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Karate at the 2019 World Beach Games

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Karate kata
at the 2019 World Beach Games
VenueKatara Beach
Dates10–11 October
Competitors64
2021 →

Karate kata competitions at the 2019 World Beach Games in Doha, Qatar were held on October 10 and October 11. The venue for the competition was at Mission Beach. Thirty-two athletes competed in each of the men's and women's events.[1]

Qualification

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A total of 64 athletes (32 of each gender) vie for the coveted spots with a maximum of two sent to compete for the best six world championship qualifiers. While the other NOCs might have one athlete per event, host nation Qatar will be ensured one quota place for each gender. The remaining 4 quotas will be eligible for each continental champions. The other remaining 6 quotas will be eligible for best five WKF ranking and one invitation place respectively.[1]

Qualification summary

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Men's qualification

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Mean of qualification Date Host Vacancies Qualified
Host nation 14 June 2019 Switzerland Lausanne 1  Adam Hasham (QAT)
2018 Asian Championships[2] 13–15 July 2018 Jordan Amman 4  Ryo Kiyuna (JPN)
 Wang Yi-ta (TPE)
 Salman Al-Mosawi (KUW)
 Chris Cheng (HKG)
2018 African Championships[3] 31 August–2 September 2018 Rwanda Kigali 4  Ofentse Bakwadi (BOT)
 Adnane El Hakimi (MAR)
 Ahmed Shawky (EGY)
2018 World Championships[4] 6–10 November 2018 Spain Madrid 6 3  Ilja Smorguner (GER)
 Enzo Montarello (FRA)
 David Contreras (COL)
2019 Pan American Championships[5] 18–23 March 2019 Panama Panama 4  Ariel Torres Gutierrez (USA)
 Antonio Díaz (VEN)
 Nykolai Arango (DOM)
 Héctor Cención (PAN)
2019 European Championships[6] 28–31 March 2019 Spain Guadalajara 4 3  Damián Quintero (ESP)
 Ali Sofuoğlu (TUR)
 Roman Heydarov (AZE)
2019 Oceanian Championships[7] 11–12 April 2019 Australia Sydney 4 1  Shaun Yuen (AUS)
WKF World Ranking 1 June 2019 Spain Madrid 5 15  Emre Vefa Göktaş (TUR)
 Adnan El Hakim (MAR)
 Ahmad Zigi Zaresta Yuda (INA)
 Sergio Galán (ESP)
 Abolfazl Shahrjerdi (IRI)
 Park Hee-jun (KOR)
 Botond Nagy (HUN)
 Madi Kateshov (KAZ)
 Peter Fabian (SVK)
 Isaac Hoshi (NZL)
 Gakuji Tozaki (USA)
 David Contreras (COL)
 Lim Chee Wei (MAS)
 Mohammed Al-Mosawi (KUW)
 Tomislav Stolar (CRO)
Total 32

Women's qualification

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Mean of qualification Date Host Vacancies Qualified
Host nation 14 June 2019 Switzerland Lausanne 1  Mona Saud Al-Kharfi (QAT)
2018 Asian Championships[2] 13–15 July 2018 Jordan Amman 4  Kiyou Shimizu (JPN)
 Celine Lee (MAS)
 Nawar Kautsar Mastura (INA)
 Grace Lau (HKG)
2018 African Championships[3] 31 August–2 September 2018 Rwanda Kigali 4  Sara Sayed (EGY)
 Sanae Agalmam (MAR)
 Akele Akele (CMR)
 Entle Maungwa (BOT)
2018 World Championships[4] 6–10 November 2018 Spain Madrid 6 3  Ngo Ha Thi (CAN)
 Ema Brázdová (SVK)
 Fatemeh Sadeghi (IRI)
2019 Pan American Championships[5] 18–23 March 2019 Panama Panama 4  María Dimitrova (DOM)
 Sakura Kokumai (USA)
 Jessica Kwong (USA)
 Andrea Armada Ruiz (VEN)
2019 European Championships[6] 28–31 March 2019 Spain Guadalajara 4 3  Sandra Sánchez (ESP)
 Alexandra Feracci (FRA)
 Dilara Eltemur (TUR)
2019 Oceanian Championships[7] 11–12 April 2019 Australia Sydney 4 3  Alexandrea Anacan (NZL)
 Ioanna Maria Sampani (AUS)
 Holly Wigg (NZL)
WKF World Ranking 1 June 2019 Spain Madrid 5 12  Jasmin Jüttner (GER)
 Veronika Mišková (CZE)
 Carola Casale (ITA)
 Nguyễn Thị Phương (VIE)
 Terryana D'Onofrio (ITA)
 Raquel Roy Rubio (ESP)
 Chien Hui-hsuan (TPE)
 Laura Sterck (HUN)
 Patricia Esparteiro (POR)
 Tung Yee Yin (HKG)
 Biserka Radulović (MNE)
 Monsicha Tararattanakul (THA)
Total 33

Medal summary

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Medal table

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  *   Host nation (Qatar)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Spain2002
2 Chinese Taipei0101
 Iran0101
4 Dominican Republic0011
 Hong Kong0011
 United States0011
 Venezuela0011
Totals (7 entries)2248

Medalists

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Event Gold Silver Bronze
Men's individual
details
Damián Quintero
 Spain
Wang Yi-ta
 Chinese Taipei
Gakuji Tozaki
 United States
Antonio Díaz
 Venezuela
Women's individual
details
Sandra Sánchez
 Spain
Fatemeh Sadeghi
 Iran
María Dimitrova
 Dominican Republic
Grace Lau
 Hong Kong

Participating nations

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References

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  1. ^ a b "San Diego 2019 AWBG Technical Handbook for the NOCs" (PDF). www.triathlon.org/. San Diego 2019 AWBG. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
  2. ^ a b "2018 Asian Championships Results" (PDF). www.wkf.net/. WKF. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
  3. ^ a b "2018 African Championships Results" (PDF). www.wkf.net/. WKF. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
  4. ^ a b "2018 World Championships Results" (PDF). www.wkf.net/. WKF. Retrieved 1 January 2019.
  5. ^ a b "2019 Pan American Championships Results" (PDF). www.wkf.net/. WKF. Retrieved 13 September 2019.
  6. ^ a b "2019 European Championships Results" (PDF). www.wkf.net/. WKF. Retrieved 13 September 2019.
  7. ^ a b "2019 Oceanian Championships Results" (PDF). www.wkf.net/. WKF. Retrieved 13 September 2019.
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