Top Bow : World Archery Competitions, Tournaments and Rules

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The World Championships to the Olympics are the most important and well recognised of all archery competitions, but do you know all the rules, shooting distances and the different divisons? This article wil fill you in on everything you need to know from Olympic recurve to World 3D.

Archery Championships, Divisions and Shooting Distances

The following competition names, distances and divisions have been assembled from the rulebooks of World Archery and the International Olympic  Committee. For national tournaments, USA archery is the best place to discover target archery tournaments on a national level. Being a member of the National Field Archery Association also qualifies you to national target archery competitions.

Championship Frequency(every) Bow Division Max Target Distance
Olympic 4 years Recurve 70m
Paralympics 4 years Open Recurve 70m
Open Compound 70m
W1 – Recurve or Compound 70m
World Outdoor 2 years Recurve 70m
Compound 50m
World Indoor 2 years Recurve 18m
Compound 18m
World Youth 2 years Junior Recurve 70m
Cadet Recurve 60m
Junior Compound 50m
World Para 2 years Open Recurve 70m
Open Compound 50m
Open W1 70m
W1 – Recurve or Compound 70m
V1,2,3 – Recurve or Compound 70m
World Field 2 years Recurve 60m
Compound 60m
Barebow 50m
World 3D 2 years Compound 60m
Barebow 50m
Longbow 40m

As you can see 70m is the furthest target distance expected for any shot in a world or olympic championship competition archery round.

Olympic Archery

Archery was first introduced to the Olympics in 1900 and was part of the 1904, 1908 and 1920 lineup but was not included again until 1972 but its been there ever since!

Olympic Bow and Target Distance

An Olympic target archery tournament is restricted to the recurve bow and both men and women recurve or compound archers shoot at a target 70 meters away. The target is 122 cm in diameter with a gold or bullseye measuring just 12.2 cm in diameter.

Although the center of the target is yellow you’ll  hear it referred to as ‘Gold’​ and there is an inner gold ring worth 10 points and an outer gold ring worth only 9. The gold has 2 inner rings both worth 10 points, the smaller inner ring is used to differentiate in a tie-break situation.

​Top Olympic male archers can typically draw around 45-55 pounds and female archers 40-48 pounds.

Olympic Archery Target
An Olympic Archery Target with Marked Scoring Zones

​Olympic Archery Competition Rules

Olympic archery is contested over a ranking phase, a knockout phase and the finals. This can all take place over a week or more depending on weather conditions and scheduling. There are divisions for individual men, individual women and team men and team women. We’re going into detail on the 3 phases of the individual competition here.

Phase 1 – The Ranking

Ranking is the first archery tournament. ​Individual men and women title contestants shoot 72 arrows, 6 at a time to achieve a ranking score. The ranking score is used to determine which athletes can recieve a ‘bye’ or skip the first round of knockouts and automatically advance (usually the top 8) and which are eliminated from the competition (usually only 64 advance to round 2). A perfect score in the ranking round would be 720 (72×10).

72 Arrow Ranking – Olympic Records

Kim Woo-Jun (Male, South Korea) scored 700 at the 2016 Rio Olympics on 05/08/2016. That’s a lot of gold.

Both Lina Herasymenko (Femala, Ukraine) and Park Sung-hyun (Female, South Korea)​ scored 673 in Atlanta 1996 and Beijing 2008 (respectively)

Phase 2 – The Knockout Rounds

Once ranked athletes enter a knockout stage where they are pitted against one another in a match scored using a 5 set system. This round pits the best ranked archer against the worst ranked, for example (as in Rio 2016) in a set of 64 people in the knockout round the archer ranked 1 will plays the archer ranked 64, and the archer ranked 2 plays the archer ranked 63 and so on. Once this first round of knockouts is completed only 32 archers will remain. The process is repeated through 2 more knockout rounds until only 8 archers remain and they advance to the Quarters, Semis and Finals.

5 Set Match Rules

Each set consists of shooting 3 arrows and the competitor with the highest combined score gets 2 points, a tie results in one 1 point. First to 6 points wins the match.

An example match may go like this:

Set 1:
Kim – Scores 10,9,10 – Total 29
Dan – Scores 10,10,10 – Total 30 (Winner – 2 points)
Set 2:
Kim – Scores 10,9,10 – Total 29
Dan – Scores 10,10,10 – Total 30 (Winner – 2 points)
Set 3:
Kim – Scores 9,10,9 – Total 29 (Tie – 1 point)
Dan – Scores 9,9,10 – Total 29 (Tie – 1 point)
​At this point in the match the scores are
Kim – 1 (Has tied 1 set)
Dan – 5 (Has won 2 and tied 1)
Set 4:
Kim – Scores 10,9,10 – Total 29
Dan – Scores 10,10,10 – Total 30 (Winner – 2 points)
Dan now has 6 points and wins the match!

A tie in a match results in a single arrow shoot-off, the closest arrow to the middle of the target wins.​ This is where the center ring on the target comes into play.

Phase 3 – Quarterfinals, Semifinals, Finals

There will likely be a break in proceedings at this point as only the final 8 competitors remain and the final 3 rounds called the quarterfinals, semifinals and finals using a similar elimination method decide the champion. These matches are contested using the same 5 set rules as the previous elimination rounds, albeit with slightly more pressure and circumstance!

Team Events

Also contested are team events made up of either 3 men or 3 women again shooting 72 arrows to define a ranking position. The teams then face off against each other in a match consisting of four sets of 6 arrows (two per archer), and the team with the highest score from the total of all six arrows receives 2 set points, a tie results in 1 point. The first team to 5 set points wins the match.

Read more at the World Archery Federation website https://worldarchery.org.

​Paralympic Archery

The Paralympic division of archery was part of the first Paralympic games in Rome in 1960 and has been part of the programme ever since.

​Paralympic Archery Classifications

The divisions consist of Open and W1 classifications, both classifications may include athletes with impaired legs who shoot from a wheelchair. Open athletes must use a bow under standard rules however W1 athletes may have bows modified from standard rules.

​Paralympic Archery Rules

​Paralympic archery is shot using the same scoring rules as olympic archery for both the compound and recurve bow.

​World Archery Championships

Every 2 years the World Archery Federation hosts the World Archery Championships. The ‘world archery championships’ actually refers to the outdoor target variant of the world championships and the winners are known as the “World Champions” as outdoor target archery is seen by most as the blue ribbon event.

​World Recurve Championships Target Distance and Size

​The recurve championships division uses the same rules and distances as the Olympics.

​World Recurve Championships Rules

​Recurve contests are similar to the Olympic rules above with a seeding round, then a knockout match of the same format.

World Compound Championships Target Distance and Size

​The world compound division is shot over 50m at an 80cm target with an 8cm diameter inner gold ring.

​World Compound Championships Rules

​Compound contests are decided using cumulative scoring, 15 arrows in 5 ends of 3, the highest 15 arrow overall score wins the match.

A tie results in a single arrow shoot-off, the closest arrow to the middle of the target wins.

​World Indoor Archery Championships (Target)

World Indoor Championships Target Distance and Size

Indoor archery is shot at a target of 40cm in diameter ad at a distance of 18m (20 yards).

The recurve division has a 4cm diameter gold and the compound division has the same size target but with an additional 2cm inner gold ring. In international competition there are 3 targets aligned vertically and one arrow is shot at each target.

World Indoor Archery Championships Rules

This competition is shot over 60 arrows and 12 ends, 5 arrows per end.

World Youth Championships (Outdoor Target)

In the the world youth archery championships you’ll find the same rules and target sizes as the world adult championships except there are 3 divisions, a junior recurve division over 70m, a cadet recurve shot over 60m and a compound division shot over 50m.

World Archery Para Championships

Paralympic archery championships are similar in division and rules to the paralympics with the exception of the addition of the V1, V2/3 categories to account for athletes with visual impairments who may be assisted verbally.

World Archery Field Championships

The world field archery championships have 3 bow categories, barebow (recurve with no aids), recurve and compound.

Field archery competitions are shot over 2 days at a maximum of 48 targets. One day consisting of 24 targets with marked distances and another consisting of 24 targets of unmarked distance.

Compound and recurve bows shoot the targets from the farthest distance (marked by a peg) and barebows shoot from a closer marked peg. After this round the top 16 scorers for each bow type are moved to an elimination round where they shoot 3 arrows at 12 marked targets. From this round the top 8 are advanced to a second elimination round there they shoot 3 arrows at 8 targets. From this round the top four advance to the semifinals and final is decided. These final rounds are shot at 4 marked targets with 3 arrows per target.

World Archery 3D Championships

3 dimensional archery (3D) is similar to field archery except the target is a 3D (usually foam) representation of an animal (deer, bear, leapoard etc) with a target area marked on the side.

3D archery targets may be distance marked or unmarked depending on the style of the tournament.

A typical round is 40 targets and an archer is only allowed 1 shot. The marked area on the target is divided into different scoring rings and the highest cumulative archers score at the end of the round determines the winner.

Championship rounds consist of 2 qualification rounds followed by 2 elimination rounds and a final round. There are 3 or 4 courses of 24 targets each for the qualification rounds and three courses of 12 targets for each first elimination round. The qualification and elimination rounds switch courses after each round so they never shoot the same course.

The final round is a course with eight targets.

Read more at the World Archery Federation website https://worldarchery.org

Hi there! I'm a passionate bowman and a fan of all target sports in general. You'll often find me at my local archery and shooting ranges honing my skills.

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