Mixed Doubles
Year | Host City | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|---|
1958 | Tokyo | Ichiro Ogimura Fujie Eguchi |
Toshiaki Tanaka Kazuko Ito-Yamaizumi |
Keisuke Tsunoda Taeko Namba |
Seiji Narita Tomie Okada-Okawa |
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1962 | Jakarta | Ichiro Ogimura Kimiyo Matsuzaki |
Koji Kimura Kazuko Ito-Yamaizumi |
Keiichi Miki Masako Seki |
1966 | Bangkok | Koji Kimura Naoko Fukatsu |
Kim Chung-Yong Yoon Ki-Sook |
Keiichi Miki Noriko Yamanaka |
Park Chung-Kil Choi Jung-Sook |
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1970 | Bangkok | Event not held | ||
1974 | Teheran | Liang Geliang Zheng Huaiying |
Kang Moon-Soo Kim Soon-Ok |
Mitsuru Kohno Tomie Edano |
1978 | Bangkok | Guo Yuehua Zhang Li |
Liang Geliang Zhang Deying |
Yoon Kil-Joong Kim Soon-Ok |
Lee Sang-Kuk Lee Ki-Won |
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1982 | New Delhi | Xie Saike Cao Yanhua |
Chen Xinhua Tong Ling |
Hiroyuki Abe Keiko Yamashita |
Yoon Kil-Joong Yoon Kyung-Mi |
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1986 | Seoul | Teng Yi Dai Lili |
Hui Jun Geng Lijuan |
Kim Wan Hyun Jung-Hwa |
Yoo Nam-Kyu Yang Young-Ja |
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1990 | Beijing | Wei Qingguang Deng Yaping |
Yoo Nam-Kyu Hyun Jung-Hwa |
Chen Zhibin Chen Zihe |
Kang Hee-Chan Hong Cha-Ok |
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1994 | Hiroshima | Kong Linghui Deng Yaping |
Chiang Peng-lung Xu Jing |
Yoo Nam-Kyu Park Hae-Jung |
Wu Wenchia Chen Jing |
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1998 | Bangkok | Wang Liqin Wang Nan |
Oh Sang-Eun Kim Moo-Kyo |
Ryo Yuzawa Keiko Okazaki |
Kim Song-Hui Kim Hyon-Hui |
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2002 | Busan | Cheung Yuk Tie Ya Na |
Ryu Seung-Min Ryu Ji-Hae |
Ma Lin Li Nan |
Wang Liqin Wang Nan |
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2006 | Doha | Ma Lin Wang Nan |
Lee Jung-Woo Lee Eun-Hee |
Yang Zi Li Jiawei |
Joo Se-Hyuk Kim Kyung-Ah |
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2010 | Guangzhou | Xu Xin Guo Yan |
Cheung Yuk Jiang Huajun |
Seiya Kishikawa Ai Fukuhara |
Kenta Matsudaira Kasumi Ishikawa |
Read more about this topic: Table Tennis At The Asian Games, Medalists
Famous quotes containing the words mixed and/or doubles:
“To brew up an adult, it seems that some leftover childhood must be mixed in; a little unfinished business from the past periodically intrudes on our adult life, confusing our relationships and disturbing our sense of self.”
—Roger Gould (20th century)
“Despots play their part in the works of thinkers. Fettered words are terrible words. The writer doubles and trebles the power of his writing when a ruler imposes silence on the people. Something emerges from that enforced silence, a mysterious fullness which filters through and becomes steely in the thought. Repression in history leads to conciseness in the historian, and the rocklike hardness of much celebrated prose is due to the tempering of the tyrant.”
—Victor Hugo (18021885)