Home Archery World champion Temiño Mediel wins first Indoor World Series event at Nimes

World champion Temiño Mediel wins first Indoor World Series event at Nimes

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Reigning recurve men’s world champion Andres Temiño Mediel made a seamless transition to indoor archery as he won the Nimes Archery Tournament, his first appearance of the 2026 World Archery indoor season.

The Spaniard pipped Chinese Taipei’s Wei Chun-Heng via a shoot-off to top the podium at Le Parnasse Hall, claiming his first senior gold ever in the Indoor World Series – he had previously won silver in the under-21 category at Nimes 2024 and bronze at the World Series Youth Finals also in 2024. 

Both archers shot fantastically in France, as they had done on Saturday when they knocked out the weekend’s top two seeds — Mediel against Marcus D’Almeida [1] in the semi-finals and Wei against Thomas Chirault [2] in the quarter-finals — averaging 9.94 per arrow from the 16 they shot, with four perfect ends out of five.

Although Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games silver medallist Wei dropped the first nine of the match in the second set, it felt like the momentum had shifted when Mediel dragged his shot just wide to the right into the nine ring in the fourth, ruining the narrow lead he had built to make it 4–4.

Surely, on his first appearance on the international indoor circuit this season, there would be a small element of panic after a faltering shot in a match decided by such tight margins?

Absolutely not. The 21-year-old didn’t let any potential rust get the better of him, dropping his next three shafts into the 10 — as did Heng — to force a shoot-off, where his winning arrow landed a few centimetres closer to the centre than his Taipei counterpart.

“I was a bit nervous, the pressure got to me, and I shot a nine,” added Mediel when asked about his only nine of the match. It’s been quite a job getting here in good shape. The truth is, after the World Championship, I’ve had more confidence in myself when shooting, but above all else I’m really enjoying it — every training session, every competition, and especially being in the present moment.”

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