Samuel Kwong

Samuel Kwong (born January 1, 1998 in Pleasanton, California) is an American sabre fencer. He is a multiple-time national champion.

Samuel Kwong
Personal information
Born (1998-01-01) January 1, 1998
Sport
CountryUnited States
SportFencing
WeaponSabre
HandRight
Medal record
Men's Sabre
Representing  United States
United States National Championships
Bronze medal – third place2013 Baltimore, Maryland Junior OlympicsCadet Men's Sabre
Gold medal – first place2013 Columbus, Ohio National ChampionshipYouth-14 Men's Sabre
Gold medal – first place2015 Richmond, Virginia Junior OlympicsJunior Men's Team Sabre
Gold medal – first place2016 Dallas, Texas National ChampionshipDivision I-A Men's Sabre

Achievements

Kwong held the national #1 rank in each concluding year of Youth-10, Youth-12, and Youth-14.[1] Altogether he won 10 North American Cup top-8 finalist medals between 2009 and 2013—including 3 gold and 3 bronze. In 2013 he won the Youth-14 National Championship in Columbus, Ohio,[2] and in 2016 he won the Division I-A National Championship in Dallas, Texas.[3]

He was the youngest male sabre fencer in the United States with an A rating in the 2012-2013 season[2] and the youngest men's sabre fencer to represent United States internationally in the 2012-2013 season,[4] at 14 years old winning United States's first medal for the season at the 2012 Cadet European Circuit in Konin, Poland.[5][6]

He won an Under-17 bronze medal at the 2013 Junior Olympics in Baltimore, Maryland[7] and as team captain an Under-19 team gold medal at the 2015 Junior Olympics in Richmond, Virginia.[8]

At the 2016 USA Fencing Summer Nationals in Dallas, Texas, Kwong won three medals in a row,[9] becoming the only fencer to have won three medals on three consecutive days in Junior and Senior national events. He won bronze in the Junior Men's Saber Challenge, gold in the Division I-A Men's Saber National Championship, and bronze in the Division I Men's Saber Challenge.

As a freshman for Stanford he won gold at the 2017 NCAA Western Regional Championships.[10] He did not compete in his sophomore year. As a junior he returned and won another gold at the 2019 NCAA Western Regional Championships.[11]

Personal

He is the son of Raymond and Emma Kwong and the younger brother of Princeton Kwong, an American national champion figure skater.

References


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