Para archery has been integral to the Paralympic Movement since its beginnings, when the sport was used as a rehabilitation tool for injured veterans at Stoke Mandeville Hospital.
It has been present on the programme of every Paralympic Games since the event began in Rome in 1960.
- VENUE: SAMBODROMO
- DATES: 10-17 SEPTEMBER
- NUMBER OF ATHLETES (TOTAL): 137 / 40 COUNTRIES
- NUMBER OF EUROPEAN ATHLETES: 62 / 19 COUNTRIES
- BIGGEST COUNTRY: PR CHINA with 12 archers
- BIGGEST EUROPEAN COUNTRY: GREAT BRITAIN with 11 archers
- NUMBER OF MEDALS: 9 (MEN’S, WOMEN’S AND MIXED TEAM COMPETITIONS IN RECURVE OPEN, COMPOUND OPEN AND W1 DIVISIONS)
Since the London 2012 Paralympic Games, the classification classes have been changed. (The alteration came into affect on 1 April 2014.)
FACTS
1) Matt Stutzman is one of the athletes to watch at the Paralympic Games. A successful compound archer, Matt was born with no arms – making witnessing him shoot out the middle, holding his bow with his foot, incredibly impressive.
2) Mixed team events make their Paralympic debut at Rio 2016, replacing three-athlete team competitions included at prior Games. Mixed teams are made up of one man and one woman from the same nation, shooting in the same division.
3) Zahra Nemati, a London 2012 Paralympic Champion, shot at the Olympic Games in Rio – and has returned for the Paralympics. She’s competed on the Hyundai Archery World Cup circuit in recent years, rather than at para archery events, so isn’t world-ranked highly – but won the Asian Para Championships in late 2015.
SCHEDULE
10 September: Ranking round
11 September: Recurve open mixed team eliminations and finals
12 September: Compound open mixed team eliminations and finals
13 September: Recurve men open eliminations and finals
14 September: Compound men open eliminations and finals
15 September: Recurve women open eliminations and finals
16 September: Compound women open and W1 men eliminations and finals
17 September: W1 women and W1 mixed team eliminations and finals
CLASSES & CLASSIFICATIONS
Compound open: Like recurve open athletes, compound open athletes have impairment in either the top or bottom halves of their body, as a rule. They compete from a wheelchair, stool or standing using a standard compound bow, which conforms to World Archery rules.
Recurve open: As a rule, recurve open athletes have impairment in either the top or bottom halves of their body. They compete from a wheelchair, stool or standing using a standard recurve bow, which conforms to World Archery rules.
W1: Athletes have impairment in both the top and bottom of their bodies, compete while seated in a wheelchair, and may shoot with either recurve or compound bows – with slightly modified rules.
Athletes using recurve bows may also use mechanical release aids, while all bows are limited to 45lb in peak draw weight and may not have peep sights, magnifying scopes or levelling bubbles.
EYES ON…
The top three world-ranked archers, in each division, as athletes arrive in the Sambodromo ahead of the Olympic competition.
COMPOUND MEN OPEN
- 1. ALBERTO SIMONELLI, ITALY
- 2. MARCEL PAVLIK, SLOVAKIA
- 3. JOHN STUBBS, GREAT BRITAIN
COMPOUND WOMEN OPEN
- 1. ELEONORA SARTI, ITALY
- 2. ZANDRA REPPE, SWEDEN
- 3. STEPANIDA ARTAKHINOVA, RUSSIA (NOT PRESENT)
RECURVE MEN OPEN
- 1. ERIC BENNETT, USA
- 2. SERGEY KHUTAKOV, RUSSIA (NOT PRESENT)
- 3. BATO TSYDENDORZHIEV, RUSSIA (NOT PRESENT)
RECURVE WOMEN OPEN
- 1. SVETLANA BARANTSEVA, RUSSIA (NOT PRESENT)
- 2. MILENA OLSZEWSKA, POLAND
- 3. ELISABETTA MIJNO, ITALY
W1 MEN
- 1. DAVID DRAHONINSKY, CZECH REPUBLIC
- 2. JOHN WALKER, GREAT BRITAIN
- 3. OMER ASIK, TURKEY
W1 WOMEN
- 1. JESSICA STRETTON, GREAT BRITAIN
- 2. JO FRITH, GREAT BRITAIN
- 3. VICKY JENKINS, GREAT BRITAIN
Live results, news, photogallery, video, etc HERE !
Official website (results and much more)
IPC website (news, info, photos and live streaming coverage)
article by World Archery