Event: | Men's individual |
Games: | 2004 Summer |
Venue: | Panathinaiko Stadium |
Dates: | 15–19 August |
Gold: | Marco Galiazzo |
Goldnoc: | ITA |
Silver: | Hiroshi Yamamoto |
Silvernoc: | JPN |
Bronze: | Tim Cuddihy |
Bronzenoc: | AUS |
Prev: | 2000 |
Next: | 2008 |
The men's individual archery event at the 2004 Summer Olympics was part of the archery programme. Its final was held on 19 August at the Panathinaiko Stadium.
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.
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) and only Wunderle made it to the quarterfinals.
Rank | Archer | Nation | Score | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 687 | |||
2 | 673 | |||
3 | 672 | |||
4 | 672 | |||
5 | 671 | |||
6 | 671 | |||
7 | 668 | |||
8 | 666 | |||
9 | 664 | |||
10 | 663 | |||
11 | 663 | |||
12 | 663 | |||
13 | 663 | |||
14 | 661 | |||
15 | 660 | |||
16 | 660 | |||
17 | 660 | |||
18 | 659 | |||
19 | 659 | |||
20 | 658 | |||
21 | 657 | |||
22 | 657 | |||
23 | 657 | |||
24 | 654 | |||
25 | 654 | |||
26 | 653 | |||
27 | 653 | |||
28 | 652 | |||
29 | 651 | |||
30 | 651 | |||
31 | 650 | |||
32 | 647 | |||
33 | 647 | |||
34 | 647 | |||
35 | 646 | |||
36 | 646 | |||
37 | 646 | |||
38 | 645 | |||
39 | 641 | |||
40 | 641 | |||
41 | 641 | |||
42 | 641 | |||
43 | 639 | |||
44 | 639 | |||
45 | 638 | |||
46 | 637 | |||
47 | 637 | |||
48 | 634 | |||
49 | 633 | |||
50 | 632 | |||
51 | 630 | |||
52 | 627 | |||
53 | 626 | |||
54 | 623 | |||
55 | 623 | |||
56 | 622 | |||
57 | 602 | |||
58 | 601 | |||
59 | 599 | |||
60 | 585 | |||
61 | 583 | |||
62 | 563 | |||
63 | Phoutlamphay Thiamphasone | 557 | ||
64 | 494 |
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.
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 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 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.
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.