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Archery at the 2016 Summer Olympics – Qualification

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There were 128 qualifying places available for archery at the 2016 Summer Olympics: 64 for men and 64 for women.

Each National Olympic Committee (NOC) is permitted to enter a maximum of six competitors, three per gender. NOCs that qualify teams for a particular gender were able to send a three-member team to the team event and also have each member compete in the individual event. There were 12 team spots for each gender, thus qualifying 36 individuals through team qualification. All other NOCs may earn a maximum of one quota place per gender for the individual events.[1]

Six places are reserved for Brazil as the host nation, and a further six will be decided by the Tripartite Commission. The remaining 116 places are then allocated through a qualification process, in which archers earned quota places for their respective NOCs, though not necessarily for themselves.

To be eligible to participate in the Olympic Games after the NOC has obtained a quota place, all archers must have achieved the following minimum qualification score (MQS):

  • Men: 70m round of 630
  • Women: 70m round of 600

The MQS must have been achieved between 26 July 2015 (starting at the 2015 World Archery Championships) and 11 July 2016 at a registered World Archery event.

Summary

[edit]
Nation Men Women Total
Individual Team Individual Team Athletes
 Australia 3 X 1 4
 Austria 1 1
 Azerbaijan 1 1
 Bangladesh 1 1
 Belarus 1 1
 Belgium 1 1
 Bhutan 1 1
 Brazil 3 X 3 X 6
 Canada 1 1 2
 Chile 1 1
 China 3 X 3 X 6
 Colombia 1 3 X 4
 Cuba 1 1
 Dominican Republic 1 1
 Egypt 1 1 2
 Estonia 1 1
 Fiji 1 1
 Finland 1 1 2
 France 3 X 3
 Georgia 3 X 3
 Germany 1 1 2
 Greece 1 1
 Great Britain 1 1 2
 India 1 3 X 4
 Indonesia 3 X 1 4
 Iran 1 1
 Italy 3 X 3 X 6
 Ivory Coast 1 1
 Japan 1 3 X 4
 Kazakhstan 1 1 2
 Kenya 1 1
 Libya 1 1
 Malawi 1 1
 Malaysia 3 X 3
 Mexico 1 3 X 4
 Moldova 1 1
 Mongolia 1 1
 Myanmar 1 1
 Nepal 1 1
 Netherlands 3 X 3
 North Korea 1 1
 Norway 1 1
 Poland 1 1
 Russia 3 X 3
 Slovakia 1 1 2
 South Korea 3 X 3 X 6
 Spain 3 X 1 4
 Sweden 1 1
 Chinese Taipei 3 X 3 X 6
 Thailand 1 1
 Tonga 1 1 2
 Turkey 1 1 2
 Ukraine 1 3 X 4
 United States 3 X 1 4
 Venezuela 1 1 2
 Zimbabwe 1 1
Total: 56 NOCs 64 12 64 12 128

Timeline

[edit]
Event Date Venue
2015 World Archery Championships July 27 – August 2, 2015 Denmark Copenhagen
2015 Asian Archery Championships November 1–9, 2015 Thailand Bangkok
2016 African Archery Championships January 28–31, 2016 Namibia Windhoek
2016 Oceanian Archery Championships April 8–16, 2016 Tonga Nuku'alofa
2016 Pan American Archery Qualifier[2] May 8–9, 2016 Colombia Medellín
2016 European Archery Championships May 23–29, 2016 United Kingdom Nottingham
2016 Archery World Cup Stage June 13–18, 2016 Turkey Antalya

Men's events

[edit]
Event Location Athletes
per NOC
Total places Qualified
Team
Host nation 3 3  Brazil
2015 World Archery Championships Denmark Copenhagen 3 24  Australia
 China
 Italy
 South Korea
 Netherlands
 Spain
 Chinese Taipei
 United States
2016 Archery World Cup Stage Turkey Antalya 3 9  Indonesia
 France
 Malaysia
Individual
2015 World Archery Championships Denmark Copenhagen 1 7*  Canada
 Colombia
 Germany
 India
 Japan
 Ukraine
 Venezuela
2015 Asian Archery Championships Thailand Bangkok[3] 1 2*  Mongolia
 Kazakhstan
2016 African Archery Championships Namibia Windhoek 1 3  Egypt
 South Africa[b]
 Zimbabwe
 Ivory Coast
2016 Oceanian Championships Tonga Nuku'alofa 1 2  Fiji
 Tonga
2016 Pan American Championships Colombia Medellín 1 3  Mexico
 El Salvador[a]
 Chile
 Cuba
2016 European Championships United Kingdom Nottingham 1 3  Turkey
 Finland
 Great Britain
2016 Archery World Cup Stage Turkey Antalya 1 5*  Belarus
 Belgium
 Norway
 Slovakia
 Thailand
Tripartite Commission 1 3  Libya
 Malawi
 Nepal
Total 64

* Eight individual spots were initially available at the World Championships and three more at the Asian Championships. Those spots taken by Indonesia and Malaysia later won team places in the team recurve at the Antalya leg of the Archery World Cup, releasing two further individual quota places to be awarded in the same meet.

Women's events

[edit]
Event Location Athletes
per NOC
Total places Qualified
Team
Host nation 3 3  Brazil
2015 World Archery Championships Denmark Copenhagen 3 24  China
 Colombia
 Georgia
 India
 Japan
 South Korea
 Mexico
 Russia
2016 Archery World Cup Stage Turkey Antalya 3 9  Ukraine
 Italy
 Chinese Taipei
Individual
2015 World Archery Championships Denmark Copenhagen 1 5*  Austria
 Germany
 Indonesia
 Poland
 United States
2015 Asian Archery Championships Thailand Bangkok[3] 1 3  North Korea
 Iran
 Kazakhstan
2016 African Archery Championships Namibia Windhoek 1 2  Ivory Coast
 Egypt
 Kenya
2016 Oceania Championships Tonga Nuku'alofa 1 2  Australia
 Tonga
2016 Pan American Championships Colombia Medellín 1 3  Venezuela
 Canada
 Dominican Republic
2016 European Championships United Kingdom Nottingham 1 3  Turkey
 Slovakia
 Azerbaijan
2016 Archery World Cup Stage Turkey Antalya 1 7*  Estonia
 Finland
 Great Britain
 Moldova
 Spain
 Sweden
 Greece
Tripartite Commission 1 3  Bangladesh
 Bhutan
 Myanmar
Total 64

* Eight individual spots were initially available at the World Championships. Three of those spots were taken by Ukraine, Italy, and Chinese Taipei. Those NOCs later won team places in the team recurve at the Antalya leg of the Archery World Cup, releasing three further individual quota places to be awarded in the same meet.

Notes

[edit]
  • a El Salvador's Óscar Ticas, who secured a quota place with a fourth-place finish in the World Archery Americas CQT, was suspended after his urine samples from a Guatemala World Ranking Event in March 2016 revealed the presence of a banned substance. As a result, El Salvador's Olympic license was redistributed to Cuba's Adrian Puentes.[4]
  • b The South African Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee's policy is only to take up Olympic qualification spots earned in global competitions rather than African or regional events. Thus Terence van Moerkerken's place was vacated and taken by Rene Kouassi of Ivory Coast.[5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Archery Qualification" (PDF). World Archery Federation. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
  2. ^ Results|https://www.worldarchery.sport/competition/16491
  3. ^ a b "First Rio 2016 continental qualifier adds 5 more nations from Asia". World Archery Federation. 8 November 2015. Retrieved 9 November 2015.
  4. ^ "ANNOUNCEMENT: SANCTIONS ISSUED IN TWO DOPING CASES". World Archery Federation. June 12, 2016.
  5. ^ Wells, Chris (30 January 2016). "Egypt Qualifies 2 at Rio 2016 African Qualification Tournament". World Archery. Retrieved 9 August 2016.; "Windhoek 2016 African Archery Championships + CQT". World Archery. Retrieved 9 August 2016.; Wells, Chris (28 July 2016). "#1: Africa". Olympic archery athletes preview. World Archery. Retrieved 9 August 2016.; "RSA Wins a place at the Continental Games to compete in the Olympics, but doesn't qualify". South African National Archery Association. 30 January 2016. Retrieved 9 August 2016.