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Fencing at the 2004 Summer Olympics – Men's épée

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Olympic fencing event

Men's épée
at the Games of the XXVIII Olympiad
Round of 32 bout between Tourchine (RUS) and Kelsey (USA)
VenueHelliniko Olympic Complex
DateAugust 17, 2004
Competitors37 from 21 nations
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s)Marcel Fischer Switzerland
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Wang Lei China
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Pavel Kolobkov Russia
← 2000
2008 →
Fencing at the
2004 Summer Olympics
Épéemenwomen
Team épéemenwomen
Foilmenwomen
Team foilmen
Sabremenwomen
Team sabremen

The men'sépée was a competition infencing at the 2004 Summer Olympics inAthens. A total of 37 men from 21 nations competed in this event. Each nation was limited to 3 fencers. Competition took place in the Fencing Hall at theHelliniko Olympic Complex on August 17. The event was won byMarcel Fischer of Switzerland, the nation's first victory in the event and first medal of any color since 1952.Wang Lei's silver was China's first medal in the men's individual épée. Defending championPavel Kolobkov earned bronze, finishing a set of three different-colored Olympic medals in the event (silver in 1992, gold in 2000). Kolobkov was the fourth man to earn three medals in the event and had the best record of any of the four; onlyRamón Fonst (with two gold medals) had more individual Olympic success in the men's épée. It was the fifth consecutive Games in which a Russian fencer reached the podium, including medals for Russian fencers competing for the Soviet Union (1988) and Unified Team (1992).

Background

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This was the 24th appearance of the event, which was not held at the first Games in 1896 (with only foil and sabre events held) but has been held at every Summer Olympics since 1900.[1]

Four of the eight quarterfinalists from 2000 returned: gold medalist (and 1992 silver medalist)Pavel Kolobkov of Russia, silver medalistHugues Obry of France, fourth-place finisherMarcel Fischer of Switzerland, and eighth-place finisherZhao Gang of China. The reigning (2003) World Champion wasFabrice Jeannet of France; Kolobkov (1993, 1994, and 2002) and Obry (1998) were also prior World Champions.[1]

Algeria made its debut in the event. France and the United States each appeared for the 22nd time, tied for most among nations.

Competition format

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The competition continued to use the entirely single-elimination (with bronze medal match) format introduced in 1996. All bouts were to 15 touches.

Schedule

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All times are Greece Standard Time (UTC+2)

DateTimeRound
Tuesday, 17 August 200412:00
13:00
15:00
16:10
19:25
20:45
 
Preliminary round
Round of 32
Round of 16
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
Bronze medal match

Results

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Preliminary round

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As there were more than 32 entrants in this event, five first round matches were held to reduce the field to 32 fencers.

 Ahmed Nabil (EGY)15—6 Georges Ambalof (GRE)
 Siriroj Rathprasert (THA)15—13 Mohanad Saif El Din Sabry (EGY)
 Dmitriy Karuchenko (UKR)15—6 Abderrahmane Daidj (ALG)
 Alexandru Nyisztor (ROU)15—6 Bogdan Nikishin (UKR)
 Serguey Kotchetkov (RUS)15—6 Rami Assiam (MAR)

Main tournament bracket

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The remaining field of 32 fencers competed in asingle-elimination tournament to determine the medal winners. Semifinal losers proceeded to abronze medal match.

Round of 32Round of 16QuarterfinalsSemifinalsGold medal final
 Fischer (SUI)15
 Nabil (EGY)10 Fischer (SUI)15
 Kovács (HUN)15 Kovács (HUN)7
 Mattern (USA)6 Fischer (SUI)15
 Fernandez (VEN)15 Fernandez (VEN)13
 Xie (CHN)13 Fernandez (VEN)15
 Gang (CHN)15 Gang (CHN)12
 Mahmoud (EGY)9 Fischer (SUI)15
 Boisse (FRA)15 Boisse (FRA)9
 Rathprasert (THA)9 Boisse (FRA)15
 Carillo (CUB)15 Carillo (CUB)11
 Obry (FRA)10 Boisse (FRA)15
 Jeannet (FRA)15 Jeannet (FRA)14
 Kotchetkov (RUS)11 Jeannet (FRA)15
 Lee (KOR)15 Lee (KOR)5
 Khvorost (UKR)11 Fischer (SUI)15
 Wang (CHN)15 Wang (CHN)9
 Boczkó (HUN)10 Wang (CHN)15
 Schmid (GER)15 Schmid (GER)11
 Fiedler (GER)12 Wang (CHN)15
 Strigel (GER)15 Strigel (GER)14
 Imre (HUN)13 Strigel (GER)15
 Karuchenko (UKR)15 Karuchenko (UKR)12
 Marik (AUT)7 Wang (CHN)15
 Kolobkov (RUS)15 Kolobkov (RUS)10
 Robinson (AUS)5 Kolobkov (RUS)15Bronze medal final
 Tourchine (RUS)15 Tourchine (RUS)10
 Kelsey (USA)11 Kolobkov (RUS)15 Kolobkov (RUS)15
 Thompson (USA)13 Thompson (USA)11 Boisse (FRA)8
 Inostroza (CHI)12 Thompson (USA)15
 Rota (ITA)15 Rota (ITA)13
 Nyisztor (ROU)8

Results summary

[edit]
RankFencerNation
1st place, gold medalist(s)Marcel Fischer Switzerland
2nd place, silver medalist(s)Wang Lei China
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)Pavel Kolobkov Russia
4Érik Boisse France
5Fabrice Jeannet France
6Silvio Fernández Venezuela
7Soren Thompson United States
8Daniel Strigel Germany
9Alfredo Rota Italy
10Zhao Gang China
11Sven Schmid Germany
12Lee Sang-Yeop South Korea
13Iván Kovács Hungary
14Andres Carillo Ayala Cuba
15Igor Turchin Russia
16Dmytro Kariuchenko Ukraine
17Christoph Marik Austria
18Gábor Boczkó Hungary
19Seth Kelsey United States
20Hugues Obry France
21Géza Imre Hungary
22Cody Mattern United States
23Paris Inostroza Chile
24Maksym Khvorost Ukraine
25Jörg Fiedler Germany
26Seamus Robinson Australia
27Xie Yongjun China
28Yasser Mahmoud Egypt
29Sergey Kochetkov Russia
30Ahmed Nabil Egypt
31Alexandru Nyisztor Romania
32Siriroj Rathprasert Thailand
33Muhannad Saif El-Din Egypt
34Bohdan Nikishyn Ukraine
35Giorgos Abalof Greece
36Aissam Rami Morocco
37Abderrahmane Daidj Algeria

References

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  1. ^ab"Épée, Individual, Men".Olympedia. Retrieved26 March 2021.
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