2008 Archery World Cup

The 2008 Archery World Cup was the 3rd 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.

Competition rules and scoring

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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:

Individual scoring

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Position Points[3]
1st place 25
2nd place 21
3rd place 18
4th place 15
5th place 13
6th place 12
7th place 11
8th place 10
9th–16th place 5

Calendar

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Stage Location
1   Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
2   Poreč, Croatia
3   Antalya Centennial Archery Field, Antalya, Turkey
4   Boé, France
Final   Lausanne, Switzerland

Results

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Recurve

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Men's individual

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Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   Ilario di Buo   Kuo Cheng-wei   Baljinima Tsyrempilov [1]
2 19 April   Poreč   Romain Girouille   Rahul Banerjee   Im Dong-hyun [2]
3 31 May   Antalya   Im Dong-hyun   Brady Ellison   Park Kyung-mo [3]
4 28 June   Boé   Viktor Ruban   Li Wenquan   Park Kyung-mo [4]
Final 27 September   Lausanne   Im Dong-hyun   Viktor Ruban   Romain Girouille [5]

Women's individual

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Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   Natalia Valeeva   Natalya Erdyniyeva   Bérengère Schuh [6]
2 19 April   Poreč   Yun Ok-hee   Justyna Mospinek   Park Sung-hyun [7]
3 31 May   Antalya   Yun Ok-hee   Victoriya Koval   Park Sung-hyun [8]
4 28 June   Boé   Park Sung-hyun   Yun Ok-hee   Zhang Juanjuan [9]
Final 27 September   Lausanne   Justyna Mospinek   Park Sung-hyun   Yun Ok-hee [10]

Men's team

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Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   Chinese Taipei   Australia   Italy [11]
2 19 April   Poreč   Chinese Taipei   Italy   India [12]
3 30 May   Antalya   India   Malaysia   Chinese Taipei [13]
4 28 June   Boé   South Korea   Malaysia   Russia [14]

Women's team

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Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   United Kingdom   Italy   Georgia [15]
2 19 April   Poreč   China   Poland   South Korea [16]
3 30 May   Antalya   South Korea   Chinese Taipei   China [17]
4 28 June   Boé   South Korea   Italy   United Kingdom [18]

Compound

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Men's individual

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Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   Dave Cousins   Robert Timms   Patrick Coghlan [19]
2 19 April   Poreč   Sergio Pagni   Roberval dos Santos   Dietmar Trillus [20]
3 31 May   Antalya   Sergio Pagni   Dejan Sitar   Peter Elzinga [21]
4 28 June   Boé   Patrick Coghlan   Kevin Tataryn   Martin Damsbo [22]
Final 27 September   Lausanne   Dietmar Trillus   Patrizio Hofer   Patrick Coghlan [23]

Women's individual

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Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   Jamie van Natta   Ivana Buden   Albina Loginova [24]
2 19 April   Poreč   Amandine Bouillot   Nichola Simpson   Andrea Gales [25]
3 31 May   Antalya   Eugenia Salvi   Jamie van Natta   Ivana Buden [26]
4 28 June   Boé   Luzmary Guedez   Nichola Simpson   Jamie van Natta [27]
Final 27 September   Lausanne   Jamie van Natta   Nichola Simpson   Amandine Bouillot [28]

Men's team

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Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   United States   Australia   Mexico [29]
2 19 April   Poreč   Italy   Sweden   United Kingdom [30]
3 30 May   Antalya   Italy   United States   Russia [31]
4 28 June   Boé   France   Australia   Canada [32]

Women's team

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Stage Date Location       Ref.
1 5 April   Santo Domingo   Russia   Germany   Mexico [33]
2 19 April   Poreč   United Kingdom   France   Belgium [34]
3 30 May   Antalya   Russia   United Kingdom   Venezuela [35]
4 28 June   Boé   France   Greece   Russia [36]

Medals table

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RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  South Korea82717
2  Italy73111
3  United States4318
4  France4138
5  Great Britain2439
6  Chinese Taipei2215
7  Russia2158
8  Australia1427
9  Poland1203
  Ukraine1203
11  Canada1124
  China1124
13  India1113
14  Venezuela1012
15  Malaysia0202
16  Croatia0112
17  Brazil0101
  Germany0101
  Greece0101
  Slovenia0101
  Sweden0101
  Switzerland0101
23  Mexico0022
24  Belgium0011
  Denmark0011
  Georgia0011
  Netherlands0011
Totals (27 entries)363636108

Qualification

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Recurve

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Men's individual

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Pos. Name Points[4]        
1.   Park Kyung-mo 51 15 18 18 Q
1.   Im Dong-hyun 51 18 25 8 Q
3.   Viktor Ruban 42 12 5 25 Q
4.   Romain Girouille 39 13 25 1 Q
5.   Jayanta Talukdar 37 6 13 12 12
6.   Rahul Banerjee 36 21 15
7.   Ilario di Buo 31 25 6
8.   Kim Ha-neul 26 2 12 12
8.   Kuo Cheng-wei 26 21 5
10.   Li Wenquan 21 21
10.   Brady Ellison 21 21

Women's individual

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Pos. Name Points[5]        
1.   Yun Ok-hee 71 25 25 21 Q
2.   Park Sung-hyun 61 18 18 25 Q
3.   Natalia Valeeva 53 25 15 13 Q
4.   Justyna Mospinek 37 8 21 8 Q
5.   Joo Hyun-jung 35 13 11 11
6.   Bombayla Devi Laishram 24 4 13 7
7.   Natalya Erdyniyeva 23 21 2
7.   Kwak Ye-ji 23 8 15
9.   Zhang Juanjuan 22 4 18
9.   Bérengère Schuh 22 18 4
9.   Wu Hui-ju 22 10 12

Compound

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Men's individual

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Pos. Name Points[6]        
1.   Sergio Pagni 60 25 25 10 Q
2.   Patrick Coghlan 43 18 25 Q
3.   Patrizio Hofer 42 12 15 15 Q
4.   Dietmar Trillus 41 11 18 12 Q
5.   Roberval dos Santos 35 10 21 4
6.   Peter Elzinga 34 5 18 11
7.   Liam Grimwood 33 15 11 6 7
8.   Robert Timms 32 21 11
9.   Martin Damsbo 30 5 7 18
10.   Kevin Tataryn 29 8 21
10.   Dejan Sitar 29 21 8

Women's individual

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Pos. Name Points[7]        
1.   Jamie van Natta 64 25 3 21 18 Q
2.   Ivana Buden 51 21 12 18 7 Q
3.   Nichola Simpson 47 3 21 5 21 Q
4.   Amandine Bouillot 43 15 25 3 Q
5.   Anna Kazantseva 39 12 12 15
6.   Eugenia Salvi 37 7 25 5
7.   Luzmary Guedez 35 10 25
7.   Sofia Goncharova 35 13 2 10 12
7.   Camilla Sømod 35 12 8 15
10.   Albina Loginova 33 18 7 7 8

Nations ranking

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Pos. Nation Points[8]        
1.   South Korea 454 131 160 163
2.   Italy 430 121 125 123 61
3.   United Kingdom 397 102 157 56 82
4.   Russia 364 119 52 106 87
5.   France 330 74 140 116
6.   India 257 70 91 84 12
7.   Australia 236 118 20 29 69
8.   Chinese Taipei 233 83 57 93
9.   United States 208 90 3 80 35
10.   China 170 55 26 89

World Cup Final

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Recurve

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Men's individual

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Semifinals Finals
      
1   Im Dong-hyun 108
4   Romain Girouille 105
1   Im Dong-hyun 112
3   Viktor Ruban 110
3   Viktor Ruban 109
2   Park Kyung-mo 108 Third place
4   Romain Girouille 1099
2   Park Kyung-mo 1098

Women's individual

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Semifinals Finals
      
1   Yun Ok-hee 110
4   Justyna Mospinek 111
4   Justyna Mospinek 109
2   Park Sung-hyun 107
3   Natalia Valeeva 103
2   Park Sung-hyun 107 Third place
1   Yun Ok-hee 113
3   Natalia Valeeva 105

Compound

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Men's individual

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Semifinals Finals
      
1   Sergio Pagni 1149
4   Dietmar Trillus 11410
4   Dietmar Trillus 11210
3   Patrizio Hofer 1129
3   Patrizio Hofer 114
2   Patrick Coghlan 113 Third place
1   Sergio Pagni 1159
2   Patrick Coghlan 11510

Women's individual

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Semifinals Finals
      
1   Jamie van Natta 10810
4   Amandine Bouillot 1088
1   Jamie van Natta 114
3   Nichola Simpson 112
3   Nichola Simpson 116
2   Ivana Buden 108 Third place
4   Amandine Bouillot 114
2   Ivana Buden 110

References

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  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 2006 - Men's Individual Recurve Results" (PDF). FITA. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  5. ^ "WORLD CUP 2011 Women's recurve results" (PDF). FITA. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  6. ^ "WORLD CUP 2008 - Men's individual compound results)" (PDF). FITA. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  7. ^ "WORLD CUP 2011 Women's compound results" (PDF). FITA. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  8. ^ "WORLD CUP 2011 - Nations Ranking" (PDF). FITA. Retrieved 22 May 2013.