Archery at the 2015 European Games – Women's individual explained

Event:Women's individual
Games:2015 European Games
Venue:Tofiq Bahramov Stadium
Date:16–21 June
Competitors:62
Nations:30
Gold:Karina Winter
Goldnoc:GER
Silver:Maja Jager
Silvernoc:DEN
Bronze:Alicia Marín
Bronzenoc:ESP
Next:2019

The women's individual recurve competition at the 2015 European Games was held from 16 to 19 June 2015 at the Tofiq Bahramov Stadium in Baku, Azerbaijan. One of five events comprising the inaugural European Games' archery programme, it featured a total of 62 archers from 30 different nations.

Karina Winter of Germany won the gold medal, defeating the reigning world champion Maja Jager of Denmark in the final. Spain's Alicia Marín won the bronze medal ahead of Greece's Evangelia Psarra.

Background

Qualification

See main article: Archery at the 2015 European Games – Qualification. Qualification for the European Games took place at the European Archery Championships in Echmiadzin, Armenia in July 2014 and at a final qualifying tournament held during the European Grand Prix in Marathon, Greece in March 2015. As the host nation, Azerbaijan automatically qualified a maximum three female archers for the Games.[1] The quota place won by Kosovo marked their first appearance as an independent entity in the women's individual event, having been accepted as a full member of the International Olympic Committee at the end of 2014.[2]

Format

Schedule

DateTimeStage
4 Tuesday, 16 June 2015 14:00-16:00 Ranking round
7 Friday, 19 June 2015 09:00-12:30
14:00-17:30
1/32 elimination round
9 Sunday, 21 June 2015 09:00-12:30 1/16 elimination round
14:00-18:15 1/8 elimination round
Quarter-finals
Semi-finals
Bronze medal match
Gold medal match
Source:[3]

Report

The Azerbaijani team was forced to make a late change after injury forced Sugrakhanim Mugabilzada to pull out of the Games. 41-year-old Leila Fazilova was initially announced as her replacement, but Reuters reported on 13 June she had voluntarily decided to withdraw amid claims of nepotism, her husband holding the position of assistant team coach of the Azerbaijani squad. Yaylagul Ramazanova was subsequently called up as the team's third member just three days before the beginning of the competition.[4]

On 18 June, the day before the beginning of the elimination rounds, the Dutch Olympic Committee announced that Shireen-Zoë de Vries was to return to the Netherlands due to from illness and would take no further part in the competition. The following day Kosovoan archer Lirije Sahiti also withdrew from the opening elimination round after falling ill.[5] [6] Their respective opponents Miriam Alarcon and Natalia Valeeva were thereby given a bye to the second round.

Sartori and Tonetta, who had already won gold medals in the women's team event, each progressed to the 1/8 elimination round to face German opposition, with Sartori meeting Richter and Tonetta facing top seed Unruh. Valeeva, the third member of the victorious Italian women's team and the winner of the gold medal in the mixed team event, did not progress beyond the 1/16 elimination round, losing to Yuliya Lobzhenidze of Georgia in four sets.[7]

Results

Ranking round

Key Advanced to 1/16 elimination round
Advanced to 1/32 elimination round
RankArcherHalfScore
1st2nd
1 3323306622610
2 3293286572710
3 327326653253
4 322331653226
5 324326650223
6 317331648258
7 320327647227
8 323324647204
9 322324646236
10 321323644217
11 318326644213
12 3203226422210
13 319323642216
14 324316640184
15 3213196401710
16 320317637195
17 321316637185
18 314322636239
19 313323636213
20 307329636195
21 318318636174
22 312323635175
23 320315635164
24 316318634154
25 318315633144
26 315315630205
27 312318630195
28 317313630162
29 319310629207
30 307322629207
31 314315629194
32 315313628257
33 312316628194
34 309318627166
35 316311627165
36 313313626153
37 317306623174
38 320303623141
39 311312623122
40 314307621174
41 307314621155
42 305314619152
43 303315618185
44 312306618155
45 308309617146
46 313304617120
47 314301615176
48 310305615174
49 309306615123
50 305306611113
51 304304608124
52 2943106041710
53 293311604152
54 302302604113
55 303298601144
56 302298600175
57 304292596163
58 302292594116
59 30428959391
60 300286586143
61 295287582102
62 22422244610
Source:[8]

Elimination rounds

Section 4

Note: An asterisk (*) denotes a win from a one-arrow shoot-off
Source:[9]

Finals

Source:[9]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Qualification System. World Archery Europe. 19 January 2015. 4 September 2019.
  2. Web site: Italian and Dutch teams secure spots as last quota places for Baku 2015 assigned. World Archery. 27 March 2015. 4 September 2019.
  3. Web site: Archery at the Baku 2015 European Games Factsheet. World Archery Europe. 10 June 2016. 4 September 2019.
  4. Web site: Azeri archer withdraws from team amid nepotism allegations. Reuters. Karolos. Grohmann. 13 June 2015. 4 September 2019.
  5. Web site: Handboogschutter de Vries naar huis. Dutch. Archer de Vries going home. Dutch Olympic Committee*Dutch Sports Federation. 18 June 2015. 4 September 2019.
  6. Web site: Lirije Sahiti dorëzon meçin ndaj Natalie Valeeva për shkaqe shëndetësore. Lirije Sahiti hands over the match to Natalie Valeeva for health reasons. Kosovo Olympic Committee. G.. Kosumi. 19 June 2015. 4 September 2019.
  7. Web site: Italy's Archery golden girls face in-form Germans. https://web.archive.org/web/20150623062226/http://www.baku2015.com/news/article/italian-archery-medallists-face-form-germans-48928.html. usurped. 23 June 2015. Baku 2015. Baku European Games Organizing Committee. 21 June 2015. 4 September 2019.
  8. Web site: European Games 2015 Recurve Women Qualification Round Results. World Archery Europe. 16 June 2015. 4 September 2019.
  9. Web site: European Games 2015 Recurve Women Results Brackets. World Archery Europe. 21 June 2015. 3 September 2019.