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Chen Jingyue

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jingyue Chen
Personal information
Born28 December 2000 (2000-12-28) (age 23)
Pingtan Island, China
Height1.70 m (5 ft 7 in)
Sport
CountryChinese
Sailing career
ClassIKA - Formula Kite
Medal record
Women's kite surfing
Representing  China
Asian Games
Gold medal – first place 2022 Hangzhou Women's Kite

Jingyue Chen (born 28 December 2000) is a Chinese Formula Kite professional athlete who became the Asian, and the Asia & Oceania, champion in 2023.

Life

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Chen was born on Pingtan Island in about 2001 and brought up there. When she was twelve, she was introduced to the sport of kiteboarding. She was chosen because she was athletic and local to the site chosen by Zhai Dahui to develop the water and wind based sport. She began to learn how to use a surfboard powered by a kite. The board was powered by its rider as they held a large kite. In time the board could be fitted with a hydrofoil so that it would rise out of the air. This sport was kitefoiling and one interpretation would become an Olympic sport named Formula Kite for the 2024 Olympics.[1]

She competed in September 2023 in the postponed 19th Asian Games at Pingtan Island and she took the gold medal.[1] The Games began with the kite competitions at the Ningbo Xiangshan Sailing Centre. Chen won the event becoming the Asian champion with Thailand's Benyapa Jantawan at silver and the bronze earned by Lee Young-eun of South Korea.[1]

In November 2023 the Formula Kite Asia & Oceania Championships was being held in Shenzhen in China. The championship was won by Chen and her fellow Chinese kitesurfer, Wan Li, took silver with the Polish surfer Julia Damasiewicz third.[2]

Formula Kite was contested for the first time as an Olympic sport at the 2024 Summer Olympics. Chen was chosen as one of the forty contestants representing China after she came eighth at the Sailing World Championships in The Hague in August 2023.[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b c 关晓萌. "Sky's the limit for China's kitefoil champion". www.chinadaily.com.cn. Retrieved 2024-07-14.
  2. ^ New, Gerald (2023-11-26). "Formula Kite Asia & Oceania Championships – Final day medal series". Retrieved 2024-07-13.
  3. ^ "Formula Kite: the 40 qualified athletes for Paris 2024". Surfer Today. 12 January 2024.
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