Kim Jung-hwan (fencer)

Kim Jung-hwan
Personal information
Born 2 September 1983
Seoul, South Korea
Nationality South Korean
Height 178 cm (5 ft 10 in)
Weight 66 kg (146 lb)
Sport
Country South Korea
Sport Fencing
Weapon Sabre
Hand Right-handed
Club Korea Sports Promotion Foundation
Head coach Kim Du-hong
Former coach Lee Hyo-kun
FIE ranking current ranking
Kim Jung-hwan
Hangul
김정환
Hanja
金政煥
Revised Romanization Gim Jeonghwan
McCune–Reischauer Kim Chŏnghwan

Kim Jung-hwan (Korean김정환; Hanja金政煥; born September 2, 1983) is a South Korean right-handed sabre fencer.

Kim is a seven-time team Asian champion, two-time individual Asian champion, two-time team world champion, and 2018 individual world champion.

A three-time Olympian, Kim is a two-time individual Olympic bronze medalist, and two-time team Olympic champion.

Kim is the first Asian fencer to win four Olympic medals; the first South Korean fencer to medal at three consecutive Olympic Games; and the first South Korean fencer across all disciplines to win a medal in both the individual and team events in a single Olympic Games.

Early life

Kim played baseball throughout elementary school and had aspired to become a baseball player, having been a fan of KBO League team LG Twins since childhood. In 1996, he was introduced to fencing by a friend and took up the sport after his middle school physical education teacher advised him that his long arms would be more suitable for fencing. He was schoolmates with future national teammate Won Woo-young at Hongik University High School, then one of the few schools in Seoul which had a fencing team, and graduated from Korea National Sport University.

Career

Kim Jung-hwan (2013)

Kim was first selected for the senior national team in 2004 and won gold at the Seoul Grand Prix in 2005 despite being a relative newcomer. However, his medal was forfeited and he was suspended for a year after failing a doping test, which he unsuccessfully argued was due to medication he had taken at home to treat his insomnia. After serving out his suspension, he returned and won medals in the Grand Prix circuit and the 2007 Summer Universiade but failed to qualify for the 2008 Summer Olympics. The slump in form coupled by the sudden death of his father, who he was close to, in 2009 nearly led him to quit the sport altogether. He enlisted for mandatory military service in January 2010 and was assigned to the Korea Armed Forces Athletic Corps. He was temporarily released to participate in the 2010 Asian Games, winning silver in the team event. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he won a gold medal in the men's team sabre event together with Won Woo-young, Oh Eun-seok and Gu Bon-gil. In the individual event he was defeated in the second round. The quartet continued to dominate in the team events, sweeping gold at both the Asian Championships and Asian Games hosted at home and winning silver at the World Championships.

In the 2014–15 Fencing World Cup, Kim won gold at the New York Grand Prix in individual men's sabre, and finished the season ranked world #2 behind Gu. Kim and his teammates had a disappointing run at the 2015 World Championships, as they were each eliminated in the quarter-finals of the individual event as well as the team event. They bounced back to defend their team gold at the Asian Championships weeks later. In the individual event, Kim defeated Gu in the final and claimed his second individual gold of the Asian Championships.

Kim qualified for the 2016 Summer Olympics, having finished the 2015–16 World Cup season ranked world #1 and won gold medals at the Moscow Grand Prix and in both the team and individual events at the Asian Championships in Wuxi. There was no men's sabre team event at the Olympics as it was not in rotation for that edition. With his bronze medal win, he became the first South Korean male sabre fencer to win an individual medal at the Olympics and dedicated his win to his late father. He was awarded the Order of Sports Merit Cheongnyong (Hangul: 청룡장; English: Blue Dragon) class, the South Korean government's highest honor bestowed on professional athletes who meet the criteria.

In 2018, he and his teammates Gu, Oh Sang-uk and Kim Jun-ho, swept gold in the team sabre event at both the World Championships and the Asian Games. Kim also won gold in the individual event at the World Championships, his first ever World Championships individual gold. The Asian Games was his last major international tournament as he officially announced his retirement from the national team that December.

Kim remained with the Korea Sports Promotion Foundation as a "player-coach". At Gu's persuasion, he returned to the national team and qualified in time for the Seoul Grand Prix held in April 2019, winning bronze. He joined the same teammates from the 2018 World Championships and Asian Games and they qualified for the 2020 Summer Olympics, which was later postponed for a year due to the COVID-19 pandemic. For a period of time, he had to double as the team's coach due to their coach being dismissed and the federation being unable to find a replacement immediately. Despite the disruption, the quartet successfully defended their gold medal. He was the only member to medal in the individual event as Gu was knocked out in the Round of 32 while Oh failed to advance to the semi-finals in a shock loss to Sandro Bazadze, whom Kim went on to defeat in the bronze medal bout. His two medals at the 2020 Olympics made him the first South Korean fencer (male or female, across all three disciplines) to win a medal at three consecutive Olympic Games.

Following on his success at the Olympics, Kim began the 2021–22 World Cup season with a gold medal at the Orléans Grand Prix in November 2021, his first gold in a Grand Prix since 2017. This was followed by individual bronze medals at two other World Cup events. He won silver in the individual event of the 2022 Asian Championships, losing to Gu for a second time in a row at the championship final. During the 2022 World Championships, his performance was hindered by a back injury and he was eliminated during the Round of 32 in the individual event and missed the final match of the team event. He was also part of the team that won gold at the Asian Championships and two other World Cup events, allowing them to retain their #1 ranking in the team category for the season.

Personal life

Kim married Byun Jung-eun in September 2020. Their son Ro-yi was born in April 2022.

Kim earned a master's degree in sports industry studies at Kookmin University. He is pursuing doctoral studies at Kyonggi University.

Medal record

Olympic Games

Year Location Event Position
2012 London, United Kingdom Team Men's Sabre 1st
2016 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Individual Men's Sabre 3rd
2021 Tokyo, Japan Individual Men's Sabre 3rd
2021 Tokyo, Japan Team Men's Sabre 1st

World Championship

Year Location Event Position
2013 Budapest, Hungary Team Men's Sabre 3rd
2014 Kazan, Russia Team Men's Sabre 2nd
2017 Leipzig, Germany Team Men's Sabre 1st
2018 Wuxi, China Individual Men's Sabre 1st
2018 Wuxi, China Team Men's Sabre 1st
2022 Cairo, Egypt Team Men's Sabre 1st

Asian Championship

Year Location Event Position
2007 Nantong, China Team Men's Sabre 2nd
2007 Nantong, China Individual Men's Sabre 3rd
2008 Bangkok, Thailand Team Men's Sabre 2nd
2010 Seoul, South Korea Team Men's Sabre 2nd
2011 Seoul, South Korea Team Men's Sabre 1st
2012 Wakayama, Japan Individual Men's Sabre 3rd
2012 Wakayama, Japan Team Men's Sabre 2nd
2013 Shanghai, China Individual Men's Sabre 2nd
2013 Shanghai, China Team Men's Sabre 1st
2014 Suwon, South Korea Team Men's Sabre 1st
2015 Singapore Individual Men's Sabre 1st
2015 Singapore Team Men's Sabre 1st
2016 Wuxi, China Individual Men's Sabre 1st
2016 Wuxi, China Team Men's Sabre 1st
2017 Hong Kong, China Team Men's Sabre 1st
2018 Bangkok, Thailand Individual Men's Sabre 2nd
2018 Bangkok, Thailand Team Men's Sabre 3rd
2022 Seoul, South Korea Individual Men's Sabre 2nd
2022 Seoul, South Korea Team Men's Sabre 1st

Grand Prix

Date Location Event Position
2007-03-02 Plovdiv, Bulgaria Individual Men's Sabre 3rd
2014-03-08 Budapest, Hungary Individual Men's Sabre 1st
2014-05-24 Plovdiv, Bulgaria Individual Men's Sabre 3rd
2014-12-13 New York, New York Individual Men's Sabre 1st
2016-05-27 Moscow, Russia Individual Men's Sabre 1st
2017-03-31 Seoul, South Korea Individual Men's Sabre 1st
2017-06-02 Moscow, Russia Individual Men's Sabre 3rd
2018-03-30 Seoul, South Korea Individual Men's Sabre 2nd
2019-04-26 Seoul, South Korea Individual Men's Sabre 3rd
2021-11-11 Orléans, France Individual Men's Sabre 1st
2022-12-08 Orléans, France Individual Men's Sabre 3rd

World Cup

Date Location Event Position
2007-05-19 Warsaw, Poland Individual Men's Sabre 1st
2012-06-22 Chicago, Illinois Individual Men's Sabre 2nd
2014-02-07 Madrid, Spain Individual Men's Sabre 1st
2014-03-21 Moscow, Russia Individual Men's Sabre 2nd
2014-04-25 Athens, Greece Individual Men's Sabre 2nd
2015-01-30 Padua, Italy Individual Men's Sabre 3rd
2015-10-30 Budapest, Hungary Individual Men's Sabre 2nd
2016-01-29 Padua, Italy Individual Men's Sabre 3rd
2016-05-13 Madrid, Spain Individual Men's Sabre 3rd
2017-02-03 Padua, Italy Individual Men's Sabre 3rd
2017-02-24 Warsaw, Poland Individual Men's Sabre 1st
2019-11-15 Cairo, Egypt Individual Men's Sabre 3rd
2022-01-15 Tbilisi, Georgia Individual Men's Sabre 3rd
2022-03-18 Budapest, Hungary Individual Men's Sabre 3rd
2022-05-06 Madrid, Spain Individual Men's Sabre 3rd
2022-05-08 Team Men's Sabre 1st
2023-03-04 Padua, Italy Team Men's Sabre 3rd