Asian Taekwondo Championships

The Asian Taekwondo Championships are the Asian senior championships in Taekwondo, first held in South Korea in 1973. The event is held every two years and is organized by the Asian Taekwondo Union, the continental affiliate of World Taekwondo, which organises and controls Olympic style taekwondo.

Asian Taekwondo Championships
Current event or competition:
2024 Asian Taekwondo Championships
Competition details
DisciplineTaekwondo
Typekyourugui, biennial
OrganiserAsian Taekwondo Union (ATU)
History
First edition1973 in Seoul, South Korea

Competitions

edit
# Year Date City and host country Venue
1 1974 18–20 October   Seoul, South Korea Kukkiwon
2 1976 16–17 October   Melbourne, Australia Dallas Brooks Hall
3 1978 8–10 September   Hong Kong Macpherson Stadium
4 1980 14–16 November   Taipei, Taiwan Municipal Gymnasium
5 1982 9–11 December   Singapore Gay World Stadium
6 1984 9–11 November   Manila, Philippines Rizal Memorial Sports Complex
7 1986 18–20 April   Darwin, Australia Marrara Indoor Stadium
8 1988 23–25 March   Kathmandu, Nepal Dasharath Rangasala
9 1990 2–4 June   Taipei, Taiwan Municipal Junior College
10 1992 31 January – 2 February   Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Stadium Negara
11 1994 28–30 January   Manila, Philippines Ninoy Aquino Stadium
12 1996 14–16 June   Melbourne, Australia
13 1998 15–17 May   Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
14 2000 13–16 May   Hong Kong Queen Elizabeth Stadium
15 2002 26–28 April   Amman, Jordan
16 2004 20–23 May   Seongnam, South Korea Seongnam Gymnasium
17 2006 21–23 April   Bangkok, Thailand Indoor Stadium Huamark
18 2008 26–28 April   Luoyang, China The Sports Centre Gymnasium
19 2010 21–23 May   Astana, Kazakhstan Daulet Sport Complex
20 2012 9–11 May   Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam Phú Thọ Indoor Stadium
21 2014 26–28 May   Tashkent, Uzbekistan Universal Palace Uzbekistan
22 2016 18–20 April   Pasay, Philippines Marriott Convention Center
23 2018 26–28 May   Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam Phú Thọ Indoor Stadium
24 2021 16–18 June   Beirut, Lebanon Nouhad Naufal Stadium
25 2022 24–27 June   Chuncheon, South Korea Hoban Gymnasium
26 2024 16–18 May   Da Nang, Vietnam Tiên Sơn Sports Palace

All-time medal table

edit

All-time medal count, as of the 2024 Asian Taekwondo Championships.[1]

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  South Korea2194549313
2  Chinese Taipei417661178
3  Iran324459135
4  China28233889
5  Uzbekistan1483153
6  Thailand9242659
7  Jordan7235787
8  Vietnam6152950
9  Australia3235177
10  Philippines3226489
11  Kazakhstan383546
12  Saudi Arabia251118
13  Indonesia183140
14  Malaysia182938
15  Nepal131216
16  Lebanon11911
17  Afghanistan11810
18  Macau1135
19  Singapore062430
20  Japan062329
21  Qatar041216
22  Hong Kong031518
23  Tajikistan0369
24  Cambodia0336
25  Bahrain0268
26  Guam0145
  India0145
28  Syria0134
29  Iraq0123
  Mongolia0123
  Pakistan0123
  Yemen0123
33  Myanmar0112
34  Kuwait0099
  New Zealand0099
36  Palestine0044
37  Brunei0022
38  Laos0011
  Tahiti0011
  United Arab Emirates0011
Totals (40 entries)3733737391485

Team ranking

edit
Year Men Women
1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd
1974   South Korea   Republic of China   Khmer Republic Not held
1976   South Korea   Australia   Philippines
1978   South Korea   Australia   Iran
1980   South Korea   Republic of China   Jordan
1982   South Korea   Thailand   Chinese Taipei
1984   South Korea   Chinese Taipei   Philippines
1986   South Korea   Australia   Chinese Taipei   Chinese Taipei   South Korea   Australia
1988   South Korea   Chinese Taipei   Jordan   South Korea   Chinese Taipei   Australia
1990   South Korea   Chinese Taipei   Jordan   Chinese Taipei   South Korea   Malaysia
1992   South Korea   Iran   Chinese Taipei   South Korea   Chinese Taipei   Malaysia
1994   South Korea   Philippines   Chinese Taipei   South Korea   Chinese Taipei   Philippines
1996   South Korea   Iran   Japan   South Korea   Chinese Taipei   Australia
1998   South Korea   Chinese Taipei   Jordan   South Korea   Chinese Taipei   China
2000   South Korea   Philippines   Chinese Taipei   South Korea   China   Chinese Taipei
2002   South Korea   Iran   Jordan   South Korea   China   Chinese Taipei
2004   South Korea   Iran   Chinese Taipei   South Korea   Chinese Taipei   China
2006   South Korea   Iran   Thailand   South Korea   Thailand   Chinese Taipei
2008   Iran   China   South Korea   China   Chinese Taipei   South Korea
2010   Iran   South Korea   Thailand   South Korea   China   Chinese Taipei
2012   South Korea   Iran   Jordan   Chinese Taipei   China   South Korea
2014   Iran   South Korea   Uzbekistan   South Korea   China   Thailand
2016   Iran   South Korea   Uzbekistan   South Korea   Chinese Taipei   Thailand
2018   South Korea   Iran   Uzbekistan   China   South Korea   Vietnam
2021   South Korea   Uzbekistan   Iran   South Korea   Iran   Vietnam
2022   Uzbekistan   South Korea   Jordan   Iran   China   South Korea
2024   Iran   South Korea   Uzbekistan   South Korea   China   Thailand

References

edit
  1. ^ "Asian Championships, senior: Number of winners by nation". taekwondodata.com. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
edit