2014 Archery World Cup

The 2014 Archery World Cup was the 9th edition of the annual international archery circuit, organised by the World Archery Federation.

2014 Archery World Cup Final
VenuePlace de la Navigation, Ouchy (Final)
LocationSwitzerland Lausanne, Switzerland (Final)
Start date22 April
End date7 September
Ouchy harbour, the venue for the finals.

American Brady Ellison won the men's recurve competition for a record third time, beating 16-year-old Marcus D'Almeida in the final by shoot off.[1][2][3][4] The winners in the other events were all from the Americas.

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 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.[5]

The recurve legs consisted of a 1440 qualification round (formerly called a FITA 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.[6]

The scores awarded in the four stages were as follows:

Hosts edit

Host cities of the 2014 Archery World Cup (italic = stage host, bold = finals host)

Calendar edit

Stage[9][10][11] Date Location
1 22–27 April   Shanghai, China
2 13–18 May   Medellín, Colombia
3 10–15 June   Antalya, Turkey
4 5–10 August   Wrocław, Poland
Final 6–7 September   Lausanne, Switzerland

Results edit

Recurve edit

Men's individual edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 27 April   Shanghai   Hideki Kikuchi   Pierre Plihon   Rick van der Ven [1]
2 18 May   Medellín   Lee Seung-yun   Oh Jin-hyek   Kim Woo-jin [2]
3 15 June   Antalya   Florian Kahllund   Ku Bon-chan   Takaharu Furukawa [3]
4 10 August   Wrocław   Rick van der Ven   Mauro Nespoli   Jean-Charles Valladont [4]
Final 7 September   Lausanne   Brady Ellison   Marcus D'Almeida   Rick van der Ven [5]

Women's individual edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 27 April   Shanghai   Elena Richter   Xu Jing   Aída Román [6]
2 18 May   Medellín   Jung Dasomi   Lisa Unruh   Natalia Erdyniyeva [7]
3 15 June   Antalya   Chang Hye-jin   Cheng Ming   Ren Hayakawa [8]
4 10 August   Wrocław   Ika Yuliana Rochmawati   Xu Jing   Deepika Kumari [9]
Final 7 September   Lausanne   Aída Román   Cheng Ming   Xu Jing [10]

Men's team edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 27 April   Shanghai   Japan   Australia   Netherlands [11]
2 18 May   Medellín   South Korea   India   United States [12]
3 15 June   Antalya   South Korea   Russia   Japan [13]
4 10 August   Wrocław   Mexico   India   China [14]

Women's team edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 27 April   Shanghai   China   Colombia   Japan [15]
2 18 May   Medellín   Germany   China   South Korea [16]
3 15 June   Antalya   China   South Korea   Russia [17]
4 10 August   Wrocław   India   Mexico   China [18]

Mixed team edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 27 April   Shanghai   United States   Mexico   United Kingdom[12] [19]
2 18 May   Medellín   South Korea   Brazil   India [20]
3 14 June   Antalya   China   India   South Korea [21]
4 10 August   Wrocław   Mexico   Russia   India [22]
Final 7 September   Lausanne   Mexico   Switzerland [23]

Compound edit

Men's individual edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 26 April   Shanghai   Sebastien Peineau   Pierre-Julien Deloche   Bridger Deaton [24]
2 17 May   Medellín   Peter Elzinga   Daniel Muñoz   Reo Wilde [25]
3 14 June   Antalya   Choi Yong-hee   Rajat Chauhan   Mike Schloesser [26]
4 9 August   Wrocław   Pierre-Julien Deloche   Reo Wilde   Alexander Dambaev [27]
Final 6 September   Lausanne   Bridger Deaton   Pierre-Julien Deloche   Reo Wilde [28]

Women's individual edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 26 April   Shanghai   Choi Bo-min   Sara López   Alejandra Usquiano [29]
2 17 May   Medellín   Erika Jones   Toja Cerne   Inge van Caspel [30]
3 14 June   Antalya   Natalia Avdeeva   Fatimah Almashhadani   Janine Meissner [31]
4 9 August   Wrocław   Cansu Ecem Coşkun   Sara López   Albina Loginova [32]
Final 6 September   Lausanne   Sara López   Erika Jones   Natalia Avdeeva [33]

Men's team edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 26 April   Shanghai   United States   Australia   Russia [34]
2 17 May   Medellín   United States   Netherlands   Italy [35]
3 14 June   Antalya   Netherlands   United States   Italy [36]
4 9 August   Wrocław   Denmark   Mexico   Italy [37]

Women's team edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 26 April   Shanghai   United States   Chinese Taipei   South Korea [38]
2 17 May   Medellín   United States   Colombia   Mexico [39]
3 14 June   Antalya   Russia   United States   India [40]
4 9 August   Wrocław   United States   Russia   Colombia [41]

Mixed team edit

Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 26 April   Shanghai   South Korea   United States   France [42]
2 17 May   Medellín   France   Netherlands   United States [43]
3 14 June   Antalya   Belgium   Colombia   Slovenia [44]
4 9 August   Wrocław   United States   India   Russia [45]
Final 6 September   Lausanne   United States   Switzerland [46]

Medals table edit

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  United States115521
2  South Korea93416
3  Mexico4329
4  China35311
5  France3328
6  Netherlands32510
7  Germany3115
8  Russia23712
9  Japan2046
10  Colombia1629
11  India15410
12  Belgium1001
  Denmark1001
  Indonesia1001
  Turkey1001
16  Australia0202
  Brazil0202
  Switzerland0202
19  Italy0134
20  Slovenia0112
21  Chinese Taipei0101
  Iraq0101
23  Great Britain0011
Totals (23 entries)464644136

Qualification edit

Recurve edit

Men's individual edit

Pos. Name Points        
1.   Rick van der Ven 56 18 13 25 Q
2.   Marcus D'Almeida 38 5 13 10 15 Q
3.   Pierre Plihon 36 21 5 10 Q
4.   Brady Ellison 34 11 10 13 Q
4.   Oh Jin-hyek 34 21 13 Q
6.   Lee Seung-yun 30 25 5 1[13]
6.   Florian Kahllund 30 5 25 Q
8.   Jake Kaminski 27 11 5 11 Q
9.   Ku Bon-chan 26 5 21
10.   Hideki Kikuchi 25 25

1. Qualified but withdrew

Women's individual edit

Pos. Name Points        
1.   Xu Jing 47 21 5 21 Q
2.   Jung Dasomi 37 25 12 Q
3.   Elena Richter 35 25 5 5 Q
4.   Lisa Unruh 31 21 5 5 Q
5.   Joo Hyun-jung 30 15 15 1[14]
6.   Aída Román 28 18 5 5 Q
7.   Cheng Ming 26 5 21 Q
8.   Tatiana Segina 25 10 15 Q
8.   Ika Yuliana Rochmawati 25 25
8.   Chang Hye-jin 25 25

1. Qualified but withdrew

Mixed team edit

Pos. Team Points        
1.   Mexico 36 12 8 16 Q
2.   India 32 10 12 10
3.   South Korea 26 16 10
4.   United States 19 16 3
5.   China 16 16

Compound edit

Men's individual edit

Pos. Name Points        
1.   Reo Wilde 52 13 18 21 Q
2.   Peter Elzinga 48 25 10 13 Q
3.   Pierre-Julien Deloche 46 21 25 Q
4.   Sebastien Peineau 43 25 5 13 5 Q
4.   Bridger Deaton 43 18 12 13 Q
6.   Rajat Chauhan 31 5 21 5 Q
7.   Choi Yong-hee 30 5 25 1[15]
8.   Alexander Dambaev 28 5 5 18 Q
9.   Sergio Pagni 25 5 15 5
10.   Mike Schloesser 23 18 5
10.   Roberto Hernández 23 5 13 5

1. Qualified but withdrew

Women's individual edit

Pos. Name Points        
1.   Sara López 47 21 5 21 Q
2.   Albina Loginova 44 15 11 18 Q
3.   Erika Jones 42 12 25 5 Q
4.   Natalia Avdeeva 38 25 13 Q
5.   Linda Ochoa 34 10 13 11 Q
6.   Alejandra Usquiano 33 18 5 10 5 Q
7.   Toja Cerne 31 5 21 5 Q
8.   Cansu Ecem Coşkun 30 5 25
9.   Choi Bo-min 25 25
10.   Inge van Caspel 23 18 5

Mixed team edit

Pos. Team Points        
1.   United States 38 12 10 4 16 Q
2.   France 29 10 16 2 3
3.   India 24 8 4 12
4.   Russia 21 3 8 10
5.   Colombia 17 2 2 12 3

Nations ranking edit

Pos. Team Points        
1.   United States 660 175 220 84 181
2.   South Korea 531 99 196 236
3.   Mexico 444 119 133 43 149
4.   Russia 373 35 46 149 143
5.   India 330 23 81 78 148
6.   China 313 76 67 87 83
7.   Netherlands 269 53 87 81 48
8.   Italy 259 97 81 81
9.   Colombia 241 78 71 32 60
10.   France 230 105 26 25 74

World Cup Final edit

With the exception of the highest ranked recurve archers Oh Jin-hyek and Jung Dasomi, the qualified athletes from South Korea declined invitations to the World Cup Final in order to focus on the Asian Games, and were replaced by the next highest qualifiers. The final places were filled by representatives from the host nation, Switzerland.[16][17][18]

Recurve edit

Men's individual edit

Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                     
1   Rick van der Ven 2 2 0 2
8   Adrian Faber 0 0 2 0
1   Rick van der Ven 1 0 1 1 1
5   Brady Ellison 1 2 1 1 1
5   Brady Ellison 0 0 2 2 11
4   Oh Jin-hyek 2 2 0 0 10
5   Brady Ellison 1 0 2 1 11
2   Marcus D'Almeida 1 2 0 1 10
3   Pierre Plihon 1 0 2 1 0
6   Florian Kahllund 1 2 0 1 2
6   Florian Kahllund 0 0 0 Third place
2   Marcus D'Almeida 2 2 2
7   Jake Kaminski 0 0 0 1   Rick van der Ven 0 1 1 2 2
2   Marcus D'Almeida 2 2 2 6   Florian Kahllund 2 1 1 0 0

Women's individual edit

Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                     
1   Xu Jing 0 2 2 2
8   Nathalie Dielen 2 0 0 0
1   Xu Jing 2 0 2 0 0
5   Aída Román 0 2 0 2 2
5   Aída Román 2 1 0 0 21
4   Lisa Unruh 0 1 2 2 00
5   Aída Román 0 2 1 2 1
6   Cheng Ming 2 0 1 0 1
3   Elena Richter 2 2 0 0 0
6   Cheng Ming 0 0 2 2 2
6   Cheng Ming 2 1 1 1 01 Third place
7   Tatiana Segina 0 1 1 1 20
7   Tatiana Segina 0 2 1 0 21 1   Xu Jing 2 1 2 0 2
2   Jung Dasomi 2 0 1 2 00 7   Tatiana Segina 0 1 0 2 0

Mixed team edit

Finals
       
1   Mexico
Aída Román
Eduardo Vélez
2 2 2
2   Switzerland
Iliana Deineko
Florian Faber
0 0 0

Compound edit

Men's individual edit

Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
         
1   Reo Wilde 148
8   Kevin Burri 139
1   Reo Wilde 146
5   Bridger Deaton 147
5   Bridger Deaton 145
4   Sebastien Peineau 144
5   Bridger Deaton 148
3   Pierre-Julien Deloche 144
3   Pierre-Julien Deloche 146
6   Rajat Chauhan 145
3   Pierre-Julien Deloche 1469* Third place
2   Peter Elzinga 1469
7   Alexander Dambaev 144 1   Reo Wilde 146
2   Peter Elzinga 145 2   Peter Elzinga 144

Women's individual edit

Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
         
1   Sara López 144
8   Clementine de Guili 140
1   Sara López 147
4   Natalia Avdeeva 145
5   Linda Ochoa 144
4   Natalia Avdeeva 145
1   Sara López 147
3   Erika Jones 145
3   Erika Jones 145
6   Alejandra Usquiano 126
3   Erika Jones 146 Third place
7   Toja Cerne 137
7   Toja Cerne 145 4   Natalia Avdeeva 145
2   Albina Loginova 140 7   Toja Cerne 144

Mixed team edit

Finals
   
1   United States
Erika Jones
Reo Wilde
158
2   Switzerland
Clementine de Guili
Patrizio Hofer
151

References edit

  1. ^ "World Archery > NEWS > News". World Archery. Archived from the original on 18 October 2014. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
  2. ^ Nick Butler. "Ellison edges Brazilian superstar in a shootout to claim third Archery World Cup Final title". insidethegames.biz - Olympic, Paralympic and Commonwealth Games News. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
  3. ^ "Top five archers of World Cup 2014 – Recurve individual men". Yahoo! News India. 25 September 2014. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
  4. ^ "Ellison and Jones Clinch Athlete of the Year Honors". USA Archery. 11 February 2015. Archived from the original on June 27, 2015. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
  5. ^ "WORLD CUP 2013 Format" (PDF). FITA. Retrieved 23 May 2013.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ "WORLD CUP 2013 Format" (PDF). FITA. Retrieved 23 May 2013.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ "WORLD CUP 2013 Rules" (PDF). FITA. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 March 2014. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  8. ^ "WORLD CUP 2013 Rules" (PDF). FITA. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 March 2014. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  9. ^ "FITA Calendar of Events". World Archery. Archived from the original on 2013-10-14. Retrieved 2013-11-24.
  10. ^ "Major calendar changes for 2014". Retrieved 13 October 2014.
  11. ^ "Lausanne 2014 - World Archery". Archived from the original on 2015-05-25. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
  12. ^ Perry, Keith (6 May 2014). "Leamington's Naomi Folkard wins a medal in Archery World Cup event". Coventry Telegraph. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
  13. ^ "World Archery > NEWS > News". World Archery. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
  14. ^ "World Archery > NEWS > News". World Archery. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
  15. ^ "World Archery > NEWS > News". World Archery. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
  16. ^ "World Archery > NEWS > News". World Archery. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
  17. ^ "World Archery > NEWS > News". World Archery. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
  18. ^ "Lausanne 2014 - World Archery". Archived from the original on 2014-10-17. Retrieved 13 October 2014.

External links edit