Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,544,845 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

ARCHERY : HUISH, U.S. TEAM STICK IT TO THE COMPETITION.


Byline: Daily News Staff and Wire Services

Exhausted from the thrill of his individual gold medal the day before, Justin Huish of Simi Valley still came through Friday to help win another Olympic archery title.

It took a second glance from the judges to wrap it up.

On his last three arrows, the California Kid erased a three-point deficit for the United States, which went on to beat South Korea 251-249 and win its first gold medal in the team event.

The Americans fell behind when the 21-year-old Huish followed an opening 10 with two 8s that he said were ``a mixture of nerves and exhaustion.''

The U.S. team didn't get even again until Huish, who shoots with his pony tail hanging from under a backwards cap while peering through mirrored sunglasses, hit two 10s and a 9 on his last round. That tied the match at 196 with six arrows remaining, and teammates Butch Johnson and Rod White took over.

``I'm pooped from yesterday, they carried me through,'' Huish said. ``I'm happy these two guys get to experience the same thing I did yesterday.''

Afterward, Huish was talking about another two-medal archer - Darrell Pace, who won individual golds in 1976 and '84 but was at these Games as an observer.

``He's a really good archer,'' Huish said, of Pace, who set a world record at Montreal and an Olympic record at Los Angeles. ``I wish he could have been out here shooting along with us.''

Rather than pulling bowstrings, Pace was pulling legs.

``I was up in the stands signing autographs,'' Huish said, ``and I just kept looking down, just kept signing and not looking at the faces and he goes, `Here, sign this.'

``But I didn't know it was him and I was signing it and he said, `Thanks a lot.' Then I looked up and it was Darrell and he had just played a trick on me.''

Italy won the bronze with a 247-244 victory over Australia.

In the women's gold-medal match, Germany's Cornelia Pfohl almost missed the entire target on the 19th arrow, opening the door for South Korea to stretch their Olympic championship streak to three straight.

The U.S. women were eliminated by a 235-226 loss to Kazakstan in their first match Friday. They lost on the last six arrows.

After Huish's comeback tied the men's gold-medal match, Johnson followed with two 9s and a 10. And then South Korea's Kim Bo-ram made a fatal error A condition that halts processing due to faulty hardware, program bugs, read errors or other anomalies. If you get a fatal error, you generally cannot recover from it, because the operating system has encountered a condition it cannot resolve. Typically, buggy applications cause fatal errors (fatal exception errors), and the computer locks up. In most cases, all data that you have changed that has not yet been saved to disk is lost., a 6.

``That was the opening we wanted,'' said the 40-year-old Johnson, of Woodstock, Conn.

The United States maintained the lead, even though the match ended with the scoreboard reading 250-250. After judges examined the targets, the Americans had gained a point - a 9 instead of an 8 for Johnson - and the Koreans had lost one.

The extra point gave the Americans their fourth straight victory with 251 points, which at the beginning of the day tied an Olympic team scoring record for a 27-arrow match.

Australia broke the scoring record with 253 points in a quarterfinal victory over Sweden. The 251 had tied the Olympic mark set by South Korea in 1992.

A women's team record was also set Friday. In the quarterfinals, South Korea won 249-226 over Sweden, breaking its own record of 246 set at Barcelona four years ago.

In the women's gold-medal match, Germany led 162-161 when Pfohl shot a 1, the outermost ring on the target. Visibly shaken, she gave way to teammate Sandra Wagner, who hit a 9 and a 10.

Individual gold medalist Kim Kyung-wook took advantage, hitting the bulls-eye three straight times. Teammate Kim Jo-sun followed with a 9 and two 10s to give South Korea control of the match.

Poland won the women's bronze medal with a 244-239 victory over Turkey.

South Korea has won all three women's team gold medals since the event was introduced, plus all four individual golds and eight of 12 individual medals overall since 1984.

Lindsay Langston, a 17-year-old from Mesa, Ariz., had two 10s and a 9 in her last turn as the U.S. women tied Kazakstan at 180 with six arrows left. The Americans never took the lead after Kazakstan's Yana Touniiantse outshot Judi Adams of Scottsdale, Ariz., 29-24 in the next round.

``There was no single thing that happened. We just didn't have it,'' Adams said. ``We got strong shots from everybody, but didn't shoot enough 10s.''

The third member of the U.S. team was Janet Dykman of El Monte, who advanced to the individual round of 16.

CAPTION(S):

Photo

Photo: (color) Bernie Huish, left, hugs son Justin after th e younger Huish helped the U.S. win the men's team title in archery.

Associated Press
COPYRIGHT 1996 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:SPORTS
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Aug 3, 1996
Words:789
Previous Article:PRESIDENT TIGHTENS SECURITY IN WAKE OF TWA CRASH.(TRAVEL)
Next Article:VALLEY TO GET RELIEF : TEMPERATURES TO TAKE BIG DIP OVER WEEKEND.(NEWS)



Related Articles
WITHOUT HUISH, ARCHERS STILL HOPE TO HIT TARGET.(Sports)
NOT GUILTY PLEA ENTERED BY HUISH ARCHER CONCERNED ABOUT OLYMPICS.(News)
ATHLETES NAMED TO AWARD ROLL; VENTURA COUNTY TRIO JOINS ROSTER OF SPORTS INSPIRATIONS.(NEWS)
HE'S AIMING FOR THE STARS : ARCHER HAS SHOT AT GOLD.(SPORTS)
FOCUS ON AREA ATHLETES.(SPORTS)
ARCHERY : HUISH BREEZES FROM AFAR.(Sports)
SIMI NEIGHBORS PROUDLY AWAIT GOLDEN ARCHER.(NEWS)
SIMI MAN SCORES FOR ARCHERY WITH GOLD MEDAL AT GAMES.(NEWS)
CEREMONY SET FOR 4 SIMI OLYMPIANS.(NEWS)
EVENT SET FOR 4 SIMI OLYMPIANS.(NEWS)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2008 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles