Sim Kwon-ho

(Redirected from Sim Kwon-Ho)

Sim Kwon-Ho (Korean심권호; Hanja沈權虎; born October 10, 1972, in Seongnam, South Korea) is a retired South Korean Greco Roman wrestler. He won gold medals at the 1996 and 2000 Olympic Games, and is the only South Korean wrestler to win two gold medals in the Olympics.

Sim Kwon-ho
Medal record
Men’s Greco-Roman wrestling
Representing  South Korea
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place 2000 Sydney 54 kg
Gold medal – first place 1996 Atlanta 48 kg
World Championships
Gold medal – first place 1998 Gävle 54 kg
Gold medal – first place 1995 Prague 48 kg
Bronze medal – third place 1993 Stockholm 48 kg
Asian Games
Gold medal – first place 1998 Bangkok 54 kg
Gold medal – first place 1994 Hiroshima 48 kg
Asian Championships
Gold medal – first place 1999 Tashkent 54 kg
Gold medal – first place 1996 Xiaoshan 48 kg
Gold medal – first place 1995 Manila 48 kg
Silver medal – second place 1993 Hiroshima 48 kg

Career edit

Sim was born on October 10, 1972, in Seongnam, Gyeonggi Province, and started wrestling at the age of 13. While attending Seoul Physical Education High School in 1990, Sim was first selected for the South Korean national wrestling team.

Sim first gained attention at the 1993 World Wrestling Championships where he won the bronze medal in the 48 kg category. Next year, Sim won the gold medal in the Men's Greco-Roman 48 kg at the Asian Games. Since the 1994 Asian Games, Sim swept gold medals in the Greco-Roman light flyweight(48 kg) and flyweight(54 kg) categories never losing a match at major international competitions such as Olympic Games, World Championships, Asian Games and Asian Championships until his retirement in 2000.

1992 Olympic trials edit

While trying to earn his spot to compete for the 1992 Summer Olympics, in Barcelona, Sim was ranked first in the Men's Greco-Roman 48 kg at the South Korean national trials, beating 1991 World Champion Goun Duk-Yong. Amid controversy, however, Goun was selected by Korea Wrestling Federation over Sim in the 48 kg category at the Barcelona Games, despite being ranked lower in the trials. At the Barcelona Games Goun was eventually eliminated in Round 1.

1996 Olympics edit

At the Atlanta Games in 1996, Sim won his first Olympic title by defeating Aleksandr Pavlov of Belarus in the final. He scored two points with a chest-high roll-through with 42 seconds left in regulation time and then added two more points with another roll in overtime to score a 4–0 victory.

In November 1996 Sim became the last world light flyweight (48 kg) champion at the 1996 World Cup where the FILA's final international 48 kg class competitions were held, dominating all the opponents by technical fall including two-time World Champion Wilber Sánchez of Cuba.

2000 Olympics edit

Sim moved up in weight from 48 kg to 54 kg in 1997 when the new weight classes were established by FILA. In the semifinals of the Sydney Games in 2000, he defeated Kang Yong-Gyun of North Korea 10–0. At the Opening Ceremony, the North and South Koreans had marched together. In this spirit, before the medal matches, Sim gave advice to Kang about the man he would be facing in the bronze-medal match-Andriy Kalashnikov of Ukraine, while Kang gave Sim a scouting report on his opponent in the gold-medal match-Lázaro Rivas of Cuba. Both Koreans won, with Sim scoring early and often against Rivas and prevailing 8–0.

Post career edit

Sim is currently a wrestling commentator for SBS Sports and serving as an assistant coach for the KOMSCO wrestling team.

Notable final matches edit

Opponent Res. Class Score Date Competition Notes
Win   Lázaro Rivas 54kg 8:0 2000-06-09   2000 Summer Olympics Won second Olympic gold medal.
Win   Shamseddin Khudoyberdiev 3:2 1999-05-31   1999 Asian Championships Won third Asian Championship gold medal.
Win   Kang Yong-Gyun 5:5 1998-12-13   1998 Asian Games Won second Asian Games gold medal.
Win   Marian Sandu 5:3 1998-08-30   1998 World Championships Won second World Championship gold medal.
Win   Aleksandr Pavlov 48kg 4:0 1996-07-21   1996 Summer Olympics Won first Olympic gold medal.
Win   Kang Yong-Gyun 11:0 1996-04-06   1996 Asian Championships Won second Asian Championship gold medal.
Win   Hiroshi Kado 6:0 1995-10-14   1995 World Championships Won first World Championship gold medal.
Win   Dmitri Korshunov 12:0 1995-06-28   1995 Asian Championships Won first Asian Championship gold medal.
Win   Reza Simkhah 7:0 1994-10-05   1994 Asian Games Won first Asian Games gold medal.

External links edit