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Archery at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics – Girls' individual

The girls' individual archery event at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics was held from 18 to 20 August 2010 at the Kallang Field in Kallang, Singapore. It was one of three recurve archery events which comprised the archery programme at the inaugural Summer Youth Olympics, and featured thirty-one archers from thirty-one countries. Entry was open to female archers born between 1 January 1992 and 31 December 1993.[1]

Girls' individual
at the I Summer Youth Olympic Games
VenueKallang Field
Date18–20 August 2010
Competitors31 from 31 nations
Medalists
2014 →

Qualification was conducted through a tournament held in parallel at the 2009 Archery World Youth Championships, as well as through five continental tournaments held in 2009 and 2010.[1] The event was among the first to follow the new competition format adopted by the Federation Internationale Tir de l'Arc (FITA) for international tournaments earlier in 2010.

Kwak Ye-ji of South Korea, who was tipped as the favourite for gold medal, emerged as champion after winning in the final against Tan Ya-ting of Chinese Taipei, who received the silver medal as runner-up. Russia's Tatiana Segina finished in third place, winning the bronze medal ahead of Mexico's Mariana Avitia.

Format edit

 
Targets used in FITA competitions were 122cm wide and were divided into ten evenly-spaced concentric rings. Shooting an arrow into the outermost ring scored one point; landing in the centre yellow circle earned the maximum ten points.

The girls' individual recurve event was an outdoor recurve target archery event. Held to FITA-approved rules, the archers shot at a 122 cm-wide target from a distance of 70 metres, with between one and ten points being awarded for each arrow depending on how close it landed to the centre of the target. The competition took place over two days, with an initial ranking round being followed by a single-elimination tournament consisting of five rounds and concluding with two matches to determine the winners of the gold, silver, and bronze medals. The ranking round was held on 18 August and determined the seeds for the elimination rounds, which also began on 18 August and concluded two days later. Each of the thirty-one archers shot a total of 72 arrows. The archer with the highest scoring total from her 72 arrows received the number one seed, the archer with the second highest total receiving second seed, and so on. In the event of a tie between two or more archers, the number of arrows shot in the central 10-ring of the target was taken into account, with the number of arrows shot within the inner-10 (or X) ring used as a second tiebreaker if necessary.

The format of the elimination and medal-deciding rounds followed the Archery Olympic Round set system that had been recently introduced in international World Archery events. The elimination rounds began on 18 August with the 1/16 round and concluded two days later on 20 August, with the bronze and gold medal finals following afterwards. Each match consisted of a maximum of five sets, with archers each shooting three arrows per set. The archer with the greater score from their three arrows won the set, earning two set points. The archer with the lower score in each set received zero points. If the score was tied, each archer received one point. The first archer to reach six set points was declared the winner. If the match was tied at five set points each after the maximum five sets were played, a single tie-breaker arrow was used with the closest to centre of the target winning.[2][3]

Schedule edit

Day Date Start time Stage
4 Wednesday, 18 August 2010 11:00 Ranking round
14:12 1/16 elimination round
6 Friday, 20 August 2010 11:00 1/8 elimination round
14:30 Quarter-finals
15:26 Semi-finals
15:58 Bronze medal match
16:12 Gold medal match
Source:[4]

Report edit

 
Kallang Field was the host of the three archery events at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics.

Pre-event edit

South Korea's Kwak Ye-ji was tipped as the favourite for gold medal, the world number seven entering as the most decorated archer at the Youth Olympics having won gold medal in the final of the 2009 Archery World Cup and silver medal at the 2009 World Archery Championships.[5][6] At age 17, Mariana Avitia of Mexico became her nation's youngest athlete to compete in two Olympic games, the world number fifteen having competed in the women's individual event at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.[7]

The withdrawal of a competitor from Brazil before the start of the event led to only thirty-one archers taking part instead of the expected thirty-two. As the Brazilian archer was also set to compete in the mixed team event, which was contested by athletes paired from the girls' and boys' individual events, FITA and the International Olympic Committee granted an additional entry from Singapore to ensure the mixed team event had an even number of entrants. Elizabeth Cheok was selected as the replacement, although she was not permitted to compete in the individual event.[8] The top seed from the ranking round was therefore given a bye to the second elimination round to compensate for the lack of a thirty-second seed.

Ranking round edit

The competition began on the morning of 18 August with the 72-arrow ranking round. Kwak was in dominant form, clinching the top seed by a comfortable margin of 22 points over Tan Ya-ting of Chinese Taipei and setting a new junior world record in the process. Her score of 670 – out of a maximum of 720 – beat the existing record set by compatriot Um Hye-rang in 2001 by four points.[9] Choi Seung Sil, the South Korean coach, however reflected that Kwak's achievement was no cause for excitement, commenting that "[i]n practice she will score up to 680, so we don't really care about breaking the record."[10] Behind Tan in second was Russia's Tatiana Segina on 639 points, with Mariana Avitia and India's Seema Verma placing fourth and fifth.

Elimination rounds edit

 
Alice Ingley of Australia (pictured in 2012) was knocked out by Moldova's Alexandra Mîrca in the last sixteen.

The knock-out rounds began on the afternoon of 18 August with the 1/16 elimination rounds. The top eight seeds each advanced to the 1/8 eliminations with ninth-seed Gloria Filippi of Italy the highest ranked archer failing to progress. After a break in play on 19 August, in which the mixed team competition was contested, the girls' individual event resumed for its final day of competition on 20 August, the morning session hosting the 1/8 elimination round. Kwak, Tan, Segina, and Avitia all advanced to the quarter-finals, Tan eliminating the bronze medalist from the mixed team event Turkey's Begünhan Elif Ünsal in the process. The round also saw Moldova's Alexandra Mîrca come back from two sets down to defeat Alice Ingley of Australia — a shot in the third set by the Australian which scored just four points was noted by FITA commentators Vanahé Antille and Didier Mieville as the turning point in the match. The weather intervened with a short rain shower during the fifth match of the morning between Miranda Leek of the United States and Isabel Viehmeier of Germany. The wet conditions appeared to affect Leek's form in particular, the American exiting the competition after failing to score higher than an eight until her eighth arrow of the match, by which time Viehmeier held a four set point lead. The rainfall ceased shortly after the beginning of the following match between China's Song Jia and Ukraine's Lidiia Sichenikova, Song winning by seven set points to three.[6]

The quarter-finals kicked off the final day's afternoon session at 2:30pm, Kwak, Tan, Segina, and Avitia again successfully advancing to reach the semi-finals. The first match between Kwak and Mîrca was a tight affair, Kwak winning the first and third sets and Mîrca winning the second and fourth. The South Korean however clinched the fifth set by one point - thereby avoiding a one-arrow shoot-off - after a judge confirmed in a post-match review that Mîrca's first arrow of the set landed within the 8-ring rather than edging into the 9-ring. In the other quarter-final contests Tan and Segina dispatched Viehmeier and Song respectively in straight sets while Avitia dropped just one set in her victory against Belgium's Zoé Göbbels.[6]

The two semi-final matches were held immediately after the quarter-finals. Kwak and Tan each overcame poor starts to progress to the gold medal final. Kwak lost the first two sets to Avitia, but with the Mexican failing to land an arrow in the central 10 ring for the rest of the match, Kwak prevailed in the next three sets to win by six set points to four. In the second semi-final Tan began with a six on her first arrow, gifting Segina a straightforward victory in the opening set. A perfect score of thirty in the second set however brought Tan back into contention. A narrowly won third set and a score of twenty-nine in the fourth was enough for Tan to win the match secure a spot in the final.[6][11]

Medal matches edit

 
Tan Ya-Ting of Chinese Taipei (pictured in 2019) won silver medal after losing in the final.

As the two losing archers from the semi-finals, Avitia and Segina met to contest the bronze medal final, which followed the semi-final matches at just before 4pm. After three sets Segina held the advantage, and when Avitia faltered with her final arrow in the fourth set, scoring just a seven, Segina shot into the 10 ring resulting in victory and the bronze medal for the Russian.[6] Following the match Avitia said she was satisfied and not disappointed with a fourth-place finish, feeling she had put in a strong performance against Kwak in the semi-finals. She however stated that the quick turnaround between competing at the 2010 Central American and Caribbean Games and the Youth Olympics may have influenced her overall form, having not had sufficient time for rest before arriving in Singapore.[12]

The gold medal final saw Kwak defeat Tan in four sets, posting a total score of 117 in her 12 arrows that would have been a new junior world record under the previous FITA competition format. Kwak's perfect scores of 30 in the first and third sets was met by Tan's own maximum score in the second, but Kwak's total of 29 in the fourth set was too much for Tan, the South Korean taking what the Yonhap News Agency described as a "widely expected" victory.[6][9] Afterwards Kwak admitted she had felt nervous in the final after her tough semi-final victory over Avitia, but immediately set her sights on replicating her success at the 2012 Summer Olympics, stating her aim was to win two gold medals in London.[9] As runner-up, Tan received the silver medal. The archer from Chinese Taipei said she had enjoyed the experience of the competition but had mixed emotions about the result, commenting that despite being pleased with her silver medal "I feel sorry for my family and friends that I didn't bring the gold medal home".[11]

Results edit

Ranking Round edit

Rank Archer Half Total 10s Xs
1st 2nd
1   Kwak Ye-ji (KOR) 334 336 670 JWR 34 13
2   Tan Ya-ting (TPE) 319 329 648 22 4
3   Tatiana Segina (RUS) 321 318 639 17 4
4   Mariana Avitia (MEX) 319 318 637 23 4
5   Seema Verma (IND) 311 324 635 21 5
6   Farida Tukebayeva (KAZ) 314 321 635 18 3
7   Lidiia Sichenikova (UKR) 313 314 627 13 3
8   Alexandra Mîrca (MDA) 313 313 626 21 7
9   Gloria Filippi (ITA) 303 320 623 16 5
10   Song Jia (CHN) 301 318 619 11 3
11   Isabel Viehmeier (GER) 289 315 604 15 2
12   Zoé Göbbels (BEL) 294 309 603 10 3
13   Nynne Sophie Holdt-Caspersen (DEN) 303 299 602 13 2
14   Erwina Safitri (INA) 301 300 601 12 5
15   Tze Rong Vanessa Loh (SIN) 297 304 601 8 4
16   Maud Custers (NED) 296 298 594 12 1
17   Laurie Lecointre (FRA) 296 296 592 11 5
18   Begünhan Elif Ünsal (TUR) 289 299 588 11 0
19   Mai Okubo (JPN) 288 295 583 8 2
20   Miriam Alarcón (ESP) 272 309 581 15 4
21   Aleksandra Wojnicka (POL) 281 294 575 5 1
22   Yasaman Shirian (IRI) 276 289 565 6 2
23   Brina Božič (SLO) 292 269 561 9 1
24   Alice Ingley (AUS) 267 293 560 3 1
25   Iryna Hul (BLR) 288 266 554 7 1
26   Zoi Paraskevopoulou (GRE) 256 295 551 7 3
27   Miranda Leek (USA) 284 266 550 10 3
28   Tanja Sorsa (FIN) 243 305 548 10 7
29   Beauty Ray (BAN) 246 270 516 6 4
30   Kristina Zaynutdinova (TJK) 236 258 494 10 4
31   Aya Kamel (EGY) 239 253 492 4 2
32   Elizabeth Cheok (SIN) 0 0 0 0 0
Source:[13]

Elimination rounds edit

Top half edit

1/16 eliminations 1/8 eliminations Quarterfinals Semifinals
            
1   Kwak Ye-ji (KOR)  
32   Elizabeth Cheok (SIN) DNS
1   Kwak Ye-ji (KOR) 7
16   Maud Custers (NED) 1
17   Laurie Lecointre (FRA) 0
16   Maud Custers (NED) 6
1   Kwak Ye-ji (KOR) 6
8   Alexandra Mîrca (MDA) 4
9   Gloria Filippi (ITA) 4
24   Alice Ingley (AUS) 6
24   Alice Ingley (AUS) 4
8   Alexandra Mîrca (MDA) 6
25   Iryna Hul (BLR) 1
8   Alexandra Mîrca (MDA) 7
1   Ye Ji Kwak (KOR) 6
4   Mariana Avitia (MEX) 4
5   Seema Verma (IND) 6
28   Tanja Sorsa (FIN) 0
5   Seema Verma (IND) 3
12   Zoé Göbbels (BEL) 7
21   Aleksandra Wojnicka (POL) 1
12   Zoé Göbbels (BEL) 7
12   Zoé Göbbels (BEL) 2
4   Mariana Avitia (MEX) 6
13   Nynne Sophie Holdt-Caspersen (DEN) 2
20   Miriam Alarcón (ESP) 6
20   Miriam Alarcón (ESP) 1
4   Mariana Avitia (MEX) 7
29   Beauty Ray (BAN) 0
4   Mariana Avitia (MEX) 6

Bottom half edit

1/16 eliminations 1/8 eliminations Quarterfinals Semifinals
            
3   Tatiana Segina (RUS) 6
30   Kristina Zaynutdinova (TJK) 0
3   Tatiana Segina (RUS) 6
19   Mai Okubo (JPN) 4
19   Mai Okubo (JPN) 6
14   Erwina Safitri (INA) 4
3   Tatiana Segina (RUS) 6
11   Isabel Viehmeier (GER) 0
11   Isabel Viehmeier (GER) 6
22   Yasaman Shirian (IRI) 2
11   Isabel Viehmeier (GER) 6
27   Miranda Leek (USA) 2
27   Miranda Leek (USA) 6
6   Farida Tukebayeva (KAZ) 4
3   Tatiana Segina (RUS) 2
2   Tan Ya-ting (TPE) 6
7   Lidiia Sichenikova (UKR) 6
26   Zoi Paraskevopoulou (GRE) 0
7   Lidiia Sichenikova (UKR) 3
10   Song Jia (CHN) 7
23   Brina Božič (SLO) 4
10   Song Jia (CHN) 6
10   Song Jia (CHN) 0
2   Tan Ya-ting (TPE) 6
15   Tze Rong Vanessa Loh (SIN) 5
18   Begünhan Elif Ünsal (TUR) 6*
18   Begünhan Elif Ünsal (TUR) 2
2   Tan Ya-ting (TPE) 6
31   Aya Kamel (EGY) 0
2   Tan Ya-ting (TPE) 6
  • Note: An asterisk (*) denotes a win from a one-arrow shoot-off

Source:[14][15]

Finals edit

Semifinals Finals
                
1   Kwak Ye-ji (KOR) 6 26 27 28 28 28
4   Mariana Avitia (MEX) 4 28 28 26 26 26
1   Kwak Ye-ji (KOR)   6 30 28 30 29
2   Tan Ya-ting (TPE)   2 27 30 27 27
3   Tatiana Segina (RUS) 2 28 27 26 26
2   Tan Ya-ting (TPE) 6 24 30 27 29 Third place
4   Mariana Avitia (MEX) 2 25 28 27 24
3   Tatiana Segina (RUS)   6 29 27 28 27

Source:[15]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b . Singapore 2010 Youth Olympic Games. Singapore 2010 Youth Olympic Games Organising Committee. 12 January 2010. Archived from the original on 18 April 2010. Retrieved 23 September 2019.
  2. ^ Tekmitchov, George (14 June 2010). "The Set System—a new era in World Archery competition". World Archery Federation. Retrieved 29 September 2019.
  3. ^ "The first ever Youth Olympic Games". World Archery Federation. 12 August 2010. Retrieved 29 September 2019.
  4. ^ . Singapore 2010 Youth Olympic Games. Singapore Youth Olympic Games Organizing Committee. Archived from the original on 27 November 2012. Retrieved 29 September 2019.
  5. ^ Antille, Vanahé (17 August 2010). "KWAK Ye Ji (KOR): "Singapore is a preparation for London"". World Archery Federation. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Antille, Vanahé; Mieville, Didier (20 August 2010). "KWAK wins the women's gold in Singapore". World Archery Federation. Retrieved 30 September 2019.
  7. ^ "El gimnasta Javier Cervantes, a la final en los Juegos Olímpicos de la Juventud" [Gymnast Javier Cervantes into the final in the Youth Olympic Games]. La Jornada (in Spanish). 17 August 2010. p. a15. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  8. ^ "Addition of a new Singaporean Junior Women archer for the Mixed Team event". Singapore: World Archery Federation. 17 August 2010. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  9. ^ a b c "S. Korea wins gold medal in Singapore Youth Olympics archery". Yonhap News Agency. 20 August 2010. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  10. ^ "Daily Wrap: Junior Womens Archery World Record Shattered In Singapore". Singapore 2010 Youth Olympic Games. Singapore Youth Olympic Games Organizing Committee. 19 August 2010. Archived from the original on 12 September 2012. Retrieved 1 October 2019.
  11. ^ a b "Then & Now: Tan Ya-ting". Olympic.org. International Olympic Committee. 13 October 2017. Retrieved 23 September 2019.
  12. ^ "Quedó Mariana Avitia fuera del podio de Tiro con Arco en Singapur 2010" [Mariana Avitia left off archery podium in Singapore]. Medio Tiempo (in Spanish). 20 August 2010. Retrieved 30 September 2019.
  13. ^ "Archery Junior Women's Individual Ranking Round Results" (PDF). World Archery Federation. 20 August 2010. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  14. ^ "Archery Junior Women's Individual Results Brackets (Elimination)" (PDF). World Archery Federation. 20 August 2010. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  15. ^ a b "Archery Junior Women's Individual Results Brackets (Final)" (PDF). World Archery Federation. 20 August 2010. Retrieved 22 September 2019.

External links edit

  • Singapore 2010 Youth Olympic Games - Details at the World Archery Federation

archery, 2010, summer, youth, olympics, girls, individual, girls, individual, archery, event, 2010, summer, youth, olympics, held, from, august, 2010, kallang, field, kallang, singapore, three, recurve, archery, events, which, comprised, archery, programme, in. The girls individual archery event at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics was held from 18 to 20 August 2010 at the Kallang Field in Kallang Singapore It was one of three recurve archery events which comprised the archery programme at the inaugural Summer Youth Olympics and featured thirty one archers from thirty one countries Entry was open to female archers born between 1 January 1992 and 31 December 1993 1 Girls individualat the I Summer Youth Olympic GamesVenueKallang FieldDate18 20 August 2010Competitors31 from 31 nationsMedalistsKwak Ye ji South KoreaTan Ya ting Chinese TaipeiTatiana Segina Russia2014 Qualification was conducted through a tournament held in parallel at the 2009 Archery World Youth Championships as well as through five continental tournaments held in 2009 and 2010 1 The event was among the first to follow the new competition format adopted by the Federation Internationale Tir de l Arc FITA for international tournaments earlier in 2010 Kwak Ye ji of South Korea who was tipped as the favourite for gold medal emerged as champion after winning in the final against Tan Ya ting of Chinese Taipei who received the silver medal as runner up Russia s Tatiana Segina finished in third place winning the bronze medal ahead of Mexico s Mariana Avitia Contents 1 Format 1 1 Schedule 2 Report 2 1 Pre event 2 2 Ranking round 2 3 Elimination rounds 2 4 Medal matches 3 Results 3 1 Ranking Round 3 2 Elimination rounds 3 2 1 Top half 3 2 2 Bottom half 3 3 Finals 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksFormat edit nbsp Targets used in FITA competitions were 122cm wide and were divided into ten evenly spaced concentric rings Shooting an arrow into the outermost ring scored one point landing in the centre yellow circle earned the maximum ten points Further information Target archery Rules and Target archery Scoring The girls individual recurve event was an outdoor recurve target archery event Held to FITA approved rules the archers shot at a 122 cm wide target from a distance of 70 metres with between one and ten points being awarded for each arrow depending on how close it landed to the centre of the target The competition took place over two days with an initial ranking round being followed by a single elimination tournament consisting of five rounds and concluding with two matches to determine the winners of the gold silver and bronze medals The ranking round was held on 18 August and determined the seeds for the elimination rounds which also began on 18 August and concluded two days later Each of the thirty one archers shot a total of 72 arrows The archer with the highest scoring total from her 72 arrows received the number one seed the archer with the second highest total receiving second seed and so on In the event of a tie between two or more archers the number of arrows shot in the central 10 ring of the target was taken into account with the number of arrows shot within the inner 10 or X ring used as a second tiebreaker if necessary The format of the elimination and medal deciding rounds followed the Archery Olympic Round set system that had been recently introduced in international World Archery events The elimination rounds began on 18 August with the 1 16 round and concluded two days later on 20 August with the bronze and gold medal finals following afterwards Each match consisted of a maximum of five sets with archers each shooting three arrows per set The archer with the greater score from their three arrows won the set earning two set points The archer with the lower score in each set received zero points If the score was tied each archer received one point The first archer to reach six set points was declared the winner If the match was tied at five set points each after the maximum five sets were played a single tie breaker arrow was used with the closest to centre of the target winning 2 3 Schedule edit Day Date Start time Stage4 Wednesday 18 August 2010 11 00 Ranking round14 12 1 16 elimination round6 Friday 20 August 2010 11 00 1 8 elimination round14 30 Quarter finals15 26 Semi finals15 58 Bronze medal match16 12 Gold medal matchSource 4 Report edit nbsp Kallang Field was the host of the three archery events at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics Pre event edit South Korea s Kwak Ye ji was tipped as the favourite for gold medal the world number seven entering as the most decorated archer at the Youth Olympics having won gold medal in the final of the 2009 Archery World Cup and silver medal at the 2009 World Archery Championships 5 6 At age 17 Mariana Avitia of Mexico became her nation s youngest athlete to compete in two Olympic games the world number fifteen having competed in the women s individual event at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing 7 The withdrawal of a competitor from Brazil before the start of the event led to only thirty one archers taking part instead of the expected thirty two As the Brazilian archer was also set to compete in the mixed team event which was contested by athletes paired from the girls and boys individual events FITA and the International Olympic Committee granted an additional entry from Singapore to ensure the mixed team event had an even number of entrants Elizabeth Cheok was selected as the replacement although she was not permitted to compete in the individual event 8 The top seed from the ranking round was therefore given a bye to the second elimination round to compensate for the lack of a thirty second seed Ranking round edit The competition began on the morning of 18 August with the 72 arrow ranking round Kwak was in dominant form clinching the top seed by a comfortable margin of 22 points over Tan Ya ting of Chinese Taipei and setting a new junior world record in the process Her score of 670 out of a maximum of 720 beat the existing record set by compatriot Um Hye rang in 2001 by four points 9 Choi Seung Sil the South Korean coach however reflected that Kwak s achievement was no cause for excitement commenting that i n practice she will score up to 680 so we don t really care about breaking the record 10 Behind Tan in second was Russia s Tatiana Segina on 639 points with Mariana Avitia and India s Seema Verma placing fourth and fifth Elimination rounds edit nbsp Alice Ingley of Australia pictured in 2012 was knocked out by Moldova s Alexandra Mirca in the last sixteen The knock out rounds began on the afternoon of 18 August with the 1 16 elimination rounds The top eight seeds each advanced to the 1 8 eliminations with ninth seed Gloria Filippi of Italy the highest ranked archer failing to progress After a break in play on 19 August in which the mixed team competition was contested the girls individual event resumed for its final day of competition on 20 August the morning session hosting the 1 8 elimination round Kwak Tan Segina and Avitia all advanced to the quarter finals Tan eliminating the bronze medalist from the mixed team event Turkey s Begunhan Elif Unsal in the process The round also saw Moldova s Alexandra Mirca come back from two sets down to defeat Alice Ingley of Australia a shot in the third set by the Australian which scored just four points was noted by FITA commentators Vanahe Antille and Didier Mieville as the turning point in the match The weather intervened with a short rain shower during the fifth match of the morning between Miranda Leek of the United States and Isabel Viehmeier of Germany The wet conditions appeared to affect Leek s form in particular the American exiting the competition after failing to score higher than an eight until her eighth arrow of the match by which time Viehmeier held a four set point lead The rainfall ceased shortly after the beginning of the following match between China s Song Jia and Ukraine s Lidiia Sichenikova Song winning by seven set points to three 6 The quarter finals kicked off the final day s afternoon session at 2 30pm Kwak Tan Segina and Avitia again successfully advancing to reach the semi finals The first match between Kwak and Mirca was a tight affair Kwak winning the first and third sets and Mirca winning the second and fourth The South Korean however clinched the fifth set by one point thereby avoiding a one arrow shoot off after a judge confirmed in a post match review that Mirca s first arrow of the set landed within the 8 ring rather than edging into the 9 ring In the other quarter final contests Tan and Segina dispatched Viehmeier and Song respectively in straight sets while Avitia dropped just one set in her victory against Belgium s Zoe Gobbels 6 The two semi final matches were held immediately after the quarter finals Kwak and Tan each overcame poor starts to progress to the gold medal final Kwak lost the first two sets to Avitia but with the Mexican failing to land an arrow in the central 10 ring for the rest of the match Kwak prevailed in the next three sets to win by six set points to four In the second semi final Tan began with a six on her first arrow gifting Segina a straightforward victory in the opening set A perfect score of thirty in the second set however brought Tan back into contention A narrowly won third set and a score of twenty nine in the fourth was enough for Tan to win the match secure a spot in the final 6 11 Medal matches edit nbsp Tan Ya Ting of Chinese Taipei pictured in 2019 won silver medal after losing in the final As the two losing archers from the semi finals Avitia and Segina met to contest the bronze medal final which followed the semi final matches at just before 4pm After three sets Segina held the advantage and when Avitia faltered with her final arrow in the fourth set scoring just a seven Segina shot into the 10 ring resulting in victory and the bronze medal for the Russian 6 Following the match Avitia said she was satisfied and not disappointed with a fourth place finish feeling she had put in a strong performance against Kwak in the semi finals She however stated that the quick turnaround between competing at the 2010 Central American and Caribbean Games and the Youth Olympics may have influenced her overall form having not had sufficient time for rest before arriving in Singapore 12 The gold medal final saw Kwak defeat Tan in four sets posting a total score of 117 in her 12 arrows that would have been a new junior world record under the previous FITA competition format Kwak s perfect scores of 30 in the first and third sets was met by Tan s own maximum score in the second but Kwak s total of 29 in the fourth set was too much for Tan the South Korean taking what the Yonhap News Agency described as a widely expected victory 6 9 Afterwards Kwak admitted she had felt nervous in the final after her tough semi final victory over Avitia but immediately set her sights on replicating her success at the 2012 Summer Olympics stating her aim was to win two gold medals in London 9 As runner up Tan received the silver medal The archer from Chinese Taipei said she had enjoyed the experience of the competition but had mixed emotions about the result commenting that despite being pleased with her silver medal I feel sorry for my family and friends that I didn t bring the gold medal home 11 Results editRanking Round edit Rank Archer Half Total 10s Xs1st 2nd1 nbsp Kwak Ye ji KOR 334 336 670 JWR 34 132 nbsp Tan Ya ting TPE 319 329 648 22 43 nbsp Tatiana Segina RUS 321 318 639 17 44 nbsp Mariana Avitia MEX 319 318 637 23 45 nbsp Seema Verma IND 311 324 635 21 56 nbsp Farida Tukebayeva KAZ 314 321 635 18 37 nbsp Lidiia Sichenikova UKR 313 314 627 13 38 nbsp Alexandra Mirca MDA 313 313 626 21 79 nbsp Gloria Filippi ITA 303 320 623 16 510 nbsp Song Jia CHN 301 318 619 11 311 nbsp Isabel Viehmeier GER 289 315 604 15 212 nbsp Zoe Gobbels BEL 294 309 603 10 313 nbsp Nynne Sophie Holdt Caspersen DEN 303 299 602 13 214 nbsp Erwina Safitri INA 301 300 601 12 515 nbsp Tze Rong Vanessa Loh SIN 297 304 601 8 416 nbsp Maud Custers NED 296 298 594 12 117 nbsp Laurie Lecointre FRA 296 296 592 11 518 nbsp Begunhan Elif Unsal TUR 289 299 588 11 019 nbsp Mai Okubo JPN 288 295 583 8 220 nbsp Miriam Alarcon ESP 272 309 581 15 421 nbsp Aleksandra Wojnicka POL 281 294 575 5 122 nbsp Yasaman Shirian IRI 276 289 565 6 223 nbsp Brina Bozic SLO 292 269 561 9 124 nbsp Alice Ingley AUS 267 293 560 3 125 nbsp Iryna Hul BLR 288 266 554 7 126 nbsp Zoi Paraskevopoulou GRE 256 295 551 7 327 nbsp Miranda Leek USA 284 266 550 10 328 nbsp Tanja Sorsa FIN 243 305 548 10 729 nbsp Beauty Ray BAN 246 270 516 6 430 nbsp Kristina Zaynutdinova TJK 236 258 494 10 431 nbsp Aya Kamel EGY 239 253 492 4 232 nbsp Elizabeth Cheok SIN 0 0 0 0 0Source 13 Elimination rounds edit Top half edit 1 16 eliminations1 8 eliminationsQuarterfinalsSemifinals 1 nbsp Kwak Ye ji KOR 32 nbsp Elizabeth Cheok SIN DNS1 nbsp Kwak Ye ji KOR 716 nbsp Maud Custers NED 117 nbsp Laurie Lecointre FRA 016 nbsp Maud Custers NED 61 nbsp Kwak Ye ji KOR 68 nbsp Alexandra Mirca MDA 49 nbsp Gloria Filippi ITA 424 nbsp Alice Ingley AUS 624 nbsp Alice Ingley AUS 48 nbsp Alexandra Mirca MDA 625 nbsp Iryna Hul BLR 18 nbsp Alexandra Mirca MDA 71 nbsp Ye Ji Kwak KOR 64 nbsp Mariana Avitia MEX 45 nbsp Seema Verma IND 628 nbsp Tanja Sorsa FIN 05 nbsp Seema Verma IND 312 nbsp Zoe Gobbels BEL 721 nbsp Aleksandra Wojnicka POL 112 nbsp Zoe Gobbels BEL 712 nbsp Zoe Gobbels BEL 24 nbsp Mariana Avitia MEX 613 nbsp Nynne Sophie Holdt Caspersen DEN 220 nbsp Miriam Alarcon ESP 620 nbsp Miriam Alarcon ESP 14 nbsp Mariana Avitia MEX 729 nbsp Beauty Ray BAN 04 nbsp Mariana Avitia MEX 6Bottom half edit 1 16 eliminations1 8 eliminationsQuarterfinalsSemifinals 3 nbsp Tatiana Segina RUS 630 nbsp Kristina Zaynutdinova TJK 03 nbsp Tatiana Segina RUS 619 nbsp Mai Okubo JPN 419 nbsp Mai Okubo JPN 614 nbsp Erwina Safitri INA 43 nbsp Tatiana Segina RUS 611 nbsp Isabel Viehmeier GER 011 nbsp Isabel Viehmeier GER 622 nbsp Yasaman Shirian IRI 211 nbsp Isabel Viehmeier GER 627 nbsp Miranda Leek USA 227 nbsp Miranda Leek USA 66 nbsp Farida Tukebayeva KAZ 43 nbsp Tatiana Segina RUS 22 nbsp Tan Ya ting TPE 67 nbsp Lidiia Sichenikova UKR 626 nbsp Zoi Paraskevopoulou GRE 07 nbsp Lidiia Sichenikova UKR 310 nbsp Song Jia CHN 723 nbsp Brina Bozic SLO 410 nbsp Song Jia CHN 610 nbsp Song Jia CHN 02 nbsp Tan Ya ting TPE 615 nbsp Tze Rong Vanessa Loh SIN 518 nbsp Begunhan Elif Unsal TUR 6 18 nbsp Begunhan Elif Unsal TUR 22 nbsp Tan Ya ting TPE 631 nbsp Aya Kamel EGY 02 nbsp Tan Ya ting TPE 6Note An asterisk denotes a win from a one arrow shoot offSource 14 15 Finals edit SemifinalsFinals 1 nbsp Kwak Ye ji KOR 626272828284 nbsp Mariana Avitia MEX 428282626261 nbsp Kwak Ye ji KOR nbsp 6302830292 nbsp Tan Ya ting TPE nbsp 2273027273 nbsp Tatiana Segina RUS 2282726262 nbsp Tan Ya ting TPE 624302729Third place4 nbsp Mariana Avitia MEX 2252827243 nbsp Tatiana Segina RUS nbsp 629272827Source 15 See also editArchery at the 2008 Summer Olympics Women s individual Archery at the 2012 Summer Olympics Women s individualReferences edit a b Archery Singapore 2010 Youth Olympic Games Singapore 2010 Youth Olympic Games Organising Committee 12 January 2010 Archived from the original on 18 April 2010 Retrieved 23 September 2019 Tekmitchov George 14 June 2010 The Set System a new era in World Archery competition World Archery Federation Retrieved 29 September 2019 The first ever Youth Olympic Games World Archery Federation 12 August 2010 Retrieved 29 September 2019 Archery Results Singapore 2010 Youth Olympic Games Singapore Youth Olympic Games Organizing Committee Archived from the original on 27 November 2012 Retrieved 29 September 2019 Antille Vanahe 17 August 2010 KWAK Ye Ji KOR Singapore is a preparation for London World Archery Federation Retrieved 22 September 2019 a b c d e f Antille Vanahe Mieville Didier 20 August 2010 KWAK wins the women s gold in Singapore World Archery Federation Retrieved 30 September 2019 El gimnasta Javier Cervantes a la final en los Juegos Olimpicos de la Juventud Gymnast Javier Cervantes into the final in the Youth Olympic Games La Jornada in Spanish 17 August 2010 p a15 Retrieved 22 September 2019 Addition of a new Singaporean Junior Women archer for the Mixed Team event Singapore World Archery Federation 17 August 2010 Retrieved 22 September 2019 a b c S Korea wins gold medal in Singapore Youth Olympics archery Yonhap News Agency 20 August 2010 Retrieved 22 September 2019 Daily Wrap Junior Womens Archery World Record Shattered In Singapore Singapore 2010 Youth Olympic Games Singapore Youth Olympic Games Organizing Committee 19 August 2010 Archived from the original on 12 September 2012 Retrieved 1 October 2019 a b Then amp Now Tan Ya ting Olympic org International Olympic Committee 13 October 2017 Retrieved 23 September 2019 Quedo Mariana Avitia fuera del podio de Tiro con Arco en Singapur 2010 Mariana Avitia left off archery podium in Singapore Medio Tiempo in Spanish 20 August 2010 Retrieved 30 September 2019 Archery Junior Women s Individual Ranking Round Results PDF World Archery Federation 20 August 2010 Retrieved 22 September 2019 Archery Junior Women s Individual Results Brackets Elimination PDF World Archery Federation 20 August 2010 Retrieved 22 September 2019 a b Archery Junior Women s Individual Results Brackets Final PDF World Archery Federation 20 August 2010 Retrieved 22 September 2019 External links editSingapore 2010 Youth Olympic Games Details at the World Archery Federation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Archery at the 2010 Summer Youth Olympics Girls 27 individual amp oldid 1127361343, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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