The British Student Taekwondo Federation (BSTF) is a national student sport federation and registered charity.[1][2]
Founded | 1986 |
---|---|
Based | United Kingdom |
Website | http://bstf.org.uk/ |
The organisation was founded in 1986[3] and provides services and events to university Taekwondo clubs across the United Kingdom including the multi-discipline Student Taekwondo Championships Series tournament programme. In 2019 the charity partnered with British Universities and Colleges Sport (BUCS), the governing body for university sport in the United Kingdom, to deliver the new BSTF BUCS Student Taekwondo Championships Series[4] joining over 30,000 student-athletes across more than 50 sports within the BUCS core competition programme.[5]
The charity also delivers training camps;[6] referee training courses;[7] British Universities and Colleges Sport (BUCS) qualification tournaments and team management of the European Universities Games and Championships squads;[8] an inter-university composite national team training programme for performance student-athletes;[9] BUCS London University Sports League tournaments;[10] support for university clubs hosting their own training events and university open tournaments;[11] award an annual Club of the Year Award,[12] and provides advocacy and advice available to all university taekwondo clubs across the UK.[13]
The charitable objects of the BSTF are: "the advancement for the public benefit of physical education among students in Universities and Colleges by the provision of services and promotion of the martial art and amateur sport of Taekwondo".[14]
History
editThe BSTF was established in 1986 as a not-for-profit organisation to facilitate university Taekwondo clubs to train and compete together. The present day BSTF BUCS Taekwondo Championships Series developed from these annual Student National Taekwondo Championships competitions, known colloquially by university taekwondo club members as "the Nationals";[15] The first Nationals were organised in 1987 and were held at the University of Southampton. The event began as a collaboration between students of Southampton and Warwick University's Taekwondo clubs, including one of the BSTF's founding members and current patron of the charity master Graham Jones. The inaugural championships included student teams from the University of Southampton, Southampton Technical College (now Southampton City College), Leeds University and Warwick University.[16]
By 1989 the organisation had evolved into a constituted national organising committee to cater for the expanding event. The first Student National Taekwondo Championships included only the WTF rules sparring discipline, with ITF rules sparring added in 1992 and various individual, pairs and team patterns events being added over time.[17] The most recent edition to the competition programme is the Freestyle Patterns discipline added to the Student National Taekwondo Championships event in 2017 as an additional qualification event for the European University Sports Association's European Universities Games and European Universities Championships Taekwondo programme.[18]
Membership of the BSTF is open to all university Taekwondo clubs which are themselves members of their respective students' unions. Representatives of each member club may vote on motions and in trustee elections at the charity's general meetings. The BSTF's events and tournaments are open to all university student Taekwondo athletes – including independent entries from universities which do not yet possess a student union registered Taekwondo club.[19]
Student National Taekwondo Championships
editThe Student National Taekwondo Championships Series comprises several multi-discipline tournaments each year, which the largest university Taekwondo events in Great Britain.[16] The series typically attracts over 500 student athletes from over 50 universities across Great Britain taking part, with around 30 highest ranking athletes qualifying at the event to represent their institutions at the EUSA European Universities Games (in even years) and EUSA European Universities Championships (in odd years).[15][20]
Five Taekwondo disciplines are contested at the annual Student National Taekwondo Championships, with competitors sub-grouped by grade (experience level) divisions and also by weight divisions for sparring disciplines. The events programme includes: ITF rules sparring; WT rules sparring; Chang-Hon patterns (individual, pair and team Tul); Kukkiwon patterns (individual, pair, and team Poomsae); and Freestyle patterns.[21] BSTF competitions are contested according to the rules of the pertinent international federations, WT and the ITF.
Competitors accrue points for their registered institution for every single sparring match win / patterns round progressed at every event in the tournament series towards their institution's overall Student National Taekwondo Championships ranking at the end of the year. The table below shows the history of overall club champions based on overall team score.[22]
Year | Host cities | Team champions | BUCS point champions |
---|---|---|---|
2023-24* | London, London, Nottingham | University College London | University of Nottingham |
2022-23* | Nottingham, Southampton, Cardiff | University College London | University College London |
2021-22* | London, Nottingham, Norwich | University College London | University of Bath |
2020-21* | n/a | n/a | n/a |
2019-20* | London, Nottingham, Colchester | University College London | University College London |
2018-19* | London, Nottingham, Worcester | University College London | n/a |
2017-18* | London, Nottingham, Worcester | University College London | n/a |
2017 | Worcester | University College London | n/a |
2016 | Worcester | Cardiff University | n/a |
2015 | Worcester | University of Southampton | n/a |
2014 | Bristol | University of Southampton | n/a |
2013 | Banbury | University of Southampton | n/a |
2012 | Nottingham | University of Southampton | n/a |
2011 | Aylesbury | University of Southampton | n/a |
2010 | Aylesbury | University of Southampton | n/a |
2009 | Durham | University of the West of England | n/a |
2008 | Nottingham | University of the West of England | n/a |
2007 | Bristol | University of the West of England | n/a |
2006 | Southampton | Newcastle University | n/a |
2005 | Leeds | Newcastle University | n/a |
2004 | Teesside | Newcastle University | n/a |
2003 | Cambridge | Bristol University | n/a |
2002 | Birmingham | Bristol University | n/a |
2001 | Birmingham | Bristol University | n/a |
2000 | Bristol | Bristol University | n/a |
1999 | Manchester | Lancaster University | n/a |
1998 | Warwick | University of Bradford | n/a |
1997 | Newcastle | Newcastle University | n/a |
1996 | Bournemouth | Newcastle University | n/a |
1995 | Coventry | Kingston University | n/a |
1994 | Nottingham | Kingston University | n/a |
1993 | Manchester | Newcastle University | n/a |
1992 | City of London | University of Southampton | n/a |
1991 | Sheffield | University of Manchester | n/a |
1990 | Lancaster | University of Manchester | n/a |
1989 | Warwick | Lancaster University | n/a |
1988 | University College London | Lancaster University | n/a |
1987 | Southampton | University of Southampton | n/a |
(*)from 1986-2017 the Team Champion title was awarded based on overall team scores from all disciplines and divisions of a Student National Taekwondo Championships Finals event only, irrespective of other competition results, while from the 2017-18 season onward the title awarded based on overall team scores from all disciplines and divisions across the multi-event championships series. The BUCS (point) Champion title is awarded to the club with the highest total of BUCS points at the end of the season.
References
edit- ^ "National and International Associations". theschoolofmartialarts.com. Archived from the original on 29 May 2016. Retrieved 19 September 2016.
- ^ "Charity framework". Retrieved 9 November 2016.
- ^ "Fight Camp". martialartsvohra.com. Retrieved 19 September 2016.
- ^ "BSTF BUCS Student Taekwondo Championships Series".
- ^ "BUCS core competition programme". Facebook.
- ^ "Fight Camp : Vohra Martial Arts - offering International membership in Kukkiwon Taekwondo & other Asian Martial Arts". www.martialartsvohra.com.
- ^ "referee training courses".
- ^ "EUSA Games 2016 - Taekwondo - British Universities & Colleges Sport". www.bucs.org.uk.
- ^ "Universities Composite Team".
- ^ "LUSL Taekwondo - British Universities & Colleges Sport". www.bucs.org.uk.
- ^ "ICO 2016 Info Pack.pdf". Google Docs.
- ^ "Club of the Year Award".
- ^ "More – British Student Taekwondo Federation".
- ^ "Charity Details". beta.charitycommission.gov.uk.
- ^ a b "Report from the 31st Student National Taekwondo Championships". British Taekwondo. 15 March 2017. Retrieved 5 May 2022.
- ^ a b "BSTF website".
- ^ "BSTF 30th Anniversary Student National Taekwondo Championships". 29 September 2016 – via YouTube.
- ^ "Freestyle Patterns Discipline".
- ^ "About Taekwondo".
- ^ "European Universities Taekwondo Championship 2017 | EUSA". taekwondo2017.eusa.eu.
- ^ "University Taekwondo Championships Series".
- ^ "National Championships Results".