Roia Zamani Explained

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Roia Zamani
رویا زمانی
Nationality:Afghan
Residence:Kabul, Afghanistan
Country:Afghanistan
Sport:Taekwondo
Event:Middleweight class
Turnedpro:2002
Regionals:2002 Asian Games

72 kg – Bronze

Roia Zamani is a taekwondo practitioner from Afghanistan, who is perhaps best known for her bronze medal finish at the 2002 Asian Games held in Busan, South Korea. Zamani, who wears a headscarf under her helmet, won a bronze medal in the 72 kg middleweight class of taekwondo without winning a single match. Zamani was the only medalist from Afghan side. None of the remaining athletes advanced past the qualifying stages.

Personal life

Zamani's family moved from Afghanistan to the neighboring country of Iran, after the Taliban seized control in 1996. Zamani, along with her family, lived in Iran for six years as a refugee, and studied taekwondo there.[1] In 2002, Zamani returned to her homeland and began working as an English teacher in Kabul.[2] Like other Muslim athletes from Middle East, Zamani wears a headscarf under her helmet when competing.[3]

2002 Asian Games

Afghanistan returned to the Asian Games after the fall of the Taliban government in the midst of the ongoing war in Afghanistan.[4] The Afghan delegation consisted of forty male and four female competitors. Three out of these four women athletes participated in taekwondo, in which total 70 female competitors from different Asian countries competed between October 10 and 13.[4] [5]

Aged 23 at that time, Zamani competed in the 72 kg (middleweight) class. Only five athletes participated in this event, making first round a quarterfinal match. She received a bye in her first round match.[6] In the semifinal, she withdrew in the middle of match due to severe injuries, in which she was lagging behind by nil to four points.[7] Zamani was beaten by her Korean opponent, Choi Jin-Mi, who left a cut over her right eyebrow.[8] But the semifinal appearance of Zamani guaranteed her a bronze medal, which she shared with Sally Solis of Philippines.[9] Zamani considered her participation in the Games as a "first step" for Afghan women.[8] None of the remaining athletes advanced past the qualifying stages, and as such did not win any medals.[10]

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Beaten Zamani gives Afghanistan first medal . . October 12, 2002 . January 7, 2012 .
  2. News: A tale of three women . https://web.archive.org/web/20040117040116/http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/mag/2002/10/20/stories/2002102000030300.htm . dead . January 17, 2004 . . October 20, 2002 . January 7, 2012 . Sharma, Kalpana . Chennai.
  3. News: Women lift veil on Asian sports mystery . . November 29, 2006 . AFP . January 8, 2012.
  4. News: The Koreas united, for a day – Plus Afghanistan's sporting comeback . . October 3, 2002 . January 7, 2012 . Westminster.
  5. Web site: Taekwondo in multi-sport game – 14th Asian Games Taekwondo . wtf.org. World Taekwondo Federation . January 7, 2012.
  6. Web site: Start Lists – Women's Middle weight −72 kg 1 Round. https://web.archive.org/web/20021229123228/http://busanasiangames.org/Eng/AG/ba_scd_st.asp?Gm_Status=2&GM_ID=TAW07&Gm_Fg=TA03&Gm_No=0&Gm_Grp=&Language=ENG&GM_DATE=20021012 . December 29, 2002 . busanasiangames.org. Busan Asian Games Organizing Committee . January 7, 2012 . October 12, 2002.
  7. Web site: Game Result – Women's Middle weight −72 kg Semi Final. https://web.archive.org/web/20030526070453/http://busanasiangames.org/Eng/AG/ba_scd_game_re_1.asp?Gm_Status=2&Gm_Id=TAW07&Gm_Fg=TA04&Gm_No=0&Gm_Grp=&Gm_Part=&Language=ENG . May 26, 2003 . busanasiangames.org. Busan Asian Games Organizing Committee . January 7, 2012 . October 12, 2002.
  8. News: Afghanistan wins first medal . . October 12, 2012 . . January 8, 2012 . Chandigarh.
  9. Web site: Final Result – Women's Middle weight −72 kg. https://web.archive.org/web/20030526062758/http://busanasiangames.org/Eng/AG/ba_scd_total_result.asp?Gm_Id=TAW07&Gm_Fg=TA04 . May 26, 2003 . busanasiangames.org. Busan Asian Games Organizing Committee . January 7, 2012 . October 12, 2002.
  10. Web site: Medal Standing – Afghanistan . https://web.archive.org/web/20030331064401/http://www.busanasiangames.org/Eng/ag/ba_res_by_nat.asp?NAT_CD=AFG . March 31, 2003 . busanasiangames.org. Busan Asian Games Organizing Committee . January 8, 2012 .