11 Countries share the 12 medals in the Team Grand Prix


Recurve Men

Larry Godfrey ofGreat Britainwould have loved to offer himself a gold medal as a present on his 30-year old birthday here inAntalya. Unfortunately for him and his teammates Simon Terry and Alan Wills, they had to face a “rock”, the Japanese team led by the legendary Hiroshi Yamamoto and his always smiling friends Satoshi Kanemura and Ryuichi Moriya. In the very last match of the day, just at the time when the sky was darkening before a rain shower,Japanwas defeatingGreat Britainon the score of 217-214. In the match for the bronze medal,Koreamanaged to beat the Chinese archers (221-218).

 

Recurve Women

The Korean ladies shot the highest score of the final four matches in the team recurve division (even better than their male counterparts!) with another amazing total of 224 out of a possible 240. They are thus adding another gold title to they quiver after they defeated they Asian neighbours from the People’s Republic ofChina(224-213). The third medal in this division was won by a European country, namelyUkraine, who beatJapan217-209.

 

Compound Men

Some great scores were set in the medal matches of the team compound division today, starting withDenmarkagainst theNetherlandswith a score of 229-225. The Danish archers in gold and the Dutch in silver, it is the French who decided they would join them on the podium. After a very tight match withGreat Britain, they finally won by only one point on the score of 227 to 226.

 

Compound Women

Three new nations for three new medals in the compound women division:Russia,CroatiaandMexicowill leaveAntalyawith at least one medal around their neck. In the bronze match, the Mexican ladies left no chance to their opponents the Greeks to win the only South American medal of this Grand Prix team competition (221-209). The Russians, for their part, proved the world record they set early in the day was not at all a piece of luck: they easily defeatedCroatia228-220 to take the gold.

 

 

 

Gold

Silver

Bronze

Recurve Men

Japan

Great Britain

Korea

Recurve Women

Korea

China

Ukraine

Compound Men

Denmark

Netherlands

France

Compound Women

Russia

Croatia

Mexico

 


Ludivine MaitreWicki

FITA Communication