2009 Archery World Cup

The 2009 Archery World Cup was the 4th edition of the international archery circuit, organised by the World Archery Federation. The best individual and mixed performers in each discipline over the three legs then joined host representatives in qualifying for the finals.

This was the first edition of the world cup where the mixed team events were contested at the final, with the top ranked mixed teams competing against a host country team in a one match final.

Competition rules and scoring edit

The compound legs consisted of a 50m qualification round of 72 arrows, followed by the compound round at 50m on a 6-zone target face, using cumulative scoring for all individual, team and mixed competitions. The top four individual performers (with no more than two from each country) proceeded to the finals.[1]

The recurve legs consisted of a FITA qualification round, followed by a 72m Olympic set system . The top seven individual performers (with no more than two from each country), plus one host nation representative if not already qualified, proceeded to the finals; the top mixed team performer proceeded to face the host nation at the finals, which were the same competition format as the legs. The team competition was not competed at the finals.[2]

Competitors' top three scores go towards qualification. The scores awarded in the legs were as follows:

Calendar edit

Stage Location
1   Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
2   Poreč, Croatia
3   Antalya Centennial Archery Field, Antalya, Turkey
4   Shanghai, China
Final   Copenhagen, Denmark

Results edit

Recurve edit

Men's individual edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   Romain Girouille   Crispin Duenas   Simon Terry [1]
2 9 May   Poreč   Jayanta Talukdar   Marco Galiazzo   Jean-Charles Valladont [2]
3 7 June   Antalya   Simon Terry   Thomas Aubert   Jayanta Talukdar [3]
4 9 August   Shanghai   Chen Wenyuan   Oh Jin-hyek   Im Dong-hyun [4]
Final 26 September   Copenhagen   Marco Galiazzo   Simon Terry   Romain Girouille [5]

Women's individual edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   Natalia Valeeva   Alison Williamson   Dola Banerjee [6]
2 9 May   Poreč   Zhao Ling   Pia Carmen Lionetti   Susanne Possner [7]
3 7 June   Antalya   Kwak Ye-ji   Yun Ok-hee   Joo Hyun-jung [8]
4 9 August   Shanghai   Yun Ok-hee   Bérengère Schuh   Kwak Ye-ji [9]
Final 26 September   Copenhagen   Kwak Ye-ji   Zhao Ling   Yun Ok-hee [10]

Men's team edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   India   United Kingdom   United States [11]
2 9 May   Poreč   India   Russia   Italy [12]
3 6 June   Antalya   South Korea   India   Malaysia [13]
4 9 August   Shanghai   South Korea   France   Mexico [14]

Women's team edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   Italy   Poland   United Kingdom [15]
2 9 May   Poreč   China   France   Ukraine [16]
3 6 June   Antalya   South Korea   Russia   India [17]
4 9 August   Shanghai   South Korea   Russia   Italy [18]

Mixed team edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   Italy   Poland   France [19]
2 9 May   Poreč   Italy   Poland   China [20]
3 7 June   Antalya   China   South Korea   Russia [21]
4 9 August   Shanghai   South Korea   China   France [22]
Final 26 September   Copenhagen   China   Denmark [23]

Compound edit

Men's individual edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   Braden Gellenthien   Patrizio Hofer   Peter Elzinga [24]
2 9 May   Poreč   Sergio Pagni   Jorge Jiménez   Paul Titscher [25]
3 7 June   Antalya   Dominique Genet   Braden Gellenthien   Patrick Coghlan [26]
4 9 August   Shanghai   Sergio Pagni   Jorge Jiménez   Patrizio Hofer [27]
Final 26 September   Copenhagen   Sergio Pagni   Braden Gellenthien   Patrizio Hofer [28]

Women's individual edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   Brittany Lorenti   Jamie van Natta   Diane Watson [29]
2 9 May   Poreč   Nicky Hunt   Ivana Buden   Andrea Weihe [30]
3 7 June   Antalya   Luzmary Guedez   Olga Bosch   Camilla Sømod [31]
4 9 August   Shanghai   Camilla Sømod   Anastasia Anastasio   Albina Loginova [32]
Final 26 September   Copenhagen   Luzmary Guedez   Camilla Sømod   Ivana Buden [33]

Men's team edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   United States   Canada   El Salvador [34]
2 9 May   Poreč   Sweden   Italy   Denmark [35]
3 6 June   Antalya   Netherlands   Sweden   Canada [36]
4 9 August   Shanghai   Mexico   New Zealand   South Africa [37]

Women's team edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   United States   Mexico   India [38]
2 9 May   Poreč   Russia   Germany   Netherlands [39]
3 6 June   Antalya   New Zealand   Greece   Australia [40]
4 9 August   Shanghai   Russia   Mexico   France [41]

Mixed team edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   Denmark   Mexico   United States [42]
2 9 May   Poreč   Italy   United States   France [43]
3 7 June   Antalya   Italy   Australia   United Kingdom [44]
4 9 August   Shanghai   Denmark   Mexico   Italy [45]
Final 26 September   Copenhagen   Denmark   Italy [46]

Medals table edit

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Italy105318
2  South Korea83415
3  China5218
4  United States44311
5  Denmark4228
6  India3148
7  France24612
8  Great Britain2338
9  Russia2327
10  Venezuela2103
11  Mexico1416
12  New Zealand1102
  Sweden1102
14  Netherlands1023
15  Poland0303
16  Canada0213
  El Salvador0213
18  Germany0134
19  Australia0123
  Switzerland0123
21  Croatia0112
22  Greece0101
23  Malaysia0011
  South Africa0011
  Ukraine0011
Totals (25 entries)464644136

Qualification edit

Recurve edit

Men's individual edit

Pos. Name Points[5]        
1.   Jayanta Talukdar 45 2 25 18 2 Q
2.   Simon Terry 43 18 25 Q
3.   Romain Girouille 36 25 11 Q
3.   Marco Galiazzo 36 15 21 Q
5.   Oh Jin-hyek 34 13 21
6.   Chu Sian Cheng 27 12 15
7.   Bair Badenov 26 1 12 13
8.   Crispin Duenas 25 21 4
8.   Chen Wenyuan 25 25
10.   Brady Ellison 23 15 8

Women's individual edit

Pos. Name Points[6]        
1.   Bérengère Schuh 49 7 15 13 21 Q
2.   Yun Ok-hee 46 21 25 Q
3.   Kwak Ye-ji 43 25 18 Q
4.   Zhao Ling 40 25 15 Q
5.   Natalia Valeeva 36 25 1 5 6
6.   Joo Hyun-jung 31 18 13
7.   Pia Carmen Lionetti 29 21 8
8.   Alison Williamson 21 21
9.   Elena Tonetta 20 12 8
10.   Dola Banerjee 18 18
10.   Susanne Possner 18 18

Mixed team edit

Pos. Team Points[7]        
1.   China 38 10 16 12 Q
2.   Italy 32 16 16
3.   South Korea 28 12 16
4.   Poland 24 12 12
4.   India 24 8 8 8

Compound edit

Men's individual edit

Pos. Name Points[8]        
1.   Sergio Pagni 50 25 25 Q
2.   Braden Gellenthien 46 25 21 Q
3.   Jorge Jiménez 42 21 21 Q
4.   Patrizio Hofer 39 21 18 Q
5.   Peter Elzinga 35 18 10 7
5.   Dietmar Trillus 35 10 13 6 12
7.   Patrick Coghlan 34 3 18 13
8.   Martin Damsbo 30 13 13 4
9.   Sebastien Brasseur 26 11 15
10.   Dominique Genet 25 25

Women's individual edit

Pos. Name Points[9]        
1.   Nicky Hunt 51 25 13 13 Q
2.   Camilla Sømod 50 5 7 18 25 Q
3.   Ivana Buden 49 13 21 15 1 Q
3.   Luzmary Guedez 49 11 4 25 13 Q
3.   Olga Bosch 49 15 13 21 5
6.   Anastasia Anastasio 48 15 12 21
7.   Albina Loginova 39 13 8 8
7.   Jamie van Natta 39 21 10 8
9.   Brittany Lorenti 25 25
10.   Eugenia Salvi 24 5 8 11

Mixed team edit

Pos. Team Points[10]        
1.   Italy 42 8 16 16 10 Q
2.   Denmark 40 16 8 16 Q1
3.   United States 30 10 12 8
4.   Mexico 24 12 12
5.   Australia 12 12

1. Qualified for final as host

Nations ranking edit

Pos. Nation Points[11]        
1.   Italy 545 121 222 105 97
2.   India 437 180 124 107 26
3.   South Korea 372 169 203
4.   Russia 360 106 79 175
5.   France 343 42 105 82 114
6.   United States 321 231 45 45
7.   Mexico 296 139 157
8.   China 227 118 37 72
9.   United Kingdom 218 110 28 55 25
10.   Canada 156 71 18 46 21

World Cup Final edit

Recurve edit

Men's individual edit

Semifinals Finals
      
1   Jayanta Talukdar 103
4   Marco Galiazzo 111
4   Marco Galiazzo 108
2   Simon Terry 105
3   Romain Girouille 108
2   Simon Terry 112 Third place
1   Jayanta Talukdar 110
3   Romain Girouille 113

Women's individual edit

Semifinals Finals
      
1   Bérengère Schuh 108
4   Zhao Ling 109
4   Zhao Ling 108
3   Kwak Ye-ji 113
3   Kwak Ye-ji 114
2   Yun Ok-hee 111 Third place
1   Bérengère Schuh 106
2   Yun Ok-hee 111

Mixed team edit

Finals
   
1   China
Zhao Ling
Xing Yu
145
2   Denmark
Carina Christiansen
Morten Caspersen
138

Compound edit

Men's individual edit

Semifinals Finals
      
1   Sergio Pagni 117
4   Patrizio Hofer 112
1   Sergio Pagni 115
2   Braden Gellenthien 114
3   Jorge Jiménez 114
2   Braden Gellenthien 120* Third place
4   Patrizio Hofer 118
3   Jorge Jiménez 115

* New world record

Women's individual edit

Semifinals Finals
      
1   Nicky Hunt 107
4   Luzmary Guedez 109
4   Luzmary Guedez 108
2   Camilla Sømod 107
3   Ivana Buden 112
2   Camilla Sømod 113 Third place
1   Nicky Hunt 111
3   Ivana Buden 115

Mixed team edit

Finals
   
1   Denmark
Camilla Sømod
Martin Damsbo
152
2   Italy
Anastasia Anastasio
Sergio Pagni
148

References edit

  1. ^ "WORLD CUP 2011 Format" (PDF). FITA. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 August 2012. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  2. ^ "WORLD CUP 2011" (PDF). FITA. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 March 2014. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  3. ^ "WORLD CUP 2011 Rules" (PDF). FITA. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 March 2014. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  4. ^ "WORLD CUP 2011 Rules" (PDF). FITA. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 March 2014. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  5. ^ "WORLD CUP 2009 - Men's Individual Recurve Results" (PDF). FITA. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  6. ^ "WORLD CUP 2009 Women's recurve results" (PDF). FITA. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  7. ^ "WORLD CUP 2010 - Mixed Recurve Results" (PDF). FITA. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  8. ^ "WORLD CUP 2009 - Men's individual compound results)" (PDF). FITA. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  9. ^ "WORLD CUP 2009 Women's compound results" (PDF). FITA. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  10. ^ "WORLD CUP 2009 - Mixed compound results" (PDF). FITA. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  11. ^ "WORLD CUP 2009 - Nations Ranking" (PDF). FITA. Retrieved 22 May 2013.