Date | 4 August 1920 |
---|---|
Status | Olympic |
Location | Nachtegalenpark, Antwerpen |
Participants | 24 from 3 countries |
At 28 metres the target was 60 centimetres in diameter, with the 9-ring, the top scoring ring, being 10 centimetres in diameter. The other scoring rings, 7-5-3-2-1, were five centimetres in diameter. Each team consisted of eight archers with two reserves allowed, with all scores counting towards the team total. Each competitor shot 60 arrows, all on the same day (4 August). Thus a perfect individual score was 540, and a perfect team score was 4,320.
Pos | Competitors | NOC | Points | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Netherlands | NED | 3,087 | Gold | ||
Janus Theeuwes | 443 | |||||
Driekske van Bussel | 414 | |||||
Joep Packbiers | 394 | |||||
Janus van Merrienboer | 388 | |||||
Tiest van Gestel | 388 | |||||
Theo Willems | 374 | |||||
Piet de Brouwer | 364 | |||||
Jo van Gastel, Jr. | 332 | |||||
2 | Belgium | BEL | 2,924 | Silver | ||
Hubert Van Innis | – | |||||
Alphonse Allaert | – | |||||
Victor De Knibber | – | |||||
Louis Delcon | – | |||||
Jérôme De Mayer | – | |||||
Louis Van Beeck | – | |||||
Pierre Van Tilt | – | |||||
Louis Fierens | – | |||||
3 | France | FRA | 2,328 | Bronze | ||
Léonce Quentin | – | |||||
Julien Brulé | – | |||||
Pascal Fauvel | – | |||||
Eugène Grisot | – | |||||
Eugène Richez | – | |||||
Paul Leroy | – | |||||
Arthur Mabillon | – | |||||
Léon Epin | – |