Yoo Ok-ryul
South Korean gymnast (born 1973)
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Men's artistic gymnastics | ||
Representing South Korea | ||
Olympic Games | ||
1992 Barcelona | Vault | |
World Championships | ||
1991 Indianapolis | Vault | |
1992 Paris | Vault | |
1993 Birmingham | Vault |
Yoo Ok-ryul | |
Hangul | 유옥렬 |
---|---|
Hanja | 柳玉烈 |
Revised Romanization | Yu Ongnyeol |
McCune–Reischauer | Ryu Ongnyŏl |
Yoo Ok-ryul (born 1 March 1973) is a Korean former gymnast who competed in the 1992 Summer Olympics.[1]
Education
- Kyung Hee University
References
- ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Yu Og-Yeol (Yoo Ok-Ryul)". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 1 July 2012.
External links
- Ok-Ryul Yoo at databaseOlympics.com (archived)
- Ok-Ryul Yoo at Olympics.com
- Ok Ryul Yoo at the International Gymnastics Federation
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- 1903 - 1930: Not awarded
- 1931: Hermann Hänggi (SUI)
- 1934: Eugen Mack (SUI)
- 1938: Eugen Mack (SUI)
- 1950: Ernst Gebendinger (SUI)
- 1954: Leo Sotorník (TCH)
- 1958: Yuri Titov (USSR)
- 1962: Přemysl Krbec (TCH)
- 1966: Haruhiro Matsuda (JPN)
- 1970: Mitsuo Tsukahara (JPN)
- 1974: Shigeru Kasamatsu (JPN)
- 1978: Junichi Shimizu (JPN)
- 1979: Alexander Dityatin (USSR)
- 1981: Ralf-Peter Hemmann (GDR)
- 1983: Artur Akopyan (USSR)
- 1985: Yuri Korolyov (USSR)
- 1987: Sylvio Kroll (GDR)
1987 Lou Yun (CHN) - 1989: Jörg Behrend (GDR)
- 1991: Yoo Ok-ryul (KOR)
- 1992: Yoo Ok-ryul (KOR)
- 1993: Vitaly Scherbo (BLR)
- 1994: Vitaly Scherbo (BLR)
- 1995: Hrihoriy Misyutin (UKR)
1995 Alexei Nemov (RUS) - 1996: Alexei Nemov (RUS)
- 1997: Sergey Fedorchenko (KAZ)
- 1999: Li Xiaopeng (CHN)
- 2001: Marian Drăgulescu (ROM)
- 2002: Li Xiaopeng (CHN)
- 2003: Li Xiaopeng (CHN)
- 2005: Marian Drăgulescu (ROM)
- 2006: Marian Drăgulescu (ROU)
- 2007: Leszek Blanik (POL)
- 2009: Marian Drăgulescu (ROU)
- 2010: Thomas Bouhail (FRA)
- 2011: Yang Hak-seon (KOR)
- 2013: Yang Hak-seon (KOR)
- 2014: Ri Se-gwang (PRK)
- 2015: Ri Se-gwang (PRK)
- 2017: Kenzō Shirai (JPN)
- 2018: Ri Se-gwang (PRK)
- 2019: Nikita Nagornyy (RUS)
- 2021: Carlos Yulo (PHI)
- 2022: Artur Davtyan (ARM)
- 2023: Jake Jarman (GBR)
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