Personal information | |
---|---|
Nationality | Canadian |
Born |
Winnipeg, Manitoba |
24 May 1986
Sport | |
Sport | Archery |
Updated on July 2012. |
Jason ("Jay") Lyon (born May 24, 1986 in Winnipeg, Manitoba) is an archer from Canada. He is a member of the Canadian National archery team who has competed in the 2004 World Junior Archery Championships, 2005 World Senior Archery Championships, the 2007 World Senior Archery Championships, the 2007 Pan-American Games and many other events. Lyon was named 2008 Manitoba Male Athlete of the Year. He was also named one of Manitoba's Top 85 Athletes of All Time by friend and host of Hot 103 Radio, Ace Burpee. Lyon currently resides in his home town of Winnipeg where he shoots regularly at his local archery range.
At the 2007 World Championships Lyon was a member of the Team Canada (along with Crispin Duenas and Hugh MacDonald) who won Canada three Olympic spots by placing eighth in the Team Round. Canada has not had a full archery team at the Olympics since 1996 in Atlanta. Lyon was also a member of the silver medal-winning team at the 2007 Pan-American Games in Rio de Janeiro where they set the Pan-American Games Record with a 224. Lyon finished fourth at the Pan-American Games, losing the bronze to Vic Wunderle (USA) 109-114. On his way to the bronze match Lyon set and broke the Pan-American Games' 12-arrow match-play record, going 114-105 against Pablo Daniel Basgall (ARG), 115-107 against Jorge Pablo Chapoy (MEX) and 116-112 against Eduardo Luis Vélez (MEX). He then shot 109-114 against Juan Carlos Stevens (CUB) and 109-114 against Vic Wunderle (USA) to finish fourth.
Lyon currently holds the FITA 1440 record at 1345, a score that is considered a landmark in recurve archery. He is the first and only Canadian recurve archer to hold this title.
Lyon won the Canadian Olympic Trials and represented Canada at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing. He finished his ranking round with a total of 646 points, which gave him the 47th seed for the final competition bracket in which he faced Chinese home favourite Xue Haifeng in the first round. Lyon won the game 111-106 and met Brady Ellison in the second round, which he won by 113-107. In the third round Lyon was unable to win against Bair Badënov from Russia (115-110), who eventually won the bronze medal.