Wushu at the 2014 Asian Games – Women's nanquan

The women's Nanquan / Nandao all-round competition at the 2014 Asian Games in Incheon, South Korea was held on 20 September at the Ganghwa Dolmens Gymnasium.[1]

Women's nanquan
at the 2014 Asian Games
VenueGanghwa Dolmens Gymnasium
Dates20 September 2014
Competitors14 from 11 nations
Medalists
gold medal    Indonesia
silver medal    China
bronze medal    Indonesia
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2018 →

Tai Cheau Xuen tested positive for the stimulant sibutramine after winning the gold medal on September 20, the first day of competition, according to the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA). Tai was stripped of the gold medal and disqualified by the OCA after failing a dope test.[2][3] An official statement announced by the Court of Arbitration for Sport that the appeal made by Malaysian contingent was dismissed.[4][5] Tai's disqualification altered the medal allocation, with Indonesia's Juwita Niza Wasni promoted from silver to gold while China's Wei Hong move up to the silver medal and Ivana Ardelia Irmanto of Indonesia to the bronze model after finishing fourth overall.[6]

Schedule

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All times are Korea Standard Time (UTC+09:00)

Date Time Event
Saturday, 20 September 2014 09:00 Nandao
14:00 Nanquan

Results

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Legend
  • DNS — Did not start
Rank Athlete Nandao Nanquan Total
    Juwita Niza Wasni (INA) 9.63 9.56 19.19
    Wei Hong (CHN) 9.72 9.43 19.15
    Ivana Ardelia Irmanto (INA) 9.57 9.55 19.12
4   Tsai Wen-chuan (TPE) 9.60 9.49 19.09
5   Lin Chih-yu (TPE) 9.57 9.45 19.02
6   Yuen Ka Ying (HKG) 9.61 9.38 18.99
7   Lim Sung-eun (KOR) 9.51 9.39 18.90
8   Tan Dong Mei (MAC) 9.15 9.46 18.61
9   Erika Kojima (JPN) 9.40 9.07 18.47
10   Aint Mi Mi (MYA) 9.10 9.17 18.27
11   Diana Bong (MAS) 9.20 9.05 18.25
  Mashvaa Rakhmanova (TJK) DNS
  Chuevue Naotuevue (LAO) DNS
DQ   Tai Cheau Xuen (MAS) 9.62 9.61 19.23
  • Tai Cheau Xuen of Malaysia originally won the gold medal, but was later disqualified after she tested positive for Sibutramine.

References

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  1. ^ "Women's Nanquan & Nandao All-Round" (PDF). Incheon 2014 official website. 20 September 2014. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  2. ^ "Malaysian gold medal winner Tai Cheau Xuen expelled for doping". Times of India. Retrieved 2014-09-30.
  3. ^ "Malaysia's Tai Cheau Xuen loses Asian Games gold medal over doping". Reuters. Retrieved 2014-09-30.[dead link]
  4. ^ "Wushu champ loses appeal against doping failure, stripped of Asiad gold". The Malaysian Insider. Retrieved 2014-10-02.
  5. ^ "Malaysia lose appeal against doping failure". AFP. Retrieved 2014-10-02.
  6. ^ "Wushu gold medallist Tai tests positive at Asiad". Reuters. Archived from the original on March 6, 2016. Retrieved 2014-10-02.
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