Jim Conroy

Archery

BIOGRAPHY

Jim Conroy became the first Irish archer to compete at the Olympic Games when he took part in the men’s individual recurve archery at the 1976 Montreal Olympic Games, finishing 29th of 37 competitors. His route to Montreal was serendipitous in the fullest sense of the word. A talented cyclist in the late 1960s who competed with the greats of the era such as Paddy Flanagan and Shay O’Hanlon, Conroy’s career changed direction on a day when, suffering the dreaded cyclist’s knock on the Navan Road at Clonee, Co. Meath, he climbed off his bicycle and spotted an archery club in a valley below. Within five months of joining the 27 April Archery Club he was national champion. In 1969 won the Irish Open title with a score very close to Olympic standard.

He competed at the British Olympic archery trials, where a second-place finish secured his nomination for Montreal.

Conroy went on to develop one of the most important archery coaching and development programmes in Irish sporting history, introducing the sport to schools and clubs across the country. He also competed at the Moscow 1980 Olympics and was Team Manager for Keith Hanlon in Barcelona 1992.

Team Ireland Number

327

Gender

Male

Discipline

Men's Individual Recurve Archery

Games

Moscow 1980, Montreal 1976

Olympic Results

29th (men's individual recurve archery, 2255 points), Montreal 1976; competed in individual recurve archery, Moscow 1980

Personal Best

2255 points (1976)

Hometown

Clonee, Co. Meath

Club Team School Or University

Coolmine Archers' Club / 27 April Archery Club

OTHER ARCHERY OLYMPIANS

Hazel Greene

Joe Malone

Keith Hanlon

Mary Vaughan

Noel Lynch

Willie Swords

Scroll to Top