Archery at the 1984 Summer Olympics

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Archery
at the Games of the XXIII Olympiad
VenueEl Dorado Park
Dates8–11 August 1984
No. of events2 (1 men, 1 women)
Competitors109 from 35 nations
← 1980
1988 →

Archery at the 1984 Summer Olympics was contested in the format used since 1972. There were two events: men's individual and women's individual. Points were in a format called the double FITA round, which included 288 arrows shot over four days at four different distances: 70 meters, 60 meters, 50 meters, 30 meters for women; 90 meters, 70 meters, 50 meters, 30 meters for men. It was the fourth, and last, time that the format was used in Olympic competition.[1]

Neroli Fairhall from New Zealand, who came 35th in the Women's individual event, was the first paraplegic athlete to compete at the Olympic Games.

Medal summary[edit]

Events[edit]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Men's individual
details
Darrell Pace
 United States
Richard McKinney
 United States
Hiroshi Yamamoto
 Japan
Women's individual
details
Seo Hyang-soon
 South Korea
Li Lingjuan
 China
Kim Jin-ho
 South Korea

Medal table[edit]

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 United States (USA)1102
2 South Korea (KOR)1012
3 China (CHN)0101
4 Japan (JPN)0011
Totals (4 entries)2226

Participating nations[edit]

Nation Men's Individual Women's Individual Total
 Australia 1 1 2
 Austria 0 1 1
 Belgium 3 2 5
 Bhutan 3 3 6
 Brazil 1 0 1
 Canada 0 3 3
 China 3 3 6
 Chinese Taipei 1 1 2
 Colombia 1 0 1
 Finland 3 2 5
 France 2 0 2
 Great Britain 3 3 6
 Hong Kong 3 3 6
 Indonesia 2 0 2
 Ireland 0 2 2
 Italy 2 1 3
 Japan 3 2 5
 Luxembourg 2 1 3
 Malta 0 1 1
 Mexico 1 1 2
 Monaco 1 0 1
 Netherlands 1 1 2
 New Zealand 1 2 3
 Norway 1 0 1
 Portugal 1 0 1
 Puerto Rico 1 0 1
 Saudi Arabia 3 0 3
 South Korea 3 3 6
 Spain 2 2 4
 Sweden 3 2 5
 Switzerland 1 2 3
 Thailand 2 0 2
 Turkey 2 0 2
 United States 3 3 6
 West Germany 3 2 5
Total athletes 62 47 109
Total NOCs 31 24 35

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Archery at the 1984 Los Angeles Summer Games". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 28 March 2020.

External links[edit]