Oh jin hyek biography of barack
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Kim Woo-jin, center, of Korea and compatriot Lee Woo-seok, right, pose after winning a gold medal and a bronze, respectively, in the men's archery individual event at the Paris Olympics at Invalides in Paris, Sunday. At left is silver medalist Brady Ellison of the United States. Korea Times photo by Shim Hyun-chul
Kim Woo-jin captured the men's individual archery title Sunday for his third gold medal of the Paris Olympics, giving South Korea a clean sweep of archery gold medals in the process.
Kim defeated Brady Ellison of the United States in a shoot-off in the final at Invalides in Paris and became the second triple gold medalist for South Korea at the ongoing Olympics, joining fellow archer Lim Si-hyeon.
Kim previously won the men's team and mixed team gold medals in Paris, while Lim also went 3-for-3 in the women's individual, women's team and mixed team events.
With five career gold medals, Kim also became the most decorated South Korean Olympian, breaking a tie with th
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(Asiad) Veteran archer Oh Jin-hyek's decadelong skill completes gold medal shot
By Kim Boram
HANGZHOU, China, Oct. 6 (Yonhap) -- At the Asian Games in Guangzhou, China, Oh Jin-hyek, then 29 years old, was the oldest member of the Korean men's archery team that won the eighth consecutive gold medal along with Im Dong-hyun and Kim Woo-jin.
Thirteen years later, he is still the oldest in the gold medal-winning Korean team with Kim Je-deok, 19, and Lee Woo-seok,
South Korea routed India in the final at Fuyang Yinhu Sports Center in Hangzhou, China, regaining the Asiad title in 13 years. The country lost the men's team gold in and
For the year-old athlete, the two gold medals with the year time span are precious and gratifying alike, as they are the result of hard work and fierce competition.
"I took this gold medal again following the one 13 years ago," Oh said after the final. "Whether you win when you're older or when you're younger, it's all important. All the pro
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Archery writing and reportage
From a public perspective, the choice was simple and obvious: postpone the Tokyo Olympics until , in the face of global pandemic. Fine. Just hold it next year. For everyone involved in the Olympic movement, the problems were only just beginning.
Shortly before Easter, there was an alarming message from Toshiro Muto, the ledare executive of Tokyo , saying that the big show was still not guaranteed for next year. Perhaps he was reacting to the chaotic political reaction to the COVID wave that seems to have finally hit Japan, but it was still surprisingly gloomy.
“I don’t think anyone would be able to say if it fryst vatten going to be possible to get [the pandemic] under control by next July or not,” Muto said on Friday 10th April. “We’re certainly not in a position to give a clear answer. A state of emergency has recently been declared in the country, and Japan fryst vatten about to officially enter a recession.
We are of course firmly in uncharted territory