South
Korean archers target more gold in Rio
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[July 05, 2016]
By Peter Rutherford
SEOUL (Reuters) - Ki Bo-bae is under
no illusions about the pressure she will face in Rio as she bids to
become the first archer to defend an individual Olympic title but
after shooting more than 500 arrows a day in training the South
Korean is ready for the challenge.
Archery has been a gold mine for Korea at the Olympics with the
country's athletes hogging 19 of the 36 titles up for grabs since
the sport returned in its modern format in 1972.
The strong performance of the archery team, who have won at least
two golds at each Games since 1988, has helped the Koreans to punch
above their weight in the overall medals table.
With that success has come expectation, Ki told Reuters.
"Previous Korean archery teams have left a legacy with their great
achievements and for many South Koreans when they think of the
Olympics they remember how successful our archers have been," she
said.
"So there is a bit of pressure weighing on our shoulders in that
regard. But we have to think positive and the only way to overcome
that pressure is through training."
Training is something the Koreans take very seriously.
Still sporting nasty sunburn from a practice session on Mount Halla
on Korea's Jeju Island, Ki loosed arrows with frightening accuracy
at the target as torrential rain hammered down at the Taeneung
national training center in Seoul.
If Ki was distracted by the rain she did not show it. Cameras
flashed, telephones rang, the media jostled for position but still
she did not flinch.
Hardly surprising, though, given that the team practiced at a
baseball stadium last weekend before a domestic league game in order
to get used to crowd noise.
Such has been the success of Korean archers that their coaches are
in high demand around the world, which has gone some way to leveling
the playing field.
"It's true that the average level of technique and skills have gone
up but Asian athletes are still head and shoulders above everyone
else," said Ki. ABSENT STARS?
While Korea are confident of getting golds in archery as well as
shooting, judo and taekwondo, two of their biggest stars may not be
on the plane to Rio.
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South Korean national archery team member Ki Bo-bae takes part in a
training session for the 2016 Rio Olympics in Seoul, South Korea,
July 5, 2016. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
Olympic vault champion Yang Hak-seon missed two selection trials due
to a torn Achilles but a gymnastics official said on Tuesday they
would hold three more trials in the hope that he would be fit enough
to try to claim a place on their five-man team.
The situation regarding swimmer Park Tae-hwan remains in the hands
of the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS).
Park, the first Korean to win an Olympic swimming medal when he won
the 400 meters freestyle gold in Beijing, completed an 18-month
doping ban imposed by world governing body FINA in March.
However, as per Korea Olympic Committee regulations, he was then
subject to an additional three-year ban from the day the FINA
suspension expired.
Park took his case to the CAS and filed an injunction with a local
court, which ruled he should be eligible for selection.
“The opinion from CAS has not come out yet," national Olympic
Committee President Kim Jung-haeng said at a news conference. "We
would need to respect both the ruling from the Seoul Eastern
District Court and also the CAS ruling."
(Editing by Clare Fallon)
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