Archery at the 2015 Pan American Games – Women's individual explained

Event:Women's individual archery
Games:2015
Venue:Varsity Stadium[1]
Dates:14 – 18 July 2015
Competitors:32
Nations:13
Win Label:Winning score
Gold:Khatuna Lorig
Goldnoc:USA
Silvernoc:COL
Bronze:Karla Hinojosa
Bronzenoc:MEX
Prev:2011
Next:2019

The women's individual archery event at the 2015 Pan American Games was held from 14 to 18 July 2015 at the Varsity Stadium in Toronto, Canada. One of five archery events as part of the 2015 Pan American sporting programme, it was the tenth time the women's individual recurve competition had been contested at the Games. Thirty-two archers from thirteen nations qualified for the event.

The defending champion from the 2011 Pan American Games was Alejandra Valencia of Mexico. As she had achieved four years previously, Valencia was seeded first following the 72-arrow ranking round but was unexpectedly defeated by Colombia's Maira Sepulveda in the 1/8 elimination round. Five-time Olympic athlete Khatuna Lorig of the United States emerged as champion, defeating Colombia's Ana Rendón in the final in four sets to take her first Pan American gold medal.[2] Valencia's Mexican teammates Aída Román and Karla Hinojosa contested the bronze medal match, Hinojosa defeating the 2012 Olympic silver medalist to take third place.

Background

See main article: Archery at the Pan American Games. An individual archery event for women has been a part of the Pan American Games programme since the sport's debut in 1979 in San Juan, Puerto Rico. The United States was the dominant nation in terms of gold medals won in the event, and at the previous Pan American Games held in 2011 in Guadalajara, Mexico, Alejandra Valencia became the second archer from outside the United States to win the women's individual gold medal, following Yaremis Pérez Ruiz of Cuba in 1999.[3] Valencia's victory over the American Miranda Leek four years previously also marked the first Mexican win in a Pan American archery event. Her compatriot Aída Román won the bronze medal ahead of Venezuela's Leidys Brito.[4]

Qualification

See main article: Archery at the 2015 Pan American Games – Qualification. There were thirty-two places available for the women's individual event, with the host nation Canada automatically receiving three spots. Qualification for the remaining twenty-nine positions took place over three tournaments: the Pan American Olympic Festival held in July 2014, the Pan American Championships in October 2014, and a final qualification round in March 2015.[5] [6] Eight nations (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Mexico, the United States, and Venezuela) also successfully qualified the maximum berth of three archers, with the Dominican Republic qualifying two and Costa Rica, El Salvador, and Guatemala qualifying one archer apiece.[7]

Mexico selected the defending bronze medalist from the 2015 Pan American Games, and silver medalist from the 2012 Summer Olympics, Aída Román to spearhead their three-member team, with defending champion Alejandra Valencia and Karla Hinojosa rounding out the squad.[8] The United States entered a team of mixed experience, pairing five-time Olympian Khatuna Lorig alongside Ariel Gibilaro and La Nola Pritchard, who both made their Pan American Games debut. The head of the United States national archery organisation Denise Parker, herself the 1987 and 1991 Pan American Games individual women's champion, said 2015 represented a "season of change" in the United States archery team with the selection of newcomers in both the women's and men's teams. She however pointed to the a bronze medal won at the 2015 Archery World Cup stage held in Shanghai in May as proof of the women's potential for success.[9]

Georcy-Stéphanie Picard and Virginie Chenier were selected as part of the Canadian team after finishing first and second in the Canadian national trials, partnering Kateri Vrakking who finished third.[10] The 41-year old Vrakking, a five-time national champion, had been initially passed over as Canada's third entry with Archery Canada, the national archery organisation, instead selecting as their third representative nineteen year-old Shannon Davidson, who had finished fifth in the national trials. Following accusations of age discrimination, which Archery Canada denied, and threats of legal action, Davidson's selection was reversed and Vrakking was named to the team.[11] [12]

Yesenia Valencia was chosen to represent Guatemala at their maiden appearance at a Pan American Games women's archery event, having won a position in the final qualification round in March 2015.[13]

Format

Schedule

DateTimeRound
Day 5Tuesday July 14, 201510:00 Ranking round
Day 6Wednesday July 15, 2015 10:00 1/16 elimination round
11:001/8 elimination round
11:30Quarterfinals
Day 9Saturday July 18, 201510:00Semi-finals
11:29Bronze medal match
11:47Gold medal match
All times are North American Central Standard Time .
Source:[14]

Report

Pre-event

Prior to the beginning of the competition, Mexican sports newspaper Esto reported that reigning champion Alejandra Valencia expressed doubts that she would retain her title to become the first back-to-back Pan American female individual archery champion. Valencia stated instead that her target was simply to perform well and beat her own personal records. In preparation for the Games, the Mexican archery squad had pitted the women's team of Valencia, Aída Román and Karla Hinojosa against the men's team of Juan René Serrano, Luis Álvarez and Ernesto Boardman and held practice rounds in the rain.[15] Román, who had been named by Mexican news agency Notimex as the world's best archer of 2014, aimed to improve on her bronze medal achievement in Guadalajara four years earlier.[16]

Ranking round

The event commenced with the ranking round on the morning of 14 July amid spells of light rain and gusts of wind. Alejandra Valencia topped the ranking round for the second Pan American Games in a row, heading the table on 655 points.[17] Fellow Mexican Aída Román finished in second with an identical score of 655 points, but was seeded second after shooting one fewer arrow inside the central 10 ring. Khatuna Lorig and Karla Hinojosa both tied on 651 points to rank third and fourth respectively.

Kateri Vrakking was the highest scoring Canadian archer, finishing with the 14th seed on 612 points.[12] Vrakking's teammates Georcy-Stéphanie Picard and Virginie Chenier were not far behind, ending the round 15th and 18th respectively and setting up an all-Canadian tie in the first elimination round. Vrakking expressed satisfaction with her performance, stating she was feeling confident ahead of the knock-out rounds after finding her rhythm. She added that she was unperturbed by the intermittent drizzle or the home crowd in attendance, which Justin Skinner of the Toronto newspaper The City Centre Mirror described as "sizeable" despite the weather.[18]

Elimination rounds

Cool and windy conditions continued into the morning of 15 July, which proved challenging for many of the archers. Khatuna Lorig began by defeating Elena Abullerade in the opening round, ending El Salvador's participation in the event.[19] Argentina's trio of Ximena Mendiberry, Fernanda Faisal, and Florencia Lenhold Juárez were all also eliminated in the first round.[20] In the all-Canadian affair between Picard and Chenier, Picard came back from two sets down to force and ultimately win the subsequent one-arrow shoot-off, placing her arrow in the 8-ring to Chenier's attempt in the 7-ring. As the two both belonged to the same archery club and shared the same coach, Chenier described the match as "like training, but with a little more people and more nervousness". Despite her loss, Chenier expressed satisfaction with her shooting, and the pair's coach Sylvain Cadieux praised their performances, saying they each knew what to expect from one another and that he was pleased that the match came down to a shoot-off.[21]

The 1/8 elimination round, the second knock-out round of the competition, began with top seed Valencia losing in five sets to Colombia's Maira Sepulveda, who finished 16th in the ranking round, while Valencia's Mexican teammates Román and Hinojoa defeated Picard and Sarah Nikitin of Brazil respectively to advance to the quarter-finals. Picard said afterwards that she felt she had played better than in her earlier match against Chenier, but was unable to fully master the gusts of winds that pushed her arrows towards the right, bowing out of the tournament to Román in straight sets.[21] Román admitted that it took time for her to adapt to the 14 °C air temperature, but was able to play her best towards the end of the day's session, which concluded with the quarter-finals at 11am. Román defeated Cuba's Maydenia Sarduy to progress to the semi-finals to face Khatuna Lorig, while Hinojosa beat Colombia's Natalia Sanchez to face off against Sanchez's compatriot Ana Rendón in the other last four contest, a result that exceeded her own expectations.[22]

The final rounds of the competition began three days later on the morning of 18 July with the two semi-final matches. In the first match Rendón was too strong for Hinojosa, the Mexican failing to land an arrow in the target's central 10 ring as the Colombian won in straight sets to advance to the final. She was joined in the gold medal match by Lorig, whose match with Román was a tight affair which necessitated a one-arrow shoot-off after the two could not be split after five sets. Lorig's winning shot was determined to be closer to the centre of the target by a matter of centimetres and was thus declared the winner. Notimex described the result as a "bitter déjà vu" for Román, who had experienced a loss in similar circumstances in the final of the women's individual event at the 2012 Summer Olympics against South Korea's Ki Bo-bae, in which Román finished with the silver medal.[23]

Medal matches

The matches determining the medal winners commenced immediately after the semi-final encounters. As the two losing archers from the semi-finals, Hinojosa and Román met to decide the bronze medal match. Hinojosa's win over Román in five sets was considered a surprise by Notimex,[23] and Esto characterised the encounter as an apprentice winning against a master in their report of the match, highlighting that Hinojosa on her Pan American Games debut overcame her vastly more experienced and Olympic medalist teammate.[24] In an interview following the match Hinojosa dedicated her bronze medal victory to her parents and her friends and set her sights on securing a spot for the 2015 World Archery Championships. She also expressed her admiration for Román, stating that defeating Román gave her motivation to put in more effort, "because Aída will never give up."[24]

In the gold medal final Lorig won comfortably over Rendón, earning the United States their first and only archery title at the 2015 Games.[25] Nick Butler of Inside the Games called her win "the biggest of her illustrious career",[26] which came on a day that saw a flurry of gold medals for the United States and helped them topple Canada from the head of the Pan American Games medal table.[27] Rendon's silver medal was the eighth achieved by Colombia at the 2015 Pan American Games and her second after her gold medal victory in the women's team event.[28]

Results

Ranking round

RankArcherHalfScore
1st2nd
1323332655266
2324331655253
3330321651246
4316335651217
5320326646215
6318328646214
7324315639194
83143166302110
9317313630179
10313317630145
11307316623185
12309310619131
13311307618194
14309303612123
15299310609122
16305296601112
17299301600153
18293307600123
19306291597141
2029929559481
2130029159175
2229329759075
23311276587156
2430028558561
25282299581113
26295284579113
27285292577103
2827928656562
2929926556451
30274289563122
3127326253593
3225124049141
Source:[29]

Elimination rounds

Bottom half

Note: An asterisk (*) denotes a win from a one-arrow shoot-off
Source:
[30]

Finals

Note: An asterisk (*) denotes a win from a one-arrow shoot-off
Source:
[30]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Venue Guide: Varsity Stadium will host archery at TO2015. Canadian Olympic Committee. Callum. Ng. 11 June 2015. 17 September 2019.
  2. Web site: 'Hunger Games' Trainer Takes Gold at Pan American Games. Times of San Diego. Chris. Jennewien. 19 July 2015. 28 July 2019.
  3. Book: Olderr, Steven. The Pan American Games/Los Juegos Panamericanos: A Statistical History. McFarland & Company. 1–6. 2003. 0786412852.
  4. Web site: 22 October 2011 - VALENCIA and ELLISON: Queen and King in Guadalajara. World Archery. Sergio. Font. 24 October 2011. 20 September 2019.
  5. Web site: PanAm Toronto 2015 Qualification System: Archery. World Archery Americas. 2014. 17 September 2019.
  6. Web site: WAA Information Bulletin 65/2014. World Archery Americas. 23 October 2014. 17 September 2019.
  7. Web site: WAA Information Bulletin 15/2015. World Archery Americas. 18 March 2015. 17 September 2019.
  8. Web site: Medallista olímpica y mundial Román encabeza selección hacia Toronto. Spanish. Olympic and world medalist Román leads Toronto team. 20 Minutos. 20 Minutos Editora, SL. 1 June 2015. 17 September 2019.
  9. Web site: Pan Am Games Keep Special Meaning For USA Archery CEO Denise Parker. USA Archery. Doug. Williams. 8 July 2015. 17 September 2019.
  10. Web site: Virginie Chenier représente le Canada aux Jeux panaméricains. French. Virginie Chenier represents Canada at the Pan Am Games. Courrier Laval. Sylvain. Lamarre. 13 July 2015. 16 September 2019.
  11. Web site: Archer's road to Pan Ams not straight as an arrow. Toronto Star. Torstar. Alex. Ballingall. 11 June 2015. 16 September 2019.
  12. Web site: Pan Am archers hit mark with row and arrows. Toronto Star. Torstar. Paul. Hunter. 14 July 2015. 16 September 2019.
  13. Web site: Tiro con Arco hará su debút en Toronto 2015. Spanish. Archery will debut in Toronto 2015. República. 10 July 2015. 17 September 2019.
  14. Web site: Archery Competition Schedule. Toronto 2015. 13 July 2015. 28 July 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20150722220354/http://results.toronto2015.org/IRS/resTO2015/pdf/TO2015/AR/TO2015_AR_C08_AR0000000.pdf. 22 July 2015.
  15. Web site: Alejandra Valencia asegura que los atletas no piensan en dinero. Spanish. Alejandra Valencia says that athletes do not think about money. Esto. Organización Editorial Mexicana. Maria. Vega. 8 July 2015. 17 September 2019.
  16. Web site: La mexicana Aida Román: mejor arquera del mundo en 2014. Spanish. Mexican Aida Román: best archer in the world in 2014. Expansión. Grupo Expansión. Notimex. 7 February 2015. 17 September 2019.
  17. News: Gran inicio de Alejandra. Spanish. Alejandra's great start. Expreso. José Luis. Sibaja. 3C. 15 July 2015. 18 September 2019.
  18. Web site: U of T's Varsity Centre Stadium hosts archery competitions. Toronto.com. Metroland Media Toronto. Justin. Skinner. 14 July 2015. 18 September 2019.
  19. Web site: Elena Abullarade dio la pelea. Spanish. Elena Abullarade put up a fight. El Diario de Hoy. Editorial Altaminaro Madriz. Raúl. Recinos. 15 July 2015. 20 September 2019.
  20. Web site: El remo le dio más medallas a la Argentina, aunque sin el brillo dorado de hace cuatro años. Spanish. Rowing gives more medals to Argentina, although without the golden glow of four years ago. La Nación. 15 July 2015. 19 September 2019.
  21. Web site: Georcy-Stéphanie Thiffeault Picard victorieuse contre sa compatriote Virginie Chenier. French. Georcy-Stéphanie Thiffeault Picard victorious against compatriot Virginie Chenier. RDS. 15 July 2015. 21 September 2019.
  22. Web site: Román e Hinojosa avanzan. Spanish. Roman and Hinojosa advance. Milenio. Carlos. Cruz. 15 July 2015. 21 September 2019.
  23. Web site: Arquera Karla Hinojosa sorprende a Aída Román y conquista bronce en JP. Spanish. Arquera Karla Hinojosa sorprende a Aída Román y conquista bronce en JP. 20 Minutos. Notimex. 18 July 2015. 21 September 2019.
  24. Web site: Karla Hinojosa, inspirada por Aída Román, su rival y gran amiga. Spanish. Karla Hinojosa, inspired by Aída Román, her rival and great friend. Esto. Organización Editorial Mexicana. Miguel. Ángel García. 18 July 2015. 21 September 2019.
  25. Web site: Alvarez, Lorig win Pan American individual golds. World Archery. Chris. Wells. 19 July 2015. 22 September 2019.
  26. Web site: Alvarez runs out of time before recovering to complete Toronto 2015 archery double. Inside the Games. Dunsar Media Company. Nick. Butler. 18 July 2015. 21 September 2019.
  27. Web site: U.S. bumps Canada from top of Pan Am medals table. Reuters. Steve. Keating. 19 July 2015. 20 September 2019.
  28. Web site: Ana María Rendón gana plata para Colombia en tiro con arco. Spanish. Ana María Rendón wins silver for Colombia in archery. Diario AS. 18 July 2015. 20 September 2019.
  29. Web site: Toronto 2015 Pan Am Games Recurve Women Qualification Round. World Archery Americas. 14 July 2015. 11 September 2019.
  30. Web site: Toronto 2015 Pan Am Games Recurve Women Results Brackets. World Archery Americas. 18 July 2015. 11 September 2019.