Wei Qingguang
Wei Qingguang (later Seiko Iseki) (Chinese: 韦晴光; born July 2, 1962) is a Chinese table tennis player.
Wei Qingguang (Seiko Iseki) | ||||||||||||||
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Full name | Wei Qingguang | |||||||||||||
Nationality | ![]() ![]() | |||||||||||||
Born | July 2, 1962 Nanning, Guangxi | |||||||||||||
Medal record
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Table tennis player
He won the 1988 Seoul Olympic Games in the doubles with Chen Longcan. Later he represented Japan and changed his name to Seiko Iseki.[1][2]
He won a gold medal in the doubles with Chen Longcan at the 1987 World Table Tennis Championships [3][4][5]
Achievements
- 1984 National Championships - 1st singles, mixed doubles & team
- 1985 National Championships - 1st doubles & mixed doubles
- 1986 Asian Cup - 1st singles
- 1987 World Championships - 1st doubles (with Chen Longcan)
- 1988 Olympic Games - 1st doubles (with Chen Longcan)
- 1989 World Championships - 3rd doubles
gollark: Now, while very ææææ in some ways (they say stuff about keeping notes around for 100 years, but run on a subscription model, and do their stuff as a clientside webapp?!), some of the features there ARE very cool.
gollark: Another one of the inspirations which fed into the utterly nonexistent idea of minoteaur I have in my head is Standard Notes.
gollark: Oh, and a full text search index obviously, although ripgrep *is* pretty fast on plain text files.
gollark: Well, I had various very approximate ideas: tags, including some sort of "smart tags" thing; first-class storage of inter-note links, possibly with associated data of some sort, for cool visualization things™; possibly even associating arbitrary key/value pairs with notes for processing.
gollark: And calling out to git for revision history would be utterly.
References
- Statistics of Seiko Iseki/Wei Qingguang. ITTF Database
- "Table Tennis World Championship medal winners". Sports123.
- Montague, Trevor (2004). A-Z of Sport, pages 699-700. The Bath Press. ISBN 0-316-72645-1.
- Matthews/Morrison, Peter/Ian (1987). The Guinness Encyclopaedia of Sports Records and Results, pages 309-312. Guinness Superlatives. ISBN 0-85112-492-5.
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