The 2024 Hyundai Archery World Cup opened its doors in Shanghai, China, from April 23–28 — and the first major outdoor international of the Olympic year did not disappoint. With Paris 2024 just three months away, the Shanghai stage was the first chance for the world's elite to test their form, shake off the rust of the indoor season, and begin building momentum for the summer. In a circuit reduced to three stages because of the Olympic Games, every arrow counted more than usual: stage wins secured automatic World Cup Final spots, while strong results accumulated ranking points that would determine qualifications for October's season finale in Tlaxcala.
Austria's Nico Wiener produced the upset of the tournament in the compound men's final, shooting a European record to deny India a clean sweep of the compound disciplines. Jyothi Surekha Vennam provided India with their headline compound gold, and Lim Sihyeon maintained her position as the dominant force in women's recurve, while the compound men's team produced a new world record that set tongues wagging across the archery community. The season had begun.
Competition Format
- Distance: 70 metres (recurve), 50 metres (compound), outdoors.
- Individual Format: 72-arrow qualification establishing seeds, followed by single-elimination from the round of 64 (individuals). Shoot-off at 5-5 (recurve) or tied score (compound).
- Team Format: Mixed team, men's team and women's team events held across the week, with team matches decided by set system (recurve) or cumulative score (compound).
- Season context: With three stages before the World Cup Final (compared to four in most years), stage wins at Shanghai, Yecheon and Antalya were the primary routes to the Tlaxcala Final qualification. Strong points results also counted, with the top-ranked archers in each category after the three stages filling the remaining Finals spots.
A World Record in the Compound Men's Team
Before a single individual elimination match had been shot, the USA's compound men's team of Braden Gellenthien, James Lutz and Sawyer Sullivan had already provided the headline of the qualification day: a new world record in the 72-arrow team total, combining for 2,140 points to beat Korea's previous mark of 2,137 by three points. Sullivan scored 715, Gellenthien 713 and Lutz 712 — three elite compounders peaking simultaneously on the first major outdoor international of the year. It did not translate directly into team gold (Denmark ultimately won the men's compound team final), but the performance signalled in clear terms that the USA's compound programme was operating at an extraordinary level heading into the Olympic season.
Compound Individual Events — Saturday, April 27
Men's Compound Individual — Wiener Shocks the Field
The compound men's individual event was the story of Nico Wiener. The Austrian world champion (2021) arrived in Shanghai seeded ninth after qualification, and his route to the final was a succession of tightly contested shoot-offs and margin victories. In the quarterfinals, he knocked out defending World Cup Final champion Mathias Fullerton of Denmark — the top qualifier — via a shoot-off win after tying on score, signalling that something special might be in the works. In the final, Wiener faced India's Priyansh, himself having an outstanding season opener after reaching the gold medal match. In the gold medal match, Wiener shot a European record score to seal the title — a clinical, composed performance that belied his ninth-seed status entirely.
"The feeling is indescribable, it's incredible. From the first shot to the last, it was like I was shooting at home," Wiener said after the win. "After the semifinals, I knew the pressure was off. It seemed super easy." The World Cup Final spot that the stage win delivered was a major bonus for an archer who had been one of the sport's most consistent performers but was yet to win a stage in this era of the outdoor circuit. Wiener's Shanghai gold announced his return to the very top of compound men's archery on the global stage.
- 🥇 Gold: Nico Wiener (Austria) — A European record in the gold medal match, a ninth-seed run through the bracket including a shoot-off elimination of top qualifier Fullerton. A breakthrough stage win for the 2021 World Champion that booked his Tlaxcala Final spot and announced that Austria's finest compounder was in career-best form.
- 🥈 Silver: Priyansh (India) — The young Indian's second consecutive World Cup individual final silver (he would match this result at Antalya two months later), demonstrating extraordinary consistency from a 21-year-old on the world's biggest outdoor archery stage. India's compound men's programme had a genuine individual star in the making.
- 🥉 Bronze: Mathias Fullerton (Denmark) — The defending World Cup Final champion and top qualifier was knocked out via shoot-off by Wiener in the quarterfinals, but recovered to claim the bronze medal, underlining his status as one of the world's elite compound archers despite the result.
Women's Compound Individual — Vennam Claims the Gold
India's Jyothi Surekha Vennam entered Shanghai as one of compound women's most decorated performers outside of Sara Lopez — a multiple Asian Games champion, World Cup medal winner, and one of the fastest drawers and most consistent scorers in the women's compound division. In Shanghai, she delivered a performance that matched her reputation, winning the individual gold medal to add to what was rapidly becoming an Indian compound sweep of the day programme. Having already helped India win the women's compound team event and the mixed compound team title earlier in the week, her individual gold completed a remarkable personal week in China.
- 🥇 Gold: Jyothi Surekha Vennam (India) — A comprehensive win from the Asian Games champion, continuing India's dominance of compound women's competition in the early 2024 season. Her triple gold across individual, team and mixed team events in Shanghai was one of the finest single-tournament performances by any archer at this opening stage.
- 🥈 Silver: Deepika Kumari (India) — The four-time Olympian, more associated with recurve, reached the final in the compound women's event in what was a remarkable result for Indian archery. An all-India final in the compound women's event was a first at this level of World Cup competition.
- 🥉 Bronze: Alexis Ruiz (USA) — The experienced American compound archer claimed bronze, the first of several strong results she would accumulate across the 2024 outdoor season on her way to securing a World Cup Final place.
Recurve Individual Events — Sunday, April 28
Women's Recurve Individual — Lim Sihyeon Continues Her Dominance
If the compound events had been defined by surprises and Indian excellence, the women's recurve final restored a familiar name to the top of the podium. Lim Sihyeon — the 21-year-old Korean who had ended 2023 as one of the sport's most exciting young talents — arrived in Shanghai as the pre-event favourite and did everything required to justify that status. She navigated through the elimination rounds, defeating India's Deepika Kumari in the gold medal match to claim the stage title and begin her 2024 World Cup season with a maximum return. It was a statement from a woman who would go on to dominate the outdoor season entirely, culminating in three Olympic gold medals in Paris less than three months later.
- 🥇 Gold: Lim Sihyeon (Republic of Korea) — The first of what would be a string of dominant results across 2024 for Korea's Olympic centrepiece. Lim defeated Deepika Kumari in the final to begin her outdoor season with the maximum stage prize.
- 🥈 Silver: Deepika Kumari (India) — A silver in the recurve women's final capped a strong individual week for the Indian legend, who would go on to compete at her fourth Olympics in Paris. Her consistency at 30 remained a benchmark for the world's recurve women.
- 🥉 Bronze: Casey Kaufhold (USA) — The world's number one-ranked recurve woman heading into the season, Kaufhold claimed bronze after being edged in the semifinals, keeping herself in fine touch ahead of the Paris Olympic Games team competition.
Men's Recurve Individual — D'Almeida Opens the Season with Gold
Brazil's Marcus D'Almeida, the world number one and one of the most decorated male recurve archers of the modern era, opened his 2024 outdoor season with the stage win in Shanghai. His route to the gold medal match was typically measured and controlled — D'Almeida is rarely spectacular in his eliminations, but his ability to raise his performance in the biggest moments is his defining trait. His gold in Shanghai confirmed him as the season's early form man in men's recurve, and the months of build-up toward Paris that followed would prove equally impressive.
- 🥇 Gold: Marcus D'Almeida (Brazil) — The world number one opened his 2024 season with the stage title, maintaining the level of consistency that had made him the pre-eminent individual male recurve archer on the World Cup circuit and one of the favourites for Olympic glory in Paris.
- 🥈 Silver: Kim Woojin (Republic of Korea) — The Olympic champion, fresh from leading Korea's team programme, reached the final before bowing out to D'Almeida. Kim's form across the day was excellent, previewing the rivalry that would define the outdoor season — and ultimately the Olympic gold medal match in Paris.
- 🥉 Bronze: Lee Woo Seok (Republic of Korea) — A bronze for Korea's third individual medallist of the day, underlining the depth of the Korean men's recurve programme heading into the Olympic Games and the World Cup season that would follow.
Key Takeaways
- Nico Wiener's upset of top seed Mathias Fullerton en route to a European record gold medal match performance was the individual story of Shanghai, and a reminder that the compound men's division has depth that no world number one can comfortably ignore.
- India's compound dominance — team gold in women's compound, men's compound silver and bronze, a world record qualification round, and Vennam's triple gold (individual, team, mixed team) — was the most comprehensive national compound performance at any 2024 season-opening stage.
- Lim Sihyeon's gold in women's recurve was the first of what would be a season-defining string of results, culminating in three Paris 2024 Olympic gold medals. The Korean's Shanghai performance suggested that if she remained healthy through to August, little would stand in her way.
- D'Almeida's opener confirmed the Korean–Brazilian dynamic in men's recurve that would define the outdoor season: a rivalry between world number one D'Almeida and Olympic champion Kim Woojin that would reach its climax in a Paris Olympic final decided by a shoot-off measured in millimetres.
- With two further World Cup stages to come in Yecheon (May) and Antalya (June), the race for World Cup Final spots and world ranking points ahead of Paris was fully underway. The 2024 outdoor archery season — one of the richest and most consequential in the sport's modern history — had begun in earnest.