2019.
  10. ^ a b "DETAILED SCHEDULE - Archery". XIX Commonwealth Games Official Website. Organising Committee Commonwealth Games 2010 Delhi. Archived from the original on 15 October 2010. Retrieved 10 October 2010.
  11. ^ "Delhi 2010 Post-Game Report" (PDF). Organising Committee Commonwealth Games 2010 Delhi. pp. 62–63. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 June 2019. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
  12. ^ Kalra, Sunil Yash (2010). Road to Commonwealth Games, 2010. New Delhi: Penguin Books India. p. 154. ISBN 9780143415251.
  13. ^ "Archery venue also set to miss target". The Times of India. Times News Network. 20 December 2009. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
  14. ^ Padmadeo, Vinayak (9 August 2010). "Too expensive: Archers won't shoot at India Gate". The Indian Express. Mumbai. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
  15. ^ "World Archery Records". World Archery. Retrieved 20 July 2019.
  16. ^ Rao, Rakesh (27 September 2010). "Limba Ram looking confident ahead of Games". The Hindu. Chennai. Retrieved 13 July 2019.(subscription required)
  17. ^ "Archery: Deepika claims gold,Dola settles for bronze". The Indian Express. Mumbai. 10 October 2010. Retrieved 14 July 2019.
  18. ^ a b Mieville, Didier (10 October 2010). "Two more golds for India!". Lausanne: World Archery. Retrieved 15 July 2019.
  19. ^ Keerthivasan, K. (26 October 2010). "Rahul, Deepika win gold medals". The Hindu. Chennai. Retrieved 13 July 2019.
  20. ^ "Indian teen star Deepika Kumari sweeps aside England's Williamson to win Gold". Organising Committee Commonwealth Games 2010 Delhi. 10 October 2010. Retrieved 13 July 2019.
  21. ^ "Williamson secures archery silver". BBC Sport. British Broadcasting Corporation. 10 October 2010. Retrieved 13 July 2019.
  22. ^ Bull, Andy (9 October 2010). "Commonwealth Games 2010: England archers deny slur against official". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 13 July 2019.
  23. ^ a b "Archery Recurve Bow Individual - Women Delhi 2010". Commonwealth Games Federation. 2018. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
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