Archery at the 2008 Summer Olympics – Women's team

The Women's team archery event at the 2008 Summer Olympics was part of the archery programme and took place at the Olympic Green Archery Field. Ranking Round was scheduled for August 9 and elimination rounds and Finals took place on August 10. All archery is done at a range of 70 metres, with targets 1.22 metres in diameter.

Women's team
at the Games of the XXIX Olympiad
The Olympic Green Archery Field, where the event took place, during the 2008 Summer Olympics.
VenueOlympic Green Archery Field
Dates9–10 August
Competitors30 from 10 nations
Winning score224
Medalists
Park Sung-hyun
Yun Ok-Hee
Joo Hyun-Jung
 South Korea
Chen Ling
Guo Dan
Zhang Juanjuan
 China
Bérengère Schuh
Sophie Dodemont
Virginie Arnold
 France

As the defending Olympic champions, South Korea defended the title with only one remaining archer from the previous Games, Park Sung-hyun, winner of two gold medals. China, silver at the last Games, participated at the team event with only one Athens medalist, Zhang Juanjuan and tried to bring the gold medal to the hosts. Chinese Taipei, bronze in Athens, brought Yuan Shu Chi and Wu Hui Ju back to the Games.

10 teams qualified for the event at the Beijing Olympics: host China, plus the top 8 teams at the 44th Outdoor Archery World championship, held in Leipzig, Germany, and one other NOC that qualified three athletes for the Games.

The competition begins with the same ranking round used to determine the individual event seeding. Each archer fires 72 arrows, with the scores of the team's three members summed to give the team score. The elimination rounds use a single-elimination tournament, with fixed brackets based on the ranking round seeding. Highly ranked teams get byes through to the quarterfinals. In each round of elimination, the two teams each fire 24 arrows (with each individual archer accounting for 8 of them). The higher scoring team moves on, while the lower scoring team is eliminated. The two semifinal losers face off for the bronze medal.

Records

Prior to this competition, the existing world and Olympic records were as follows. The change from the prior 27 arrow match to a 24 arrow match for the XXIX Olympiad meant that there was no standing Olympic record in the team match.

  • 216 arrow ranking round
World record South Korea
Park Sung-hyun, Lee Sung-Jin, Yun Mi-Jin
2030[1]Athens, Greece12 August 2004
Olympic record South Korea
Kim Soo-Nyung, Kim Nam-Soon, Yun Mi-Jin
1994Sydney, Australia16 September 2000
  • 24 arrow match
World record South Korea
Lee Tuk-Young, Yun Ok-Hee, Yun Mi-Jin
228Shanghai29 September 2006
Olympic recordNew record classification

The following new world and Olympic records were set during this competition.

DateRecordRoundNameNationalityScoreORWR
9 August216 arrow ranking roundRanking RoundPark Sung-hyun
Yun Ok-Hee
Joo Hyun-Jung
 South Korea2004OR
10 August24 arrow matchFirst RoundNatalia Valeeva
Pia Carmen Maria Lionetti
Elena Tonetta
 Italy215OR
10 August24 arrow matchQuarterfinalsBérengère Schuh
Sophie Dodemont
Virginie Arnold
 France218OR
10 August24 arrow matchQuarterfinalsPark Sung-hyun
Yun Ok-Hee
Joo Hyun-Jung
 South Korea231ORWR

World rankings entering Olympics

Rank Team
1 South Korea (KOR)
2 Great Britain (GBR)
3 China (CHN)
4 Italy (ITA)
5 Poland (POL)
7 Chinese Taipei (TPE)
11 India (IND)
13 Japan (JPN)
15 France (FRA)
17 Colombia (COL)

Ranking Round

Rank Team 1st Half 2nd Half 10s Xs Score
1 South Korea (KOR)101199396362004 OR
 Park Sung-hyun (KOR)3363373412673
 Yun Ok-Hee (KOR)3363313014667
 Joo Hyun-Jung (KOR)3393253210664
2 Great Britain (GBR)98395956121925
 Alison Williamson (GBR)325326223651
 Naomi Folkard (GBR)329322216651
 Charlotte Burgess (GBR)312311133623
3 China (CHN)97594155251916
 Chen Ling (CHN)330315187645
 Guo Dan (CHN)322314218636
 Zhang Juanjuan (CHN)3233121610635
4 Poland (POL)95295656211908
 Małgorzata Ćwieńczek (POL)3233222710645
 Justyna Mospinek (POL)321322166643
 Iwona Marcinkiewicz (POL)308312135620
5 France (FRA)94695759181903
 Bérengère Schuh (FRA)323322249645
 Sophie Dodemont (FRA)313319132632
 Virginie Arnold (FRA)310316227626
6 India (IND)95993860201897
 Laishram Bombaya Devi (IND)319318229637
 Dola Banerjee (IND)319314208633
 Pranitha Devi (IND)321306183627
7 Japan (JPN)94993252181881
 Nami Hayakawa (JPN)326323229649
 Sayoko Kitabatake (JPN)317299175616
 Yuki Hayashi (JPN)306310134616
8 Chinese Taipei (TPE)94592652131871
 Yuan Shu Chi (TPE)334318237652
 Wu Hui Ju (TPE)320314195634
 Wei Pi-Hsiu (TPE)291294101585
9 Italy (ITA)92691642151842
 Natalia Valeeva (ITA)316318142634
 Pia Carmen Maria Lionetti (ITA)310303187613
 Elena Tonetta (ITA)300295106595
10 Colombia (COL)92691550121841
 Ana Rendón (COL)319328226647
 Natalia Sánchez (COL)328315205643
 Sigrid Romero (COL)27927281551

Elimination Round

  First Round Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                                     
       
  1  South Korea (KOR) 231 (WR)  
    9  Italy (ITA) 217  
8  Chinese Taipei (TPE) 211
9  Italy (ITA) 215  
  1  South Korea (KOR) 213  
  5  France (FRA) 184  
       
       
  5  France (FRA) 218
    4  Poland (POL) 211  
     
       
  1  South Korea (KOR) 224
  3  China (CHN) 215
       
       
  3  China (CHN) 211 Third place
    6  India (IND) 206  
      5  France (FRA) 203
        2  Great Britain (GBR) 201
  3  China (CHN) 208
  2  Great Britain (GBR) 202  
7  Japan (JPN) 206  
10  Colombia (COL) 199  
  7  Japan (JPN) 196
    2  Great Britain (GBR) 201  
     

Final standings

RankTeam
 South Korea (KOR)
 China (CHN)
 France (FRA)
4  Great Britain (GBR)
5  Italy (ITA)
6  Poland (POL)
7  India (IND)
8  Japan (JPN)
9  Chinese Taipei (TPE)
10  Colombia (COL)

Final Match Details

Rank Team Athletes End Arrows Score
 South Korea 24-Match Total 224
       Joo Hyun-Jung
       Yun Ok-Hee
       Park Sung-hyun







1 9 9 9 27
8 9 10 27
2 10 10 9 29
9 9 10 28
3 10 10 8 28
9 9 10 28
4 9 9 10 28
10 9 10 29
 China 24-Match Total 215
       Chen Ling
       Guo Dan
       Zhang Juan Juan







1 9 7 10 26
10 8 8 26
2 9 8 10 27
9 9 9 27
3 10 9 10 29
8 7 9 24
4 9 10 9 28
9 10 9 28

References

  1. This result is not recognized by the International Olympic Committee as an Olympic record, as the ranking round took place on 12 August, before the 2004 opening ceremony.
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