From 25 July to 4 August 2024, 128 of the world's finest recurve archers descended on the Esplanade des Invalides — one of the most iconic settings in Olympic history — for five events that captivated global audiences. The setting could hardly have been more dramatic: the golden dome of the Hôtel des Invalides rising behind the targets at 70 metres, the crowd pressed deep on both sides, the wind swirling unpredictably across the open esplanade. Paris, as a host city, has a gift for spectacle, and archery at Les Invalides delivered spectacle in abundance.
The Republic of Korea, as expected by anyone who follows the sport, swept all five gold medals — their men's team alone claimed their third consecutive Olympic title, while the women completed a stunning tenth straight Olympic crown. But within that sweep were individual stories of extraordinary drama: a men's individual final settled by millimetres, a French heroine holding off South Korea for bronze before her home crowd, and a mixed team event that delivered the most complete performance Korea has ever produced at the Games.
Competition Format
- Distance: 70 metres, outdoors, at a 122 cm target face (10-ring: 12.2 cm in diameter).
- Ranking Round: 72 arrows, establishing seedings for all events. Combined men's and women's scores determined mixed team pairs.
- Individual Events: Single-elimination bracket of 64 archers per gender. Matches decided by the set system (best of five sets, three arrows per set). Tied at 5-5 goes to a shoot-off.
- Team Events: Single-elimination bracket of 12 teams per gender. Sets of six arrows (two per archer), four sets. Tied at 4-4 goes to a shoot-off.
- Mixed Team: Top 16 ranked pairs from the ranking round. Sets of four arrows (two per archer), four sets. Tied at 4-4 goes to a shoot-off.
Mixed Team — South Korea Opens with a Perfect Sweep
The first archery gold of Paris 2024 was settled on 28 July in the mixed team recurve — and it was announced from the very first arrow that Korea intended to leave Paris with everything. Lim Sihyeon and Kim Woojin, the nation's flagship pair, dropped just two sets across their entire bracket run — surviving a tight match against Chinese Taipei in the round of 16 before dismantling Germany's Michelle Kroppen and Florian Unruh 6-0 in the gold medal match. It was the second consecutive Olympic mixed team title for Korea, and the performance level from Lim and Kim that afternoon gave an early indication of what was to come across the week.
Team USA — pairing five-time Olympian Brady Ellison with 21-year-old Casey Kaufhold — won the bronze medal against India's Ankita Bhakat and Dhiraj Bommadevara, 6-2. It was the first archery medal for the United States since Rio 2016 and made Kaufhold the first American woman to win an archery medal since the women's team claimed bronze at the 1988 Seoul Games.
- 🥇 Gold: Republic of Korea (Lim Sihyeon / Kim Woojin) — A 6-0 gold medal match victory over Germany. Two dominant archers at the absolute peak of their powers, shooting in perfect synchrony.
- 🥈 Silver: Germany (Michelle Kroppen / Florian Unruh) — A silver medal and one of Germany's finest Olympic archery results in a generation.
- 🥉 Bronze: USA (Casey Kaufhold / Brady Ellison) — A landmark medal for US archery, Kaufhold's first major international podium and the country's first archery medal in eight years.
Women's Team — Korea's Tenth Straight Olympic Gold
No other event in team sport — across any discipline in Olympic history — has produced a ten-consecutive-gold sequence. On 28 July, the Republic of Korea's women's archery team continued the most extraordinary dynasty in the Games. The trio — Lim Sihyeon, Nam Suhyeon and Jeon Hunyoung — had set an Olympic ranking round record of 2,046 points on the opening day, and the quality of their shooting throughout the event left little doubt about the eventual outcome. Their gold medal match against China required a shoot-off to finally separate the sides after an enthralling contest, but Korea prevailed, extending their unbeaten Olympic team run to 36 years.
- 🥇 Gold: Republic of Korea (Lim Sihyeon, Nam Suhyeon, Jeon Hunyoung) — Ten consecutive Olympic titles. An unparalleled achievement in the history of team sport at the Olympic Games.
- 🥈 Silver: China — A gold-medal-level performance undone only in the shoot-off. China's women's team were the closest challengers to the Korean dynasty in Paris.
- 🥉 Bronze: Mexico (Alejandra Valencia, Ana Luiza Sliachticas Caetano, Angela Ruiz) — A landmark bronze for Mexican women's archery, defeating the Netherlands 6-2 in the bronze medal match.
Men's Team — Korea Extends Their Own Dynasty
If the women's ten-title streak is the gold standard of Olympic archery dominance, the men's team has run a parallel sequence that now stands at three consecutive titles. Kim Woojin, Lee Woo Seok and Kim Woojin's compatriots dismantled their opponents systematically through the bracket, reaching the gold medal match against France — a home-nation final that ignited the Invalides crowd into full voice. Korea prevailed, claiming their third straight men's team Olympic title.
- 🥇 Gold: Republic of Korea (Kim Woojin, Lee Woo Seok, Kim Je Deok) — Three consecutive Olympic men's team titles. A dominant display throughout the bracket, with France their final opponents on home soil.
- 🥈 Silver: France (Jean-Charles Valladont, Thomas Chirault, Baptiste Addis) — An emotionally charged silver for the host nation. The crowd at Les Invalides was at its loudest for this match, and France more than held their own against Korea before bowing out to a genuinely superior team.
- 🥉 Bronze: Türkiye (Mete Gazoz, Muhammed Gazoz, Ömer Yüksel) — Bronze for Türkiye, defeating China 6-2 in the bronze medal match. World champion Mete Gazoz led the team throughout a strong Olympic campaign.
Women's Individual — An All-Korean Final
Defending individual champion An San was not in Paris, having failed to qualify for the Games. But Korea's depth ensured they still produced two finalists. Lim Sihyeon — who had by this point already won both the team gold and the mixed team gold — faced compatriot Nam Suhyeon in the gold medal match in the first all-Korean women's archery final at the Olympics. Lim took the title 7-3 in a composed, clinical performance, adding her third Paris gold to her collection. The bronze medal went to France's Lisa Barbelin, whose defeat of a South Korean opponent before her own home crowd at Les Invalides sent the Invalides crowd into a frenzy.
- 🥇 Gold: Lim Sihyeon (Republic of Korea) — Three gold medals across Paris 2024 (individual, team, mixed team). One of the finest performances by any archer in a single Olympic Games.
- 🥈 Silver: Nam Suhyeon (Republic of Korea) — An all-Korean podium sweep was narrowly averted by France's Barbelin claiming bronze. Nam's silver was a tremendous achievement in a Games dominated by her compatriots.
- 🥉 Bronze: Lisa Barbelin (France) — The home crowd's hero at Les Invalides. Barbelin's bronze medal match win drew scenes of euphoria from the Paris crowd and was one of the emotional highlights of the entire Games.
Men's Individual — The Greatest Individual Final in Olympic Archery History
If one match from Paris 2024 will be remembered across generations, it is the men's individual gold medal final on 4 August between Kim Woojin (Korea) and Brady Ellison (USA). Two of the finest recurve men's archers of all time — "If Messi and Ronaldo are the best in soccer, then maybe we are the duo in archery," Kim said of their rivalry — traded set for set for the full five sets, finishing tied at 5-5 and forcing a single-arrow shoot-off for the Olympic gold medal.
Kim went first and fired a 10, just on the inside of the ring. Ellison — shooting for the Olympic gold medal he had spent his entire career chasing — released his arrow 5 millimetres wide of Kim's for a 9. The Korean was the Olympic champion. It was Kim Woojin's fifth Olympic gold medal across his career, completing a three-gold sweep in Paris and confirming his place — in his own words and by any objective measure — as the greatest Olympic archer of all time. For Ellison, now with three silver medals and two bronze across five Olympics, the result was a narrow miss at the pinnacle of the sport, delivered with every ounce of what both men had.
Lee Woo Seok, who had won the mixed team gold with Kim as part of the team, defeated Germany's Florian Unruh in the bronze medal match to complete a remarkable Korean podium sweep of the men's event.
- 🥇 Gold: Kim Woojin (Republic of Korea) — Five Olympic gold medals. Three in Paris alone. A shoot-off victory over Brady Ellison decided by 5 millimetres. After the match, Kim said: "I think you can now call me the greatest of all time."
- 🥈 Silver: Brady Ellison (USA) — Three career Olympic silver medals and two bronze. Five Games. A 9 by 5 millimetres. The greatest rival any archer in this era has known. A career of extraordinary achievement, defined by the narrowest of margins at the very top.
- 🥉 Bronze: Lee Woo Seok (Republic of Korea) — A third Korean medal in the men's individual, completing a dominant programme for the Korean men's team. Lee had been one of the most consistent performers throughout the Paris competition.
Key Takeaways
- South Korea swept all five gold medals — individual men's and women's, team men's and women's, and mixed team — the first time any nation has achieved a clean sweep of Olympic archery golds in the modern era.
- Lim Sihyeon's three Paris golds (individual, team, mixed team) place her among the greatest individual Olympic performances of any archer in the Games' history.
- Kim Woojin vs. Brady Ellison in the men's individual final — decided by 5 millimetres in a shoot-off — will rank among the most dramatic gold medal matches in the history of Olympic archery.
- Lisa Barbelin's bronze for France before her home crowd at Les Invalides was the emotional moment of the week, a scene of pure joy that encapsulated what archery in Paris meant to the host nation.
- Casey Kaufhold's bronze in the mixed team with Brady Ellison was the first archery medal for the USA since Rio 2016 — a breakthrough for the 21-year-old who had entered the Games as one of the world's top-ranked women.
- Mexico's women's team bronze — with Angela Ruiz, Alejandra Valencia and Ana Luiza Sliachticas Caetano — was a historic result for Latin American archery, previewing a Mexican programme that would continue to flourish into the 2025–26 indoor season.
- The next edition of Olympic archery will take place at Los Angeles 2028, where the USA will hold host nation automatic berths across all events — a significant structural advantage for Ellison, Kaufhold and the next generation of American archers.