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Fencing at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Men's foil

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Men's foil
at the Games of the XXX Olympiad
Fencing pistes
VenueExCeL London
Date31 July
Competitors38 from 20 nations
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Lei Sheng  China
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Alaaeldin Abouelkassem  Egypt
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Choi Byung-chul  South Korea
← 2008
2016 →

The men's foil competition in fencing at the 2012 Olympic Games in London was held on 31 July at the ExCeL London Exhibition Centre. There were 38 competitors from 20 nations.[1] Lei Sheng of China won the gold medal, beating Alaaeldin Abouelkassem from Egypt in the final. It was the first medal in the individual men's foil for each of those nations. Choi Byung-chul of South Korea took bronze. The 2012 podium was the first time since 1904 that no European fencer won a medal in the event.

Background

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This was the 26th appearance of the event, which has been held at every Summer Olympics except 1908 (when there was a foil display only rather than a medal event). Seven of the eight quarterfinalists from 2008 returned: gold medalist Benjamin Kleibrink of Germany, silver medalist Yuki Ota of Japan, fourth-place finisher Zhu Jun of China, fifth-place finisher Peter Joppich of Germany, sixth-place finisher Andrea Cassarà of Italy, seventh-place finisher Erwann Le Péchoux of France, and eighth-place finisher Lei Sheng of China. The Italian team was highly regarded: Cassarà was the reigning world champion, Valerio Aspromonte had been the runner-up to him in 2011, and Andrea Baldini had won the world title in 2009. Germany also sent a strong team, led by defending champion Kleibrink and four-time (2003, 2006, 2007, and 2010) world champion Peter Joppich. Other contenders included Asian champion and three-time world medalist Lei and European champion Aleksey Cheremisinov of Russia.[1]

Croatia made its debut in the men's foil. France and the United States each made their 24th appearance, tied for most of any nation; France had missed only the 1904 (with fencers not traveling to St. Louis) and the 1912 (boycotted due to a dispute over rules) foil competitions, while the United States had missed the inaugural 1896 competition and boycotted the 1980 Games altogether.

Qualification

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Nations were limited to three fencers each from 1928 to 2004. However, the 2008 Games introduced a rotation of men's team fencing events with one weapon left off each Games; the individual event without a corresponding team event had the number of fencers per nation reduced to two. Men's foil was the first event this applied to, so each nation could enter a maximum of two fencers in the event in 2008. The team foil was back in 2012 (épée the missing weapon for men), so the limit was three for 2012.

There were 36 dedicated quota spots for men's foil. The first 24 spots went to the 3 members of each of the 8 qualified teams in the team foil event. Next, 7 more men were selected from the world rankings based on continents: 2 from Europe, 2 from the Americas, 2 from Asia/Oceania, and 1 from Africa. Finally, 5 spots were allocated by continental qualifying events: 2 from Europe, 1 from the Americas, 1 from Asia/Oceania, and 1 from Africa.

Additionally, there were 8 host/invitational spots that could be spread throughout the various fencing events. Great Britain had already qualified one fencer in the men's foil (Richard Kruse, through individual rankings) and chose to use 2 of its 8 host places to bring its men's foil team up to 3. This made the total number of fencers in the event 38.

Competition format

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The foil competition consisted of a six-round single-elimination bracket with a bronze medal match between the two semifinal losers. Fencing was done to 15 touches or to the completion of three three-minute rounds if neither fencer reached 15 touches by then. At the end of time, the higher-scoring fencer was the winner; a tie resulted in an additional one-minute sudden-death time period. This sudden-death period was further modified by the selection of a draw-winner beforehand; if neither fencer scored a touch during the minute, the predetermined draw-winner won the bout.[1]

Schedule

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All times are British Summer Time (UTC+1)

Date Time Round
Tuesday, 31 July 2012 9:00 Round of 64
Round of 32
Round of 16
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Bronze medal match
Final

Results

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Section 1

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Round of 64 Round of 32 Round of 16 Quarter-finals
 Valerio Aspromonte (ITA) 15
 Nicholas Edward Choi (HKG) 8  Radu Dărăban (ROU) 11
 Radu Dărăban (ROU) 15  Valerio Aspromonte (ITA) 15
 Sebastian Bachmann (GER) 11
 Renal Ganeyev (RUS) 9
 Sebastian Bachmann (GER) 15
 Valerio Aspromonte (ITA) 8
 Lei Sheng (CHN) 15
 Victor Sintès (FRA) 15
 Kenta Chida (JPN) 11
 Victor Sintès (FRA) 6
 Lei Sheng (CHN) 15
 Roland Schlosser (AUT) 9
 Lei Sheng (CHN) 15

Section 2

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Round of 64 Round of 32 Round of 16 Quarter-finals
 Aleksey Cheremisinov (RUS) 15
 Anas Mostafa (EGY) 5  Tarek Ayad (EGY) 8
 Tarek Ayad (EGY) 15   Aleksey Cheremisinov (RUS) 15
  Alexander Massialas (USA) 6
 Étienne Lalonde‐Turbide (CAN) 6
 Alexander Massialas (USA) 15
 Aleksey Cheremisinov (RUS) 5
 Andrea Baldini (ITA) 15
 Andrea Baldini (ITA) 15
 Ryo Miyake (JPN) 6
 Andrea Baldini (ITA) 15
 Lahoussine Ali (MAR) 6  Race Imboden (USA) 9
 Guilherme Toldo (BRA) 15   Guilherme Toldo (BRA) 5
 Race Imboden (USA) 15

Section 3

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Round of 64 Round of 32 Round of 16 Quarter-finals
 Ma Jianfei (CHN) 15
 Bojan Jovanović (CRO) 14  Daniel Gómez (MEX) 9
 Daniel Gómez (MEX) 15   Ma Jianfei (CHN) 15
  Artur Akhmatkhuzin (RUS) 11
 Artur Akhmatkhuzin (RUS) 15
 Richard Kruse (GBR) 5
 Ma Jianfei (CHN) 13
 Choi Byung-chul (KOR) 15
 Erwann Le Péchoux (FRA) 15
 Enzo Lefort (FRA) 9
  Erwann Le Péchoux (FRA) 13
 Zhu Jun (CHN) 15   Choi Byung-chul (KOR) 15
 Zain Shaito (LIB) 2   Zhu Jun (CHN) 13
 Choi Byung-chul (KOR) 15

Section 4

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Round of 64 Round of 32 Round of 16 Quarter-finals
 Alaaeldin Abouelkassem (EGY) 15
 Miles Chamley-Watson (USA) 10
 Alaaeldin Abouelkassem (EGY) 15
 Peter Joppich (GER) 10
 James-Andrew Davis (GBR) 10
 Peter Joppich (GER) 15
 Alaaeldin Abouelkassem (EGY) 15
 Andrea Cassarà (ITA) 10
 Yuki Ota (JPN) 15
 Benjamin Kleibrink (GER) 5
 Yuki Ota (JPN) 14
 Husayn Rosowsky (GBR) 8  Andrea Cassarà (ITA) 15
 Mohamed Samandi (TUN) 15  Mohamed Samandi (TUN) 7
 Andrea Cassarà (ITA) 15

Finals

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Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
 
 
 
 Lei Sheng (CHN)15
 
 
 
 Andrea Baldini (ITA)11
 
 Lei Sheng (CHN)15
 
 
 
 Alaaeldin Abouelkassem (EGY)13
 
 Choi Byung-chul (KOR)12
 
 
 Alaaeldin Abouelkassem (EGY)15
 
Bronze medal match
 
 
 
 
 
 Andrea Baldini (ITA)14
 
 
 Choi Byung-chul (KOR)15

Final classification

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Rank Fencer Nation
1st place, gold medalist(s) Lei Sheng  China
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Alaaeldin Abouelkassem  Egypt
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Choi Byung-chul  South Korea
4 Andrea Baldini  Italy
5 Andrea Cassarà  Italy
6 Valerio Aspromonte  Italy
7 Ma Jianfei  China
8 Aleksey Cheremisinov  Russia
9 Race Imboden  United States
10 Victor Sintès  France
11 Peter Joppich  Germany
12 Erwann Le Péchoux  France
13 Alexander Massialas  United States
14 Yuki Ota  Japan
15 Sebastian Bachmann  Germany
16 Artur Akhmatkhuzin  Russia
17 Richard Kruse  Great Britain
18 Benjamin Kleibrink  Germany
19 Renal Ganeyev  Russia
20 Ryo Miyake  Japan
21 Étienne Lalonde-Turbide  Canada
22 Enzo Lefort  France
23 James-Andrew Davis  Great Britain
24 Kenta Chida  Japan
25 Miles Chamley-Watson  United States
26 Roland Schlosser  Austria
27 Zhu Jun  China
28 Tarek Fouad  Egypt
29 Daniel Gómez  Mexico
30 Radu Dărăban  Romania
31 Mohamed Samandi  Tunisia
32 Guilherme Toldo  Brazil
33 Lahoussine Ali  Morocco
34 Husayn Rosowsky  Great Britain
35 Nicholas Choi  Hong Kong
36 Bojan Jovanović  Croatia
37 Zain Shaito  Lebanon
38 Anas Mostafa  Egypt

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Foil, Individual, Men". Olympedia. Retrieved 21 November 2020.