Jump to content

Hatice Kübra İlgün

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hatice Kübra İlgün
Personal information
Born (1993-01-01) 1 January 1993 (age 31)
Kars, Turkey
Alma materUludağ University
Height175 cm (5 ft 9 in)
Weight57 kg (126 lb)
Sport
CountryTurkey
SportTaekwondo
Event(s)Featherweight, 57 kg
ClubBursa BB Spor Club
Coached byFikret Temuçin

Hatice Kübra İlgün (born 1 January 1993) is a Turkish taekwondo practitioner. She has won a silver medal at the 2017 World Taekwondo Championships in the featherweight division.[1]

Sport career

[edit]

Hatice Kübra İlgün left it until the final second of her under-57 kilograms featherweight final to win the World Taekwondo Grand Prix in Chiba in September 2019.

A high, round kick to the head of Morocco's Nada Laraaj turned a 3-2 deficit into a 4-3 winning margin for the 26-year-old Turkish fighter whose career was gathering huge momentum up to the point where competition had to be held up because of the 2020 coronavirus pandemic.[2] İlgün started taekwondo 14-years-ago though a family contact.

"My advantages are that my legs are very long, and I am strong and slim," she said. "And I work hard."

Her promise in the sport was soon evident as she earned second place in the senior under-49 kg event at the Dutch Open aged 16. The following year, she was under-57 kg bronze medallist at the European Under-21 Championships in Chișinău and senior titles soon followed in the Turkish, Ukraine and Moldova Open events.

In 2017, she took another significant step-up as she won under-57 kg silver at the World Championships in Muju, losing 7-5 to South Korea's Lee Ah-reum, who had beaten Britain's Olympic champion Jade Jones in the semi-final.

Before the year was over she had won gold at the Summer Universiade in Taipei, and she followed up by earning her first Grand Prix title in Rabat.

At the 2018 European Championships in Kazan she added another significant medal to her collection as she earned silver, losing to Jones in the final.

In 2019, she produced a series of results that bettered for consistency anything she had done before.

Her Chiba win was preceded by silver at the Rome Grand Prix, and followed by bronze at the Sofia Grand Prix and a silver in the Grand Prix Final in Moscow.

She continued into 2020 in the same dominant vein, winning the Fujairah Open and WT Presidents Cup - Europe in Helsingborg before taking bronze at the German Open.

Qualification for the next Olympics has been amply secured.

"I am really hard working," she told World Taekwondo. "And I really want to be there."

A medal at Tokyo would be a life-changing achievement. Turkey awards successful European, World or Olympic medal-winning athletes with monetary compensation and post-career coaching positions.

"That is good for building my future," she added. "But I will fight under the Turkish national flag. That is more important to me than money."[2]

Hatice Kübra Ilgün managed to win 8-6 in the final for third place against Alizadeh Zenoorin Kimia, the fighter of the Olympic Refugee Team (EOR), in the women’s category of – 57 kg during the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. İlgün won the first round 3-2, and continued her form in the second round with a 2-0 win, taking the total score to 4-3. İlgün clinched the last round 4-3 and won the match with an 8-6 score.[3][4]

She won the gold medal in the women's 57 kg event at the 2022 Mediterranean Games held in Oran, Algeria.[5] She won one of the bronze medals in the women's featherweight event at the 2022 World Taekwondo Championships held in Guadalajara, Mexico.

Hatice Kübra İlgün, who passed the first round in the women's women's featherweight category at the 2023 World Taekwondo Championships in Baku, Azerbaijan, defeated Nadine Mahmoud of Egypt in the second round and Arlet Ortiz of Spain in the third round. Ilgün, who defeated Poland's Patrycja Adamkiewicz in the quarterfinals, lost to Taiwan's Lo Chia-ling in the semifinals and became the third in the world and won a bronze medal.[6]

Tournament record

[edit]
Year Event Location G-Rank Place
2022 European Championships United Kingdom Manchester G-4 1st
Spanish Open Spain La Nucia G-1 1st
Turkish Open Turkey Antalya G-1 2nd
WT Presidents Cup - Europe Albania Durrës G-1 3rd
2021 Olympic Games Japan Tokyo G-20 3rd
European Championships Bulgaria Sofia G-4 2nd
WT Presidents Cup - Europe Albania Durrës G-1 3rd
2020 WT Presidents Cup - Europe Sweden Helsingborg G-1 1st
European Clubs Championships Croatia Zagreb G-1 1st
Fujairah Open United Arab Emirates Fujairah G-1 1st
German Open Germany Hamburg G-1 3rd
2019 Grand Prix Japan Chiba G-4 1st 
Grand Prix Italy Rome G-4 2nd 
Grand Prix Russia Moscow G-8 2nd
Grand Prix Bulgaria Sofia G-4 3rd
Spanish Open Spain Castellón de la Plana G-4 1st 
US Open United States Las Vegas G-1 1st 
WT Presidents Cup - Europe Turkey Antalya G-1 1st 
Asian Open Vietnam Ho Chi Minh City G-1 2nd
Dutch Open Netherlands Nijmegen G-1 3rd
2018 Grand Prix Russia Moscow G-4 3rd 
Grand Slam - Qualification China Wuxi G-4 2nd
European Championships Russia Kazan G-4 2nd
European Clubs Championships Turkey Istanbul G-1 1st 
Turkish Open Turkey Istanbul G-1 1st 
Egypt Open Egypt Alexandria G-1 1st 
Sofia Open Bulgaria Sofia G-1 1st 
WT Presidents Cup - Europe Greece Athens G-1 1st 
2017 World Championships Morocco Rabat G-12 2nd 
Grand Prix Morocco Rabat G-4 1st  
Universiade Chinese Taipei Taipei G-2 1st 
European Clubs Championships Turkey Antalya G-1 1st 
Moldova Open Moldova Ciorescu G-1 2nd 
Turkish Open Turkey Antalya G-1 3rd 
WT Presidents Cup - Europe Greece Athens G-1 3rd  
2016 WT Presidents Cup - Europe Germany Bonn G-1 1st 
Greece Open Greece Thessaloniki G-1 1st  
Palestine Open State of Palestine Ramallah G-1 1st 
Israel Open Israel Ramla G-1 1st 
European Clubs Championships Turkey Antalya G-1 3rd 
Turkish Open Turkey Antalya G-1 3rd 
Serbia Open Serbia Belgrade G-1 3rd  
2015 Ukraine Open Ukraine Kharkov G-1 1st 
Moldova Open Moldova Chișinău G-1 1st  
2014 Turkish Open Turkey Antalya G-1 1st
2013 Mediterranean Games Turkey Mersin G-4 2nd  
European U-21 Championships Moldova Chișinău G-4 3rd
German Open Germany Hamburg G-1 3rd 
2010 Dutch Open Netherlands Eindhoven G-1 2nd 
2009 German Open Germany Hamburg G-1 1st

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Hatice Kübra İlgün'den gümüş madalya". Fanatik (in Turkish). 30 June 2017. Archived from the original on 9 March 2024. Retrieved 30 June 2017.
  2. ^ a b "Hatice Kübra İlgün: Last gasp heroics in Chiba". Archived from the original on 26 April 2021. Retrieved 26 April 2021.
  3. ^ "Olympic Games Tokyo / Taekwondo: Turkish Hatice Kübra Ilgün decorated in bronze". Archived from the original on 25 July 2021. Retrieved 25 July 2021.
  4. ^ "Taekwondo brings Turkey's first medals at Tokyo 2020 Olympics | Daily Sabah". Daily Sabah. 25 July 2021. Archived from the original on 25 July 2021. Retrieved 25 July 2021.
  5. ^ "Taekwondo Results Book" (PDF). 2022 Mediterranean Games. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 July 2022. Retrieved 6 July 2022.
  6. ^ "Hatice Kübra ile yine gururlandık". Archived from the original on 31 May 2023. Retrieved 9 March 2024.
[edit]