Asian Archery Championships

Asian Archery Championships is the archery championship organized by the World Archery Asia.

It has been held biannually, and since 2001 has included both the recurve and compound disciplines. The tournament began in 1980 and it was first hosted in India. Countries such as South Korea, China, Japan, and India compete, with many of the world's leading archers representing them.[1]

List of tournaments and champions

Recurve

Year Host Men's individual Women's individual Men's team Women's team Mixed team
1 1980 Kolkata, India
2 1981 Singapore Carlos Santos Jr. Park Young-sook  South Korea  South Korea
3 1983 Hong Kong Kim Young-woon Kim Jin-ho  South Korea  South Korea
4 1985 Jakarta, Indonesia Chun In-soo Seo Hyang-soon  South Korea  South Korea
5 1988 Kolkata, India Ho Jin-soo Kim Soo-nyung  South Korea  South Korea
6 1989 Beijing, China  India
7 1991 Manila, Philippines Han Seung-hun Lee Jang-mi  South Korea  South Korea
8 1993 Jakarta, Indonesia Kim Bo-ram Kim Kyung-wook  South Korea  South Korea
9 1996 Chonburi, Thailand Luo Hengyu Kim Jung-rye  South Korea  South Korea
10 1997 Langkawi, Malaysia Oh Kyo-moon Yoon Hye-young  Japan  South Korea
11 1999 Beijing, China Chung Jae-hun Kang Hyun-ji  South Korea  South Korea
12 2001 Hong Kong Kim Won-sub Zhang Juanjuan  South Korea  Chinese Taipei
13 2003 Yangon, Myanmar Lee Dong-wook Lin Sang  South Korea  South Korea
14 2005 New Delhi, India Im Dong-hyun Park Sung-hyun  South Korea  China
15 2007 Xi'an, China Wang Cheng-pang Lee Sung-jin  India  South Korea
16 2009 Denpasar, Indonesia Kuo Cheng-wei Joo Hyun-jung  South Korea  Japan
17 2011 Tehran, Iran Khairul Anuar Mohamad Yang Nien-hsiu  Malaysia  Japan  Kazakhstan
18 2013 Taipei, Taiwan Takaharu Furukawa Lei Chien-ying  South Korea  South Korea  India
19 2015 Bangkok, Thailand Lee Woo-seok Chang Hye-jin  South Korea  South Korea  Chinese Taipei
20 2017 Dhaka, Bangladesh Lee Seung-yun Lee Eun-gyeong  South Korea  South Korea  South Korea
21 2019 Bangkok, Thailand Lee Woo-seok Kang Chae-young  South Korea  South Korea  South Korea
22 2021 Dhaka, Bangladesh Lee Seung-yun Lim Hae-jin  South Korea  South Korea  South Korea

Compound

Year Host Men's individual Women's individual Men's team Women's team Mixed team
12 2001  Hong Kong Wang Chih-hao Huang I-ting  Chinese Taipei  Chinese Taipei
13 2003 Yangon, Myanmar Wang Chih-hao Choi Mi-yeon  South Korea
14 2005 New Delhi, India Cai Shuo Jhano Hansdah  India
15 2007 Xi'an, China Earl Yap Kwon Oh-hyang  Iran  Philippines
16 2009 Denpasar, Indonesia Isiah Rajendra Sanam Seok Ji-hyun  India  South Korea
17 2011 Tehran, Iran Reza Zamaninejad Maryam Ranjbar  Iran  South Korea  South Korea
18 2013 Taipei, Taiwan Abhishek Verma Seok Ji-hyun  India  Chinese Taipei  India
19 2015 Bangkok, Thailand Rajat Chauhan Jyothi Surekha Vennam  India  South Korea  South Korea
20 2017 Dhaka, Bangladesh Abhishek Verma Song Yun-soo  South Korea  India  South Korea
21 2019 Bangkok, Thailand Choi Yong-hee Seol Da-yeong  South Korea  South Korea  India
22 2021 Dhaka, Bangladesh Kim Jong-ho Jyothi Surekha Vennam  South Korea  South Korea  South Korea

References

  1. "India tops a poor field". Sportstar. India. 7 February 2003.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.