Archers were the first to land in Rio about a month in advance to acclimatise themselves to the conditions but that hardly made a difference to their performance as they were also among the first to return home empty-handed.
Archery was one discipline which generated a lot of hype in the run-up to the Olympics and the let-down was one of the big blows to India's hit-and-miss overall campaign of one silver and one bronze medal show in Rio 2016.
Leading 4-2 against the second seeds, India needed a draw to make semis but just could not handle the nerves as they lost the fourth set where Deepika failed to match her teammates' two perfect 10s, allowing Russia to level and wrap the issue 5-4 in the shoot-off.
The blame was back on the strong southern winds at the historical Samba Street, something that did not trouble their opponents.
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But Olympics continued to be a hurdle too big for Deepika, which will keep haunt her when she gears up for Tokyo 2020 as a 26-year-old.
For India, the senior-most and low key Manipuri archer Bombayla impressed the most with a total score of 72 from her eight arrows including three perfect 10.
In individual section, Deepika, Bombayla and the sole male member, Atanu Das signed off in the familiar last 16 stage.
Till then, Satyadev Prasad had the best finish among Indians by advancing to the pre-quarters 12 years ago in Athens.
An Olympic medal has eluded the Indian archers who have otherwise achieved almost every other feat, including winning a bronze at the youth level of the Summer Games, courtesy Atul Verma in Nanjing, China 2014.
They have participated in the Olympic Games since the sport was introduced in 1988 Seoul and, barring 2000 Sydney when they failed to qualify, they have competed in seven editions but still failed to win a medal.
She has more than 10 gold medals at the world level including the team and individual at the 2010 Commonwealth Games when she stunned five-time Olympian and bronze-medallist Alison Williamson of Great Britain.
(REOPENS DEL 10)
But all the hype fizzled out in a few seconds when Deepika lost to Amy Oliver of Great Britain, while the team which also had Bombayala and Chekrovolu Swuro went down to Denmark, both in first rounds.
Former AAI secretary general Paresh Nath Mukherjee, who quit after the London debacle, ending his association with the sport since 1969, first as a player and then as a non-playing captain since 1992, is critical of the archers.
"Clearly the hunger is missing in them. Once they achieve a medal at a world-level event, they are becoming complacent," Mukherjee told