Korean Sport & Olympic Committee

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Korean Sport & Olympic Committee
Korean Sport & Olympic Committee logo
Country/Region South Korea
CodeKOR
Created1920, as Joseon Sports Council
Recognized1947
Headquarters424, Olympic-ro, Songpa-gu, Seoul, South Korea
PresidentLee Kee-heung
Secretary GeneralChoongryul Jeon
Websitesports.or.kr
The Korean Sport & Olympic Committee

The Korean Sport & Olympic Committee (Korean대한체육회; Hanja大韓體育會, Abbr.: KOC) is the National Olympic Committee of Republic of Korea (competing as Korea) for the Olympic Games movement and inbound sports issue. It is a non-profit organization that selects players and teams to represent the nation, and raises funds to send them to Olympic events organized by the International Olympic Committee (IOC).

History[]

Origin[]

The Joseon Sports Council was established on 13 July 1920, and it made Korean national competitions of each sport including All Joseon Football Tournament.[1] The competitions were combined as the All Joseon Sport Games (currently Korean National Sports Festival) in 1934, and the combined competition was held every autumn.[1] However, the Joseon Sports Council was forcibly dissolved by Japan on 4 July 1938, and Korean sporting activities were restricted until the end of the Japanese occupation.[1] The council was revived after Korean independence in 1945, and joined the IOC on 20 June 1947.[1] It also established the Korean Olympic Committee (KOC) to prepare for the Olympic Games in that year.[1] The council was renamed the Korea Amateur Sports Association (KASA) in 1954,[1] and the Korea Sports Council (KSC) in 1994.[2] The KASA succeeded in hosting the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, and South Korea finished fourth in that edition, which was its best ever result in Olympics. The KOC was merged into the KSC on 24 June 2009, but the organization used KOC as its name.[1] It once again merged with the in March 2016,[1] and named the current "Korean Sport & Olympic Committee" in November 2016, but the emblem of the committee is remaining the same as previous.

Presidents[]

IOC members[]

Lee Kee-heung in his function as an IOC member at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics

2018 Inter-Korean Sports Conference[]

On 2 November 2018, officials from both North and South Korea announced that their countries would participate at the 2020 Summer Olympics, held in Tokyo, Japan, as a unified team.[3][4] The officials from both Koreas also announced that the letters they would send to the IOC regarding their bids for hosting the 2032 Summer Olympics would also consist of co-host bids so that the Olympic activities would take place in both nations if their bids were accepted as well.[3][4][5]

Korean Sports Hall of Fame[]

Source:[6]

Year Inductee Gender Sport Titles[note 1]
Olympic sports
2011 Sohn Kee-chung Man Athletics pictogram.svg Athletics Summer Olympics : 1936
Kim Seong-jip Man Weightlifting pictogram.svg Weightlifting Summer Olympics : 1948, 1952
Asian Games: 1954
2014 Suh Yun-bok Man Athletics pictogram.svg Athletics Boston Marathon: 1947
Chang Chang-sun Man Wrestling pictogram.svg Wrestling Summer Olympics: : 1964
World Championships: 1966
2015 Yang Jung-mo Man Wrestling pictogram.svg Wrestling Summer Olympics : 1976
Asian Games: 1974, 1978
Woman Basketball pictogram.svg Basketball
2016 Yuna Kim Woman Figure skating pictogram.svg Figure skating Winter Olympics : 2010
Winter Olympics : 2014
World Championships: 2009, 2013
Four Continents Championships: 2009
Grand Prix Final: 2006–07, 2007–08, 2009–10
2017 Cha Bum-kun Man Football pictogram.svg Football Asian Games: 1978
2018 Kim Jin-ho Woman Archery pictogram.svg Archery Summer Olympics : 1984
World Championships: 1979 (2), 1983 (2)
Asian Games: 1978, 1982, 1986 (3)
Asian Championships: , ,
2020 Jo O-ryeon Man Swimming pictogram.svg Swimming Asian Games: 1970 (2), 1974 (2)
Other sports
2018 Kim Il Man Professional wrestling
2019 Um Hong-gil Man Mountaineering
Administration
2014 Man
2015 Kim Un-yong Man
  1. ^ Only include Olympic medals, world titles, and Asian titles as a senior national player.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h 대한체육회(大韓體育會) (in Korean). Encyclopedia of Korean Culture. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  2. ^ <체육단신>대한체육회 KSC로 (in Korean). JoongAng Ilbo. 25 March 1994. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b "North and South Korea plan to compete together at Tokyo 2020".
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b "North, South Korea combining for 2020 Olympics". 2 November 2018.
  5. ^ "Olympics: North, South Korea to send letter to IOC on joint 2032 bid". Reuters. 2 November 2018.
  6. ^ 스포츠영웅. hero.Sports.or.kr (in Korean). KOC. Retrieved 8 November 2019.

External links[]


Retrieved from ""