Jung Jin-sun

Jung Jin-Sun (Hangul: 정진선, Hanja: 鄭鎭善; Korean pronunciation: [tɕʌŋ.dʑin.sʌn] or [tɕʌŋ] [tɕin.sʌn]; born 24 January 1984) is a South Korean épée fencer. Jung won gold in team épée at the 2006 Asian Games in Doha, Qatar. Jung participated in the 2008 Beijing Olympics. He was one of the top seeds for the individual épée competition but lost to eventual silver medalist Fabrice Jeannet of France 15–11 in the quarter finals. He also participated in the 2012 London Olympics 4 years later, winning the individual bronze medal.

Jung Jin-sun
At the 2014 Paris World Cup
Personal information
Born (1984-01-24) 24 January 1984
Height1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)
Weight78 kg (172 lb)
Sport
Country South Korea
SportFencing
WeaponÉpée
Handright-handed
ClubHwaseong City Hall
FIE rankingcurrent ranking

Career

Jung took up fencing in middle school after being noticed by Olympian Yang Dal-sik.

He made his international debut in the 2004–05 season and won a bronze medal in the Stockholm Grand Prix. A year later, he won gold in team épée at the 2006 Asian Games in Doha. He then went through a dry spell until he reached the final in the 2008 at the Koweit City World Cup. He climbed on the podium in Montréal and Cali and won the Puerto Rico Grand Prix. In the 2008 Beijing Olympics. He was one of the top seeds for the individual épée competition, but lost 15–11 in the quarter-finals to eventual silver medalist Fabrice Jeannet of France. These results allowed him to finish the season at the second place in world rankings.

In 2011 Jung won the gold medal in the Asian Championships at home in Seoul, a feat he repeated a year later at Wakayama. In the 2012 London Olympics, he knocked out world No.4 Elmir Alimzhanov, then Jörg Fiedler, but was defeated after a tight bout against surprise semifinalist Bartosz Piasecki of Norway.[1] He then met American fencer Weston Kelsey in the bronze medal match. They were tied at 11 all at the end of fencing time. After two double hits, Jung scored with a foot touch to come away with a bronze medal.[1]

After the 2012 Games, Jung won a bronze medal in the 2013 Legnano World Cup. He won the gold medal in the same event a year later, along with a bronze in the Paris World Cup. He won the 2014 Asian Fencing Championships in Suwon after defeating Japan's Keisuke Sakamoto in the final. In the World Championships in Kazan, he made it to the round of 16 but was stopped by Italy's Enrico Garozzo, who eventually won the bronze medal. In the team event, No.6 seed South Korea defeated Brazil, Japan, Ukraine, then host Russia to meet France in the final. After a good start Korea could not prevent a French comeback. They were defeated 39–45 and came away with the silver medal.[2]

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gollark: ... did I say it was?
gollark: Even if it actually *is* true that living in an authoritarian regime is similar to living in... well, I guess the comparison is just a "relatively standard reasonably free Western country" or something... for the average non-politically-active person (which is probably the case for *some* authoritarian regimes), that doesn't really make authoritarian regimes okay.
gollark: I mean, authoritarian regimes... aren't very good, I think, even if they can *sometimes* produce good outcomes.
gollark: IIRC China *did* silence people warning about it back in 2019, though.

References

  1. International Fencing Federation (ed.). "Limardo Gascón remporte la première médaille d'or vénézuélienne d'escrime de l'histoire". Archived from the original on 5 August 2014.
  2. France TV Sport, ed. (23 July 2014). "Les Français champions du monde par équipes à l'épée".
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