Tamer Abdelmoneim Hussein

Egyptian taekwondo practitioner From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tamer Abdelmoneim Hussein (Arabic: تامر عبد المنعم حسين; born 22 November 1974 in Cairo) is an Egyptian taekwondo practitioner, who competed in the men's featherweight category.[1] He captured two medals each in the men's 70-kg division at the World Taekwondo Championships (1991 and 1997), and attained a fifth-place finish at the 2004 Summer Olympics, representing his nation Egypt.

FullnameTamer Abdelmoneim Hussein
Nationality Egypt
Born (1974-11-22) 22 November 1974 (age 51)
Cairo, Egypt
Height1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)
Quick facts Personal information, Full name ...
Tamer Abdelmoneim Hussein
Personal information
Full nameTamer Abdelmoneim Hussein
Nationality Egypt
Born (1974-11-22) 22 November 1974 (age 51)
Cairo, Egypt
Height1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)
Weight68 kg (150 lb)
Sport
SportTaekwondo
Event
68 kg
Medal record
Men's taekwondo
Representing  Egypt
World Championships
Gold medal – first place1997 Hong Kong70 kg
Bronze medal – third place1991 Athens70 kg
Close

Hussein qualified as a 29-year-old for the Egyptian squad in the men's featherweight class (68 kg) at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, by defeating Tunisia's Mohamed Omrani for the top spot and securing a berth from the African Olympic Qualifying Tournament in his native Cairo.[2][3] Hussein lost his opening match 8–1 to Chinese Taipei's Huang Chih-hsiung, but slipped abruptly into the repechage for a chance to add another Olympic bronze medal for Egypt in the sport, following Huang's progress towards the final.[4] In the repechage, Hussein redeemed from his ill-fated Olympic prelim feat to seal an adamant 8–4 victory over Austria's two-time Olympian Tuncay Çalışkan, before ending his Olympic run by plunging to a 6–8 decision against South Korea's Song Myeong-seob, relegating Hussein to fifth position.[5][6]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI