Skilled fighters are emerging from so many countries that the taekwondo
tournament at next year's Beijing Olympics could be the most open ever, the head
of the sport's world governing body said.
Choue Chungwon, president of the World Taekwondo Federation (WTF) since 2004,
said that last week's world championships in Beijing had thrown up some stunning
surprises, not least men's heavyweight champion Daba Modibo Keita of Mali.
 Chinese taekwondo team players
celebrate for teammate Chen Zhong(C)'s victory over a South
Korean player during recently-closed taekwondo tournament held in
Beijing.[Xinhua] |
Europe and Asia could turn out to
be medal hotspots at the Games if the world championships are any guide to form
with gold going to Croatia and Spain, while the growing popularity of the sport
in China could mean big wins for the home nation.
"There really is no guessing which countries will win gold in Beijing. It's
going to be a really open competition," Choue said in an interview with Reuters.
"In the Sydney Olympics and the Athens Games the medals were distributed
between 16 and 18 countries. But at the Beijing world championships this month
the medal distribution was fantastic -- 26 countries received gold, silver or
bronze."
Choue said the WTF was working hard to make sure that taekwondo remains an
Olympic sport after the 2012 Games in London. Its status is reviewed in 2009 and
survival to the 2016 Olympics will ensure its current reach to world audiences.
However, Olympic style taekwondo is often criticised for its fighters'
passivity. With no hand strikes allowed to the face, evenly-matched fighters
often bob in front of each other waiting for an opening.
Although passivity is penalised, high-stakes medal fights are often decided
in the blink of an eye after minutes of apparent inaction.
"I've told our technical committee it can do anything to make the sport more
interesting. At the moment the mat is square, they're even thinking of having a
round mat which would give more room for the athletes to attack," said Choue.
Electronic chest protectors would be used to enhance the accuracy of scoring
but one of the WTF's biggest pushes will be to update referee training and
selection to head off criticism of bias and incompetence.
"We plan to invite 300 referees from all over the world and to have a special
intensive referee education programme. After that we will select 50 out of the
300 and this 50 will move around with Olympic qualification rounds," said Choue.
"After that we will select 29 international referees for the Beijing Olympic
Games."