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Maja Jager

Danish archer

Maja Buskbjerg Jager (born 22 December 1991) is a Danish recurve archer. A two-time compe*or at the Olympic Games (2012 and 2020), Jager was the women's individual champion at the 2013 World Archery Championships, an achievement for which she was awarded the Danish Sports Name of the Year prize for 2013. She is also a multiple medalist at the European Games and the European Archery Championships.

Contents

  • 1 Early and personal life
  • 2 Career
    • 2.1 Early career (2009–2012)
    • 2.2 World Champion (2013)
    • 2.3 Later career (2014– )
  • 3 Notes
  • 4 References
  • 5 External links

Early and personal life

Jager was born on 22 December 1991 in Nørre Broby to parents Jan and Hanne Jager. She was introduced to archery at the age of eight, and in her youth practised in a warehouse in Tilst, a venue procured by her father using his local connections as a fruit grower in the Aarhus region. She was later trained by former Danish Olympic archer Ole Gammelgaard.

In 2013 Jager moved to and trained in Goesan, South Korea under the tutelage of Kim Hyung-Tak, the coach of the Korean archery team at the 1984 Summer Olympics, as part of an agreement between Kim and the Danish Archery Federation. To meet her residency requirements in South Korea she undertook and completed an undergraduate degree in computer system engineering at Jungwon University. Jager later reflected that the first few months in the country with the culture shock and learning the Korean language were the most difficult of her life. After five years in South Korea, Jager returned to Denmark in 2018 following her graduation from Jungwon University, and as of 2019 is enrolled in a postgraduate programme at the Technical University of Denmark.

Career

Early career (2009–2012)

Jager made her first appearance for the Danish national team at the 2009 Archery World Cup. She later participated in the 2010 European Archery Championships and the 2011 World Archery Championships, where she finished ninth overall in the women's individual compe*ion. The following year she made her Olympic debut at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. She and teammates Carina Christiansen and Louise Laursen comprised Denmark's three-person entry for the women's team event, the nation's debut in the discipline. In the preliminary ranking round, which determined the seedings for the subsequent elimination rounds, the trio set a new Danish national record of 1,946 points over the 216-arrow contest, finishing with the eighth seed of the twelve competing nations. Victory over India in the first knockout round saw them advance to the quarter-finals, where they were eliminated by South Korea.

World Champion (2013)

In early 2013 Jager relocated to South Korea at the invitation of 1984 Olympic gold medal-winning coach Kim Hyung-Tak, one of two athletes selected by the Danish Archery Federation to undergo full-time training in the country ahead of the 2016 Summer Olympics. Jager spent six months under Kim's instruction before contesting the 2013 World Championships held in Belek, Turkey. She entered the tournament's individual event with an unimpressive record, having individually failed to progress beyond the last 32 compe*ors in an international compe*ion since 2011. In the event's preliminary ranking stage Jager achieved a new Danish record for a 144-arrow round, scoring 1,351 points from a maximum of 1,440. Her score was enough to qualify for the subsequent elimination rounds as the eighth seed. Jager proceeded to deliver a surprising run of results in the elimination rounds, defeating both Ki Bo-bae and Yun Ok-hee, the World Archery Federation's number one and number two-ranked archers respectively, on her way to the final. Her opponent in the gold medal match was Xu Jing, who had won an Olympic silver medal in the women's team event in 2012. After tying on five set points each over the regulation five sets, Jager outshot Xu in the subsequent tiebreaking one-arrow shoot-off, landing her single arrow 1 millimetre (0.039:in) closer to the centre of the target to claim the world championship *le.

Jager's victory earned her a second medal of the championships, having earlier secured bronze medal in the women's team event with Carina Christiansen and Anne Marie Laursen. Her two medals contributed to Denmark's most successful World Championship performance on record. She afterwards credited her move to South Korea as being key to winning the individual *le. For her achievements she was named Danish Sports Name of the Year for 2013 by the Danish Olympic Committee and the Jyllands-Posten newspaper, beating racing driver Tom Kristensen and skeet shooter Jesper Hansen to the accolade. Her *le was later credited as popularising the sport of archery in Denmark in the run-up to the 2015 World Championships held in Copenhagen.

Later career (2014– )

Jager combined with Nikolaj Wulff at the 2014 European Archery Championships to win silver in the mixed team recurve event. She later achieved a second silver medal at the European Games the following year as the runner-up to Germany's Karina Winter in the women's individual event. The 2015 World Championships in July however saw her fail to defend both her individual *le, losing in the second round by Mexico's Karla Hinojosa, and her team bronze medal, where she and her teammates Carina Christiansen and Natasja Bech failed to attain a high enough rank to qualify for the team elimination rounds. In June 2016 Jager was defeated by Christiansen in the Olympic qualifying tournament, eliminating her from contention for the following month's Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro.

At the 2018 European Archery Championships Jager finished runner-up in the women's individual event to Turkey's Yasemin Anagoz, who outscored her in a one-arrow shoot-off. Jager combined with Randi Degn and Anne Marie Laursen at the 2019 European Games in June to win bronze in the women's team compe*ion, but was herself knocked out of the women's individual event at the last sixteen stage. That month Jager secured qualification for the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, marking her second appearance at the Games and her country's first in the archery compe*ions since 2012. These Olympics, which were rescheduled to July 2021 following to the outbreak of the global COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020, saw Jager eliminated in the second round of the women's individual event by Russia's Ksenia Perova.

Notes

    References

      External links

      • Maja Jager at the World Archery Federation
      • Maja Jager at Olympics at Sports-Reference.com (archived)

      Maja Jager Is A Member Of