The Archery World Cup is a competition organized by World Archery, where the archers compete in four stages in four countries and the best eight archers of each category (from 2010, four archers during 2006–09) advance to an additional stage to contest the Archery World Cup Final. Started in 2006, this form of competition was introduced following the success of the 2003 World Archery Championships in New York and the 2004 Summer Olympics with the intent of making the sport more popular and attractive to spectators, with the matches being held in 'spectacular' locations and the final matches being broadcast online.[1] It has received plaudits for its innovative approach to the sport, raising its profile and reach.[2][3]

Archery World Cup
Statusactive
Genresporting event
Date(s)April – October
Frequencyannual
Countryvarying
Inaugurated2006 (2006)
FounderWorld Archery
Most recent2024 Archery World Cup

From 2013, the World Cup is broadcast live on Eurosport.[4] It carries sponsorship from Kia and Longines, which supports the annual Longines Prize of Precision for archery, for the "best male and female athletes that master bow and arrow through concentration, balance, accuracy, and skill".[5]

Prize money

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The prize money for 2022 season was:[6]

2022 Prize money
Position Stage Final
1st 3,500 CHF 28,000 CHF
2nd 2,200 CHF 14,000 CHF
3rd 1,100 CHF 7,000 CHF
4th 800 CHF 1,500 CHF

In the World Cup Finals the prize money for the individual competitions in 2018 was:[7]

  • 1st place: 20,000 CHF
  • 2nd place: 10,000 CHF
  • 3rd place: 5,000 CHF
  • 4th place: 1,000 CHF

For each individual World Cup stage, the prize money offered for individual competitions in 2013 was:

  • 1st place: 2,000 CHF
  • 2nd place: 1,000 CHF
  • 3rd place: 500 CHF

Host venues

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The following venues have hosted stages of the World Cup Final.

Number Year Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4 Final Events
1 2006   Poreč   Antalya   San Salvador   Shanghai   Mérida 36
2 2007   Ulsan   Varese   Antalya   Dover   Dubai 36
3 2008   Santo Domingo   Poreč   Antalya   Boé   Lausanne 36
4 2009   Santo Domingo   Poreč   Antalya   Shanghai   Copenhagen 46
5 2010   Poreč   Antalya   Ogden   Shanghai   Edinburgh 46
6 2011   Poreč   Antalya   Ogden   Shanghai   Istanbul 46
7 2012   Shanghai   Antalya   Ogden n/c: 2012 Olympics   Tokyo 36
8 2013   Shanghai   Antalya   Medellín   Wrocław   Paris 46
9 2014   Shanghai   Medellín   Antalya   Wrocław   Lausanne 46
10 2015   Shanghai   Antalya   Wrocław   Medellín   Mexico City 46
11 2016   Shanghai   Medellín   Antalya n/c: 2016 Olympics   Odense 36
12 2017   Shanghai   Antalya   Salt Lake City   Berlin   Rome 46
13 2018   Shanghai   Antalya   Salt Lake City   Berlin   Samsun 46
14 2019   Medellín   Shanghai   Antalya   Berlin   Moscow 46
2020 Cancelled[8]
15 2021   Guatemala City   Lausanne   Paris n/c: 2020 Olympics   Yankton 34
16 2022   Antalya   Gwangju   Paris   Medellín   Tlaxcala 44
17 2023   Antalya   Shanghai   Medellín   Paris   Hermosillo 44
18 2024   Shanghai   Yecheon   Antalya n/c: 2024 Olympics   Tlaxcala
19 2025   Haines City   Shanghai   Antalya   Madrid TBD
20 2026   Haines City   Shanghai   Antalya   Madrid TBD
21 2027   Haines City   Shanghai   Antalya   Madrid TBD

Editions and winners

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Recurve

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Finals Gold Silver Bronze
  2006 Mérida   Park Kyung-mo   Ilario Di Buò   Magnus Petersson
  2007 Dubai   Baljinima Tsyrempilov   Juan René Serrano   Alan Wills
  2008 Lausanne   Im Dong-hyun   Viktor Ruban   Romain Girouille
  2009 Copenhagen   Marco Galiazzo   Simon Terry   Romain Girouille
  2010 Edinburgh   Brady Ellison   Im Dong-hyun   Jayanta Talukdar
  2011 Istanbul   Brady Ellison   Dai Xiaoxiang   Dmytro Hrachov
  2012 Tokyo   Kim Woo-jin   Brady Ellison   Gaël Prévost
  2013 Paris   Oh Jin-hyek   Dai Xiaoxiang   Brady Ellison
  2014 Lausanne   Brady Ellison   Marcus D'Almeida   Rick van der Ven
  2015 Mexico City   Miguel Alvariño García   Jean-Charles Valladont   Kim Woo-jin
  2016 Odense   Brady Ellison   Sjef van den Berg   Ku Bon-chan
  2017 Rome   Kim Woo-jin   Brady Ellison   Im Dong-hyun
  2018 Samsun   Kim Woo-jin   Lee Woo-seok   Brady Ellison
  2019 Moscow   Brady Ellison   Mauro Nespoli   Sjef van den Berg
  2021 Yankton   Jack Williams   Brady Ellison   Mete Gazoz
  2022 Tlaxcala   Kim Woo-jin   Miguel Alvariño García   Mete Gazoz
  2023 Hermosillo   Marcus D'almeida   Lee Woo-seok   Mauro Nespoli
  2024 Tlaxcala

Women

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Finals Gold Silver Bronze
  2006 Mérida   Zhang Juanjuan   Qian Jialing   Elena Tonetta
  2007 Dubai   Dola Banerjee   Choi Eun-young   Natalya Erdyniyeva
  2008 Lausanne   Justyna Mospinek   Park Sung-hyun   Yun Ok-hee
  2009 Copenhagen   Kwak Ye-ji   Zhao Ling   Yun Ok-hee
  2010 Edinburgh   Yun Ok-hee   Victoriya Koval   Ki Bo-bae
  2011 Istanbul   Cheng Ming   Deepika Kumari   Bérengère Schuh
  2012 Tokyo   Ki Bo-bae   Deepika Kumari   Choi Hyeon-ju
  2013 Paris   Yun Ok-hee   Deepika Kumari   Cui Yuanyuan
  2014 Lausanne   Aída Román   Cheng Ming   Xu Jing
  2015 Mexico City   Choi Mi-sun   Deepika Kumari   Le Chien-ying
  2016 Odense   Ki Bo-bae   Choi Mi-sun   Tan Ya-ting
  2017 Rome   Ki Bo-bae   Ksenia Perova   Chang Hye-jin
  2018 Samsun   Lee Eun-gyeong   Yasemin Anagöz   Deepika Kumari
  2019 Moscow   Kang Chae-young   Tan Ya-ting   Zheng Yichai
  2021 Yankton   Lisa Unruh   Elena Osipova   Michelle Kroppen
  2022 Tlaxcala   An San   Choi Mi-sun   Peng Chia-mao
  2023 Hermosillo   Kang Chae-young   Alejandra Valencia   Lim Si-hyeon
  2024 Tlaxcala

Mixed team

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Finals Gold Silver Bronze
  2009 Copenhagen   China
Zhao Ling
Xing Yu
  Denmark
Carina Christiansen
Morten Caspersen
  2010 Edinburgh   United States
Khatuna Lorig
Jake Kaminski
  United Kingdom
Naomi Folkard
Simon Terry
  2011 Istanbul   South Korea
Jung Dasomi
Oh Jin-hyek
  Turkey
Natalia Nasaridze
Yağız Yılmaz
  2012 Tokyo   United States
Jennifer Nichols
Brady Ellison
  Japan
Miki Kanie
Takaharu Furukawa
  2013 Paris   South Korea
Yun Ok-hee
Oh Jin-hyek
  France
Cyrielle Cotry
Gaël Prévost
  2014 Lausanne   Mexico
Aída Román
Eduardo Vélez
  Switzerland
Iliana Deineko
Florian Faber
  2015 Mexico City   South Korea
Choi Mi-sun
Kim Woo-jin
  Mexico
Alejandra Valencia
Luis Álvarez
  2016 Odense   South Korea
Choi Mi-sun
Ku Bon-chan
  Denmark
Maja Jager
Johan Weiss
  2017 Rome   South Korea
Chang Hye-jin
Kim Woo-jin
  Italy
Vanessa Landi
Mauro Nespoli
  2018 Samsun   South Korea
Chang Hye-jin
Kim Woo-jin
  Turkey
Yasemin Anagöz
Mete Gazoz
  2019 Moscow   South Korea
Kim Woo-jin
Kang Chae-young
  Russia
Erdem Irdyneev
Elena Osipova

Compound

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Finals Gold Silver Bronze
  2006 Mérida   Reo Wilde   Peter Elzinga   Jorge Jiménez
  2007 Dubai   Jorge Jiménez   Braden Gellenthien   Roberval dos Santos
  2008 Lausanne   Dietmar Trillus   Patrizio Hofer   Patrick Coghlan
  2009 Copenhagen   Sergio Pagni   Braden Gellenthien   Patrizio Hofer
  2010 Edinburgh   Sergio Pagni (2)   Braden Gellenthien   Rodger Willett Jr.
  2011 Istanbul   Rodger Willett Jr.   Reo Wilde   Sergio Pagni
  2012 Tokyo   Braden Gellenthien   Reo Wilde (2)   Julio Ricardo Fierro
  2013 Paris   Martin Damsbo   Braden Gellenthien   Sergio Pagni (2)
  2014 Lausanne   Bridger Deaton   Pierre-Julien Deloche   Reo Wilde
  2015 Mexico City   Demir Elmaağaçlı   Abhishek Verma   Dominique Genet
  2016 Odense   Mike Schloesser   Seppie Cilliers   Reo Wilde (2)
  2017 Rome   Braden Gellenthien (2)   Stephan Hansen   Steve Anderson
  2018 Samsun   Kris Schaff   Demir Elmaağaçlı   Abhishek Verma
  2019 Moscow   Mike Schloesser   Braden Gellenthien   Daniel Muñoz
  2021 Yankton   Mike Schloesser   Braden Gellenthien (6)   Kris Schaff
  2022 Tlaxcala   Mike Schloesser (4)   Nicolas Girard   Jean Pizarro
  2023 Hermosillo   Mathias Fullerton   Prathamesh Samadhan Jawkar   Mike Schloesser
  2024 Tlaxcala

Women

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Finals Gold Silver Bronze
  2006 Mérida   Sofia Goncharova   Anna Kazantseva   Jahna Davis
  2007 Dubai   Petra Ericsson   Sofia Goncharova   Jamie van Natta
  2008 Lausanne   Jamie van Natta   Nichola Simpson   Amandine Bouillot
  2009 Copenhagen   Luzmary Guedez   Camilla Sømod   Ivana Buden
  2010 Edinburgh   Albina Loginova   Ashley Wallace   Erika Anschutz
  2011 Istanbul   Erika Anschutz   Christie Colin   Marcella Tonioli
  2012 Tokyo   Jamie van Natta   Danielle Brown   Christie Colin
  2013 Paris   Alejandra Usquiano   Erika Jones   Albina Loginova
  2014 Lausanne   Sara López   Erika Jones   Natalia Avdeeva
  2015 Mexico City   Sara López   Maria Vinogradova   Linda Ochoa
  2016 Odense   Marcella Tonioli   Sarah Holst Sonnichsen   Crystal Gauvin
  2017 Rome   Sara López   Tanja Gellenthien   Yeşim Bostan
  2018 Samsun   Sara López   Linda Ochoa   So Chae-won
  2019 Moscow   Sara López   Natalia Avdeeva   Sophie Dodemomt
  2021 Yankton   Sara López   Toja Ellison   Tanja Gellenthien
  2022 Tlaxcala   Sara López   Ella Gibson   Alejandra Usquiano
  2023 Hermosillo   Sara López   Tanja Gellenthien   Dafne Quintero
  2024 Tlaxcala   Sara López   Meeri-Marita Paas   Dafne Quintero

Mixed team

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Finals Gold Silver Bronze
  2009 Copenhagen   Denmark
Camilla Sømod
Martin Damsbo
  Italy
Anastasia Anastasio
Sergio Pagni
  2010 Edinburgh   United Kingdom
Nicky Hunt
Chris White
  Mexico
Linda Ochoa
Hafid Jaime
  2011 Istanbul   United States
Christie Colin
Rodger Willett Jr.
  Turkey
Gizem Kocaman
Ali Davarci
  2012 Tokyo   United States
Christie Colin
Reo Wilde
  Japan
Yumiko Hondo
Naoto Anji
  2013 Paris   France
Pascale Lebecque
Pierre-Julien Deloche
  Italy
Marcella Tonioli
Sergio Pagni
  2014 Lausanne   United States
Erika Jones
Bridger Deaton
  Switzerland
Clementine de Guili
Patrizio Hofer
  2015 Mexico City   Denmark
Erika Anear
Stephan Hansen
  Mexico
Linda Ochoa
Mario Cardoso
  2016 Odense   Denmark
Tanja Gellenthien
Stephan Hansen
  Colombia
Alejandra Usquiano
Camilo Cardona
  2017 Rome   Denmark
Sarah Holst Sönnichsen
Stephan Hansen
  Italy
Irene Franchini
Alberto Simonelli
  2018 Samsun   Turkey
Yeşim Bostan
Demir Elmaağaçlı
  India
Jyothi Surekha Vennam
Abhishek Verma
  2019 Moscow   United States
Braden Gellenthien
Alexis Ruiz
  Russia
Pavel Krylov
Elizaveta Knyazeva

Longines Prize for Precision

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The Longines Prize for Precision is awarded to the male and female archers who shoot the most 10s over the course of the competition at the end of the season. It has been awarded since 2010 and is awarded to compound and recurve archers in alternate years. Winners receive a trophy, watch and cash prize of 5,000 CHF.[6][9]

Winners

Year R/C Men's winner Women's winner
2010 R   Brady Ellison   Justyna Mospinek
2011 C   Rodger Willett Jr.   Erika Anschutz
2012 R   Brady Ellison   Ki Bo-bae
2013 C   Braden Gellenthien   Erika Jones
2014 R   Brady Ellison   Aída Román
2015 C   Mike Schloesser   Sara López
2016 R   Brady Ellison   Tan Ya-ting
2017 C   Stephan Hansen   Sarah Holst Sönnichsen
2018 R   Lee Woo-seok   Chang Hye-jin
2019 C   Braden Gellenthien   Alexis Ruiz
2021 C   Mike Schloesser   Tanja Gellenthien
2023 R   Lee Woo-seok   Lim Si-hyeon
2024 C   Mike Schloesser   Andrea Becerra

Medal table

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Nations

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Including all individual and team stage and final medals up to end of 2023 World Cup final.

  • † Final host nation
  • ‡ Stage host nation
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  South Korea1688082330
2  United States14210189332
3  Russia434438125
4  Italy364239117
5  Colombia36211067
6  India354242119
7  Denmark34321480
8  France342956119
9  China28323797
10  Netherlands23273383
11  Chinese Taipei23253179
12  Great Britain18312473
13  Mexico16453798
14  Turkey14181850
15  Germany8172348
16  Japan7171438
17  Spain68822
18  Ukraine471324
19  Brazil44513
20  Venezuela41611
21  Canada310922
22  Iran38415
23  El Salvador37717
24  Sweden3519
25  South Africa3418
26  Belgium33612
27  New Zealand3104
28  Australia210921
29  Slovenia26311
30  Poland1719
31  Malaysia15612
32  Croatia15410
33  Indonesia1157
34  Kazakhstan1102
35  Guatemala1001
  Moldova1001
37  Switzerland0448
38  Belarus0336
39  Estonia0213
  Puerto Rico0213
41  Greece0202
42  Georgia0112
43  Austria0101
  Bangladesh0101
  Iraq0101
  Luxembourg0101
  Norway0101
  Sri Lanka0101
49  Philippines0022
50  Argentina0011
  Bulgaria0011
  Lithuania0011
Totals (52 entries)7157166902,121

Archers

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The following table shows the total number of all medals (including stage and finals).

Including stage and final medals up to end of 2023 World Cup final.

  Recurve archer
  Compound archer

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1   Braden Gellenthien 38 24 14 76
2   Kim Woo-jin 33 14 11 58
3   Sara López 33 11 7 51
4   Brady Ellison 32 16 16 64
5   Reo Wilde 32 12 16 60
6   Kang Chae-young 21 2 1 24
7   Oh Jin-hyek 19 8 7 34
8   Yun Ok-hee 19 4 7 30
9   Choi Mi-sun 18 5 4 27
10   Jamie van Natta 17 16 11 44
11   Erika Jones 17 14 6 37
12   Ki Bo-bae 17 8 5 29
13   Chang Hye-jin 17 8 3 28
14   Im Dong-hyun 17 4 11 32
15   Mike Schloesser 15 8 11 34
16   Sergio Pagni 12 12 11 35
17   Albina Loginova 12 7 11 30
18   Lee Woo-seok 12 8 4 24
19   Deepika Kumari 11 17 8 36
20   Martin Damsbo 11 12 9 32
21   Alejandra Usquiano 10 10 4 24
22   Sofia Goncharova 10 4 2 16
23   Lee Seung-yun 10 1 1 12
24   Rodger Willett Jr. 9 4 4 17
25   An San 9 0 1 4
26   Dave Cousins 9 0 1 10
27   Tanja Gellenthien 8 8 3 19
28   Pierre-Julien Deloche 8 7 6 21
29   Abhishek Verma 8 4 10 22
30   Jayanta Talukdar 7 10 6 23
31   Sarah Sonnichsen 7 6 1 14
32   Marcella Tonioli 6 6 10 22
33   Peng Chia-Mao 6 5 7 18
34   Cheng Ming 6 5 6 17
35   Anna Kazantseva 6 5 2 13
36   Ilario Di Buò 6 3 0 9
37   Kim Je-deok 6 2 0 8
38   Jung Dasomi 6 1 4 11
39   Sebastien Peineau 6 1 4 11
40   Park Sung-hyun 6 1 3 10
41   Lim Si-hyeon 6 1 1 8
42   Ella Gibson 5 6 2 13
43   Mauro Nespoli 4 10 5 19
44   Miguel Alvarino Garcia 4 5 5 14
45   Park Kyung-mo 4 1 3 8
46   Luzmary Guedez 4 0 3 7
47   Kwak Ye-ji 4 0 1 5
47   Mathias Fullerton 4 0 1 5
49   Lee Eun-gyeong 4 0 0 4
50   Jorge Jiménez 3 6 6 15

The following table shows the total number of individual medals (including stage and finals).

Including stage and final medals up to end of 2023 World Cup final.

  Recurve archer
  Compound archer

Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1   Sara López 19 4 4 27
2   Brady Ellison 15 6 5 26
3   Mike Schloesser 12 5 5 22
4   Kim Woo-jin 10 7 5 22
5   Braden Gellenthien 8 13 6 27
6   Yun Ok-hee 8 3 5 16
7   Reo Wilde 7 4 7 18
8   Sergio Pagni 7 2 3 12
9   Ki Bo-bae 6 4 3 13
10   Jamie van Natta 5 6 3 14
11   Choi Mi-sun 5 3 3 11
12   Im Dong-hyun 5 2 6 13
13   Kang Chae-young 5 1 1 7
14   Deepika Kumari 4 7 4 15
15   Erika Jones 4 7 2 13
16   Sofia Goncharova 4 2 1 7
17   Ella Gibson 4 2 0 6
18   Rodger Willett Jr. 4 0 2 6
19   Lee Seung-yun 4 0 0 4
20   Oh Jin-hyek 3 5 2 10

Indoor World Cup

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An Indoor Archery World Cup was inaugurated in 2010. It is played in the off-season (November to February), with fewer stages and the final competed in Las Vegas. In 2014, the stages were held in Marrakesh, Singapore and Telford.[10] 2019-2020 Indoor Archery World Series have 6 qualification and one final stage.[11] After 2018, the World Indoor Archery Championships were discontinued, leaving the Indoor Archery World Series as the premier championship in indoor archery.[12]

Year Host (Final) Men's Recurve Women's Recurve Men's Compound Women's Compound Ref
2011   Las Vegas   Michele Frangilli   Louise Laursen   Reo Wilde   Albina Loginova [1]
2012   Las Vegas   Brady Ellison   Ksenia Perova   Reo Wilde   Joanna Chesse [2]
2013   Las Vegas   Brady Ellison   Jeon Sung-eun   Braden Gellenthien   Andrea Gales [3]
2014   Las Vegas   Rick van der Ven   Park Se-hui   Sebastien Peineau   Erika Jones [4]
2015   Las Vegas   Kim Jaeh-yeong   Jo Seung-hyeon   Mike Schloesser   Erika Jones [5]
2016   Las Vegas   Brady Ellison   Khatuna Lorig   Jesse Broadwater   Sarah Sonnichsen [13]
2017   Las Vegas   Oh Jin-hyek   Song Ji-yung   Jesse Broadwater   Tanja Gellenthien [14]
2018   Las Vegas   Han Jae-yeop   Lisa Unruh   Jesse Broadwater   Alexandra Savenkova [15]
2019   Las Vegas   Steve Wijler   Sim Ye-ji   Kris Schaff   Viktoria Balzhanova [16]
2020   Las Vegas   Florian Unruh   Wi Na-yeon   Mike Schloesser   Paige Pearce [17]
2022   Las Vegas   Felix Wieser   Penny Healey   Nicolas Girard   Toja Ellison [18]
2023   Las Vegas   Steve Wijler   Duna Lim   Bodie Turner   Elisa Roner [19]
2024   Las Vegas   Brady Ellison   Michelle Kroppen   James Lutz   Elisa Roner [20]

References

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  1. ^ "- World Archery". Archived from the original on 20 May 2013. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
  2. ^ "Nick Butler: Archery focused on the big picture after innovative World Cup Final weekend". insidethegames.biz. Archived from the original on 10 September 2014. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
  3. ^ "World Cup celebrates 10 years!". Bow International. 30 April 2015. Archived from the original on 17 January 2021. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
  4. ^ "World Archery strikes Eurosport deal". sportspromedia.com. 21 May 2013. Archived from the original on 31 January 2016. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
  5. ^ "Longines: Producing Swiss Watches Since 1832". longines.com. Archived from the original on 18 April 2015. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
  6. ^ a b "Hyundai Archery World Cup Rules – 2022" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2024-07-30. Retrieved 2022-05-30.
  7. ^ "Hyundai Archery World Cup Rules – 2018" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 20 February 2019.
  8. ^ "Events Update: Archery World Cup cancelled". World Archery. Archived from the original on 16 July 2020. Retrieved 16 July 2020.
  9. ^ "Longines: Producing Swiss Watches Since 1832". longines.com. Archived from the original on 18 April 2015. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
  10. ^ "World Archery > WORLD CUP > World Cup Home > 2013 Indoor Final - Las Vegas". Archived from the original on 2013-06-17. Retrieved 2014-03-22.
  11. ^ "Indoor". Archived from the original on 2019-11-05.
  12. ^ "Disciplines: Indoor Archery". World Archery. Archived from the original on 2023-05-11. Retrieved 2023-05-10.
  13. ^ "Las Vegas 2016 Indoor Archery World Cup Stage 4 and Final". World Archery. Archived from the original on 2022-06-27. Retrieved 2022-10-17.
  14. ^ "Indoor Archery World Cup Final 2017". World Archery. Archived from the original on 2021-07-30. Retrieved 2022-10-17.
  15. ^ "Indoor Archery World Cup Final 2018". World Archery. Archived from the original on 2021-08-17. Retrieved 2022-10-17.
  16. ^ "Sim, Wijler win World Series recurve titles in single-arrow tiebreakers". worldarchery.sport. 10 February 2019. Archived from the original on 9 July 2021. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  17. ^ "Indoor Archery World Series Finals". World Archery. Archived from the original on 2021-01-28. Retrieved 2022-10-17.
  18. ^ "2022 Indoor Archery World Series Finals". worldarchery.sport. Archived from the original on 9 February 2022. Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  19. ^ "2023 Indoor Archery World Series Finals". Archived from the original on 13 February 2023. Retrieved 13 February 2023.
  20. ^ "2024 Indoor Archery World Series Finals". Archived from the original on 7 February 2024. Retrieved 7 February 2024.
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