Posted July 28, 2012 on AP on Fox
PLAYERS: Im Dong-Hyun
The headline sounded too good to be true: ''Legally Blind Archer Smashes World Record.'' Turns out it almost certainly was. A day after setting the first world records of the 2012 Games, Im Dong-hyun led South Korea to a bronze medal in the team event Saturday and somehow managed to leave behind more questions than answers about exactly how impaired his eyesight is. At one moment, speaking through an interpreter, Im described himself as farsighted and said the colors in the target -- almost 77 yards away -- appeared ''blurry, not bad ... like a drop of paint in the water.'' A moment later, he said he didn't need glasses to drive or read, unless he was tired, describing his problem as ''old man's eyes.'' At yet another, he said the vision in his left eye was 20 percent of a normal sighted person and 30 percent in the right. Not long after that, his coach, Oh Seon-Tek, raised that number to 60 percent and laughed at the notion that his star pupil had any problem seeing the target at all. Finally, after Im was asked directly a second time whether he was legally blind, he grinned widely and replied: ''It's really a matter of common sense. If I were legally blind, do you really think I could participate in the Olympics? ''I'd rather participate in the Paralympics,'' he added. ''There, I'd have a much greater chance to win a gold medal.'' Why Im has been described as legally blind in published reports dating back several years is a matter of some conjecture. A South Korean journalist who knows him well said Im occasionally passes close by without so much as a hint of recognition and that the various answers to questions on the topic may have more to do with the stigma attached to disabilities than his actual condition. What is clear is that no matter the extent of Im's visual impairment, it hasn't affected his ability to compete. Officials of several federations suggested it might even be an advantage in a sport where some competitors sometimes focus too long and too intently on the target and freeze up, rather than rely on biomechanics or muscle memory to help them decide when to release the arrow. Called ''target panic,'' it's archery's equivalent of the putting ''yips'' that bedevil even top-flight golfers. That, however, has never been a problem with Im, who arrived at the Olympics as the No. 2-ranked archer in the world. On Friday, he broke his own personal 72-arrow mark and contributed to a second record in the team shoot. Then he shook off a slow start and nearly turned back a surprisingly hot-shooting American team that upset the South Koreans in the semifinal round. The Americans, in turn, were upset by Italy in the gold-medal match. It turns out the Italians had a visually impaired archer of their own, Mauro Nespoli, because it's not all that uncommon in the sport. What thrust Im into the spotlight, and kept him there, are his consistently world-class results. He's got one more shot at redemption in these games come Friday. ''It's not the end of the line,'' he said after the victory over Mexico in the consolation round. ''It's still a long way to go.'' Still, after winning the last three team golds -- the South Korean women have won all six since archery became a medal sport at the 1988 Seoul Games -- the scale of the disappointment was etched on Oh's face. ''Pressure is inevitable,'' he said through an interpreter, then explained how his nation's coaches and assistants have been needling one another for more than a decade about who would be in charge when the dynasty took a hit. Oh managed a weak smile to indicate it was him. ''Only eight arrows determine everything,'' he added. Oh's words and expressions barely hinted at how crushing the expectations for this squad were back home. Only soccer and perhaps baseball elicit anywhere near the same passion among his countrymen. Among Olympic sports, archery has no competition. Before coming to London, the South Koreans built an exact replica of Lord's, the most hallowed ground in cricket. Not only that, they built it inside a baseball stadium, filled it with spectators to simulate crowd noise, and put together a video to make it feel like the real thing. What they forgot to adjust for was the London weather. ''It was a true replica,'' Oh said, smiling ruefully. ''But we were not able to make the wind.'' -- Jim Litke is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at jlitke@ap.org and follow him at Twitter.com/JimLitke.
THE BACKYARD
BEST OF MAXIM
AROUND THE WEB
RELATED ARTICLES

Blind South Korean Im Dong-hyun Sets a World Record in Archery to Kick Off the Olympics

ChambersIm Dong-hyun(Photo courtesy of Getty Images via CBSSports.com) The 2012 Olympics are underway, and the first world record has been set by blind South Korean archer Im Dong-hyun. Not only did Im set an individual world record, but he was part of a team world record set by the South Koreans. Im Dong-hyun has only 10 percent vision in his left eye and 20 percent in his right...

Legally blind archer sets world marks

Legally blind archer Im Dong-hyun set the first world records of the London Olympics, breaking his own record in the 72-arrow mark and helping South Korea set a team record in the ranking round on Friday. Im broke the record he had set in Turkey in May by three points with a score of 699, hours before the 2012 Games official opening ceremony. ''This is just the first round...

Blind Korean archer sets first world record at 2012 Olympics

South Korean archer Im Dong-hyun sees the world through blurred colors and lines but that didn't stop the legally-blind Olympian from breaking a world record in a 72-arrow men's archery event at the 2012 Olympics Friday. Im— who has 10 percent vision in his left eye and 20 percent in his right— broke his own record he set in Turkey in May by three points with a score...

Column: World record, yes. Blind? Not exactly.

The headline sounded too good to be true: ''Legally Blind Archer Smashes World Record.'' Turns out it almost certainly was. A day after setting the first world records of the 2012 Games, Im Dong-hyun led South Korea to a bronze medal in the team event Saturday and somehow managed to leave behind more questions than answers about exactly how impaired his eyesight...

Somebody Get This Guy A Film Trilogy, Stat

One of the early stories of the 2012 Summer Olympics in London has been North Korea’s refusal to participate until England stops calling them South Koreans. After today’s archery ranking round, maybe being South Korean won’t sound as bad.Simultaneously bringing to life the dreams of The Hunger Games, The Avengers and Brave fanboys and girls across the Internet, South Korea’s...

Public turned away from archery prelims

Fans who showed up to watch archery's preliminary rounds at Lord's Cricket Ground were turned away. Olympic officials said Friday the ranking rounds were not advertised as open to the public. The officials add they had sent warnings about buying tickets from unofficial websites. Dozens surrounded an entrance before the competition began, many angry with Olympics volunteers...
Today's Best Stuff
For Bloggers

Join the Yardbarker Network for more promotion, traffic, and money.

Company Info
Help
What is Yardbarker?

Yardbarker is the largest network of sports blogs and pro athlete blogs on the web. This site is the hub of the Yardbarker Network, where our editors and algorithms curate the best sports content from our network and beyond.