Equestrian at the 1998 Asian Games – Individual eventing

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Individual eventing
at the 1998 Asian Games
VenueFort Adison Riding Club
Date6–8 December 1998
Competitors21 from 5 nations
Medalists
gold medal    Japan
silver medal    Thailand
bronze medal    Thailand
← 1986
2002 →

Individual eventing equestrian at the 1998 Asian Games was held in Fort Adison Riding Club, Saraburi, Thailand from December 8 to December 10, 1998.[1]

Schedule[edit]

All times are Indochina Time (UTC+07:00)

Date Time Event
Tuesday, 8 December 1998 07:00 Dressage
Wednesday, 9 December 1998 08:00 Cross-country
Thursday, 10 December 1998 15:00 Jumping

Results[edit]

Legend
  • EL — Eliminated
  • RT — Retired
  • WD — Withdrawn
Rank Athlete Horse Penalties Total
Dressage X-country Jumping
1st place, gold medalist(s)  Ikko Murakami (JPN) Onward Caesar 53.40 0.00 0.00 53.40
2nd place, silver medalist(s)  Nagone Kamolsiri (THA) Chor Chuthima 54.60 0.00 0.00 54.60
3rd place, bronze medalist(s)  Kiatnarong Klongkarn (THA) Stylish Amb. 62.40 0.00 5.00 67.40
4  Fuangvich Aniruth-deva (THA) Venetian Waltz 58.20 0.00 10.00 68.20
5  Vithai Laithomya (THA) Montana 58.60 0.00 10.00 68.60
6  Sachiko Kodera (JPN) Stars de Riols 69.40 0.00 0.00 69.40
7  Park Jae-hong (KOR) Buddy Good 64.80 0.00 5.00 69.80
8  Keizo Eto (JPN) Gipsy Joe 72.00 0.00 5.00 77.00
9  Tunku Nazroff (MAS) Sprite 80.40 0.00 5.00 85.40
10  Amlokjit Singh (IND) Smart 76.40 0.00 25.00 101.40
11  Imtiaz Anees (IND) Mirza 82.40 0.00 20.00 102.40
12  Mana Sonkratok (THA) Jarungsap 100.80 2.75 12.75 116.30
13  Husref Malek (MAS) McPherson 124.80 0.00 10.00 134.80
14  Kim Hyung-chil (KOR) Hello Henry 366.00 0.00 0.00 366.00
 Ashraff Denal Ali (MAS) Deutsche Mark 81.80 WD WD
 James Ravindra (MAS) Alf 62.60 EL EL
 Choi Myung-jin (KOR) Cool Spirit 79.40 EL EL
 Shigeyuki Hosono (JPN) As du Perche 51.80 WD WD
 Palwinder Singh (IND) Nector 76.40 EL EL
 Rajesh Pattu (IND) Ringo 88.20 RT RT
 Yang Hi-won (KOR) It's Hollywood 73.20 EL EL

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Horsemen win a bronze for India". Rediff. 10 December 1998. Retrieved 15 January 2014.

External links[edit]