Fencing_at_the_2020_Summer_Olympics_–_Women's_team_sabre

Fencing at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Women's team sabre

Fencing at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Women's team sabre

Fencing at the Olympics


Quick Facts Women's team sabre at the Games of the XXXII Olympiad, Venue ...

The women's team sabre event at the 2020 Summer Olympics took place on 31 July 2021 at the Makuhari Messe.[1] 27 fencers (9 teams of 3) from 9 nations are expected to compete.[2]

Background

This will be the 3rd appearance of the event. It was introduced in 2008, at which point the team events began to be rotated off the schedule, with only two of the three weapons for each of the men's and women's categories. The women's team sabre rotated off in 2012 and back on in 2016. The 2020 Games ended the rotation system, with all weapons having team events.

The reigning Olympic champion is Russia (Yekaterina Dyachenko, Yuliya Gavrilova, Yana Egorian, and Sofya Velikaya). Russia is also the reigning World Champion (Egorian, Olga Nikitina, Sofia Pozdniakova, and Velikaya). A preview from Olympics.com identified Russia as a recently powerful contender, joining historically strong nations Italy, France, and Hungary.[3]

Qualification

A National Olympic Committee (NOC) could enter a team of 3 fencers in the women's team sabre. These fencers also automatically qualified for the individual event.[2]

There are 8 dedicated quota spots for women's team sabre. They are allocated as through the world team ranking list of 5 April 2021. The top 4 spots, regardless of geographic zone, qualify (ROC, Italy, France, and South Korea). The next four spots are allocated to separate geographic zones, as long as an NOC from that zone is in the top 16. These places went to China (Asia/Oceania), the United States (Americas), Tunisia (Africa), and Hungary (Europe).[2]

Additionally, there are 8 host/invitational spots that can be spread throughout the various fencing events.[2] Japan qualified one women's sabre fencer through normal individual qualification and used two host quota places to complete a women's sabre team.

The COVID-19 pandemic delayed many of the events for qualifying for fencing, moving the close of the rankings period back to April 5, 2021 rather than the original April 4, 2020.[2][4]

Competition format

The 2020 tournament is a single-elimination tournament, with classification matches for all places. Each match features the three fencers on each team competing in a round-robin, with 9 three-minute bouts to 5 points; the winning team is the one that reaches 45 total points first or is leading after the end of the nine bouts. Standard sabre rules regarding target area, striking, and priority are used.[5][6]

Schedule

The competition is held over a single day, Saturday, 31 July. The first session runs from 10 a.m. to approximately 3:20 p.m. (when all matches except the bronze and gold medal finals are expected to conclude), after which there is a break until 6:30 p.m. before the medal bouts are held.[1]

All times are Japan Standard Time (UTC+9)

More information Date, Time ...

Results

Round of 16Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
              
 ROC45
 Japan34
 Tunisia29
 Japan45
 ROC45
 South Korea26
 Hungary40
 South Korea45
 ROC45
 France41
 France45
 United States30
 France45
 Italy39 Bronze medal bout
 China41 South Korea45
 Italy45  Italy42

5–8th place classification

 
5–8th place semifinalsFifth place bout
 
      
 
 
 
 
 Japan45
 
 
 
 Hungary42
 
 Japan45
 
 
 
 United States43
 
 United States45
 
 
 China35
 
Seventh place bout
 
 
 
 
 
 Hungary30
 
 
 China45

Final classification


References

  1. "Fencing Competition Schedule". Tokyo 2020. Retrieved 25 November 2020.
  2. "Everything you need to know about Olympic fencing at Tokyo 2020". Tokyo 2020. 20 March 2021. Archived from the original on 3 July 2021. Retrieved 30 June 2021.
  3. "Fencing". Archived from the original on 3 July 2021. Retrieved 30 June 2021.

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