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Hugo Calderano

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hugo Calderano
Calderano in 2012
Personal information
Full nameHugo Marinho Borges Calderano
NationalityBrazilian
Born (1996-06-22) 22 June 1996 (age 27)
Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Height182 cm (6 ft 0 in)
Weight74 kg (163 lb)
Table tennis career
Playing styleRight-handed, shakehand grip
Highest ranking3 (1 February 2022)[1]
Current ranking7 (9 April 2024)[2]
ClubTTF Liebherr Ochsenhausen
Medal record
Men's table tennis
Representing  Brazil
WTT Cup Finals
Bronze medal – third place 2021 Singapore Singles
ITTF World Tour Grand Finals
Bronze medal – third place 2018 Incheon Singles
Pan American Games
Gold medal – first place 2015 Toronto Singles
Gold medal – first place 2015 Toronto Team
Gold medal – first place 2019 Lima Singles
Gold medal – first place 2019 Lima Doubles
Gold medal – first place 2023 Santiago Singles
Gold medal – first place 2023 Santiago Team
Silver medal – second place 2023 Santiago Doubles
Bronze medal – third place 2019 Lima Team
Pan American Championships
Gold medal – first place 2017 Cartagena de Indias Singles
Gold medal – first place 2017 Cartagena de Indias Team
Gold medal – first place 2021 Lima Singles
Gold medal – first place 2021 Lima Team
Gold medal – first place 2022 Santiago Singles
Gold medal – first place 2022 Santiago Team
Gold medal – first place 2023 Havana Singles
Gold medal – first place 2023 Havana Team
Pan American Cup
Gold medal – first place 2018 Asunción Singles
Gold medal – first place 2019 Guaynabo Singles
Gold medal – first place 2020 Guaynabo Singles
Latin American Championships
Gold medal – first place 2014 Santo Domingo Singles
Gold medal – first place 2014 Santo Domingo Team
Gold medal – first place 2015 Buenos Aires Singles
Gold medal – first place 2015 Buenos Aires Team
Gold medal – first place 2016 San Juan Singles
Gold medal – first place 2016 San Juan Team
Silver medal – second place 2014 Santo Domingo Doubles
Latin American Table Tennis Cup
Gold medal – first place 2016 Guatemala City Singles
Youth Olympic Games
Bronze medal – third place 2014 Nanjing Singles

Hugo Marinho Borges Calderano (born 22 June 1996, in Rio de Janeiro) is a table tennis player from Brazil.[3][4] In January 2022, he peaked at number 3 in the world rankings, becoming the greatest Americas player of all time.[5]

He is the first-ever player from Latin America to reach the Top 10 of the ITTF World Rankings. Calderano has been in the top three in almost all of the world's most important competitions, such as the Table Tennis World Cup, the ITTF World Tour Grand Finals, the WTT Champions and the Grand Smash, in addition to being 5th in the World Table Tennis Championships and the Olympic Games. He is also well known for beating China's Fan Zhendong two times: at the quarterfinals of the 2018 ITTF World Tour Grand Finals in Incheon, South Korea, and at the 2024 WTT Champions also held in Incheon.[6]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • WTT Player Insights: Hugo Calderano
  • FULL MATCH | Hugo CALDERANO vs FAN Zhendong | MS SF | #WTTIncheon 2024
  • FULL MATCH | Hugo CALDERANO vs Alexis LEBRUN | MS R16 | #WTTIncheon 2024
  • Liang Jingkun vs Hugo Calderano | MS FINAL | WTT Champions Incheon 2024
  • FULL MATCH | Hugo CALDERANO vs Felix LEBRUN | MS QF | #WTTIncheon 2024

Transcription

Early life

Born in Rio de Janeiro, he started playing table tennis at the age of eight. Since his mother, father and grandfather were physical education teachers, the boy was encouraged to play sports from an early age. From the age of 10 to 12, he was a member of the Rio volleyball team and was pre-school state champion in the long jump.[7][8]

At the age of 14, Calderano left Rio de Janeiro, and the Laranjeiras club, home of Fluminense, where he trained, for São Caetano do Sul, in São Paulo, to wear the uniform of the Brazilian table tennis team for the first time. In 2010, at the age of 14, he was South American and Latin American Children's Champion. In 2011, at the age of 15, he was Brazilian Youth Champion, Latin American Children's Champion, in Peru, individually and in teams; and Champion of the Argentine Open Youth in individual, team and doubles. [9][10]

In 2012, at the age of 16, he won an individual bronze medal at the World Cadet Challenge in Puerto Rico; he was South American Youth Champion, in individual, teams and doubles; and champion in youth open competitions in Brazil, Argentina, Mexico and Poland.[11][12]

In 2013, at the age of 17, he was the youngest table tennis player to win a stage of the World Tour and the first to win stages of the Youth and Adult World Tour in the same year. He won an individual silver medal at the Polish Youth Open, was Champion of the Brazilian Open Adult in individual, and Champion of the Brazilian Open Youth in individual and team.[13][14]

International Career

2014-2016

In 2014, at the age of 18, he had his first Olympic experience, obtaining bronze at the Youth Olympic Games in Nanjing, China. He was also a silver medalist in the ITTF Grand Finals under-21 tournament, Japan Open under-21 Champion, Brazilian Adult Singles Champion and Latin American Adult Champion.[15][16][17]

From 2014 to 2021, Hugo played for the Ochsenhausen team, in the first division of the German Bundesliga.[18][19]

In 2015, he won two gold medals at the Pan American Games, in the individual and team events. He was also a Latin American individual and team champion, and a silver medalist in the Qatar Open doubles tournament. He participated in the 2015 World Table Tennis Championships, losing in the 2nd round.[20][21]

In 2016, Calderano was Latin American Champion in individual and team competitions; Champion of the Latin American Table Tennis Cup, in Guatemala; Kuwait Open under-21 champion; Austrian Open singles silver medal and Swedish Open doubles tournament champion.[22][23] In October 2016, Calderano, 31st in the world rankings, lost in the round of 16 of the World Cup, in Saarbrücken, Germany, 4-0 (11/8, 11/5, 11/6 and 11/7) for the Chinese Xu Xin, third in the classification. It was the second most important event of the season, behind only the Olympics.[24]

2016 Summer Olympics

Calderano participated in the Rio de Janeiro Olympic Games, where he reached the round of 16, a feat that only Hugo Hoyama, a Brazilian legend in the sport, had achieved for Brazil, in Atlanta-1996. Calderano thus finished 9th in the competition.[25][26][27]

2017-2020

Calderano, 2017

Calderano entered the table tennis world top 20 in January 2017.[28] When he was number 25 in the world rankings, he participated in the 2017 World Table Tennis Championships, losing in the 3rd round to the Chinese Xu Xin, 3rd in the world, by 4 to 1 (partials of 12/10, 7/11, 11/6, 11/3 and 11/4).[29] At the 2017 Pan American Table Tennis Championships held in Cartagena, he obtained two gold medals in singles and team.[30] This year, he was also a singles and doubles bronze medalist at the Czech Republic Open; Singles and doubles champion at the Brazilian Open, and silver medalist in the doubles tournament at the Hungarian Open.[31]

At the 2018 World Team Table Tennis Championships, Calderano reached the quarterfinals playing with Gustavo Tsuboi and Eric Jouti.[32]

At the 2018 ITTF Pan-America Cup, Calderano won the gold medal.[33]

Calderano entered the table tennis world top 10 in July 2018.[34]

In December 2018, Calderano won a historic bronze medal at the 2018 ITTF World Tour Grand Finals. In the semi-final, a few hours after beating the Chinese Fan Zhendong, number 1 in the world and voted the best player of the season, Calderano was defeated by the Japanese Tomokazu Harimoto, fifth in the world rankings, 4-0 (7/11, 8/11 , 8/11 and 5/11). The Japanese phenomenon, just 15 years old, played his quarter-final match a day earlier. Calderano had less than five hours to recover from an extremely exhausting duel against the best in the world. Calderano started the year ranked 17th in the world, and arrived at this tournament sixth in the rankings.[35][36]

Other important results for Calderano in 2018 were the individual silver medal at the Qatar Open, the individual bronze medal at the Hungarian Open, runner-up in the 2017/18 Bundesliga, and the title of Brazilian adult champion.[37]

At the 2019 ITTF Pan-America Cup, Calderano won the gold medal, becoming two-time champion of the tournament.[38]

Calderano at the 2019 Pan American Games

At the 2019 Pan American Games, Calderano won gold in singles (becoming two-time champion of the competition) defeating the Chinese, naturalized Dominican, Jiaji Wu in the final, in addition to obtaining gold in doubles, and bronze in teams.[39]

At the 2019 World Table Tennis Championships, Calderano reached the 4th round (round of 16), where he faced Chinese Ma Long, two-time world champion and Olympic champion, and was defeated by 4 sets to 1, partial 8/11, 11/8, 11/1, 11/3 and 11/8. [40]

Other important results for Calderano in 2019 were the individual bronze medal at the Austrian Open, the individual bronze medal at the Czech Republic Open, the 2018/19 Bundesliga title and the 2018/19 German Cup title.[41]

At the 2020 ITTF Pan-America Cup, Calderano won the gold medal, becoming three-time champion of the tournament.[42] In 2020, he was also runner-up in the 2019/20 Bundesliga and in the 2019/20 German Cup.[43]

2021

In 2021, Calderano announced he was leaving the German Bundesliga and switching to the Russian Champion's league to focus more on international competition.[44] However, Calderano will continue to live in Germany and train in the same training center; he will compete in a different league.[45]

Calderano entered World Table Tennis' inaugural event WTT Doha. After receiving a minor scare in the first round to co-patriot Gustavo Tsuboi, Calderano comfortably beat An Jaehyun in the round of 16.[46] However, he lost to Simon Gauzy in the quarterfinals of the WTT Contender Event. In the WTT Star Contender event, he bowed out in the round of 16 to Darko Jorgic after missing his own serve at deuce in the fifth game.[47] Although it briefly looked like Lin Yun-Ju had passed Calderano for the Olympic fourth seed following the results of WTT Doha, in April ITTF amended the seeding system so that Calderano was once again slated to be the fourth seed.[48]

In an interview with JAPAN Forward in July, Calderano named mentality as one of his strong suits and stated that he used to work with a mental coach until the coach died.[49]

Calderano made up for his loss in the WTT Contender Doha and WTT Star Contender Doha earlier in March by winning the title at WTT Star Contender Doha in September. He defeated Liam Pitchford and Darko Jorgic in the semifinal and final, respectively, on his way to victory.[50]

In September 2021, Calderano entered the table tennis world top 5 for the first time. [51]

At the 2021 Pan American Table Tennis Championships, Calderano became two-time Pan American champion in singles and in the team category. [52]

At the 2021 World Table Tennis Championships, Calderano reached the quarter-finals, where he faced the Chinese Liang Jingkun, and went on to open 3 sets to 0, but ended up eliminated 4-3. With this, he achieved the best result in Brazil's history in this tournament, finishing in 5th place.[53][54]

In December 2021, Calderano obtained another historic medal, obtaining bronze at the WTT Cup Finals (a tournament that ended this year's season and featured the 16 best table tennis players of the season, in Singapore. The event replaced the ITTF Grand Finals this year when the international circuit underwent some changes). Calderano ended 2021 as the best season of his career, ranked number four in the world. [55]

2020 Olympic Games

Calderano at Tokyo 2020

In February 2021, Calderano was already three years among the top ten players in the world in table tennis and was ranked sixth in the world rankings. Calderano qualified for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games as seed No.4, being the best non-Asian in the world ranking. [56]

By beating the South Korean Jang Woojin, number 12 in the ranking, by 4 sets to 3, he became the first Brazilian and Latin American to reach the quarter-finals of table tennis in the Olympic Games.[57][58] His Olympic Challenge ended in the quarterfinals with a 2:4 defeat against Dimitrij Ovtcharov, the eventual bronze medallist, finishing in 5th place.[59]

2022-present

In November 2022, at the 2022 Pan American Table Tennis Championships, Calderano became three-time Pan American champion in singles and in the team category. The table tennis player completed seven years undefeated in this continental competition.[60]

In March 2023, Calderano competed in the Singapore Grand Smash, a tournament that features the participation of all the top 20 in the world. He defeated world No. 20 Yukiya Uda in the 2nd round; Darko Jorgic, world No. 10, in the round of 16; Quadri Aruna, number 14 in the world, in the quarter-finals, and only lost to the Chinese Ma Long, number 2 in the world, in the semi-final, ending with a historic bronze. [61]

In May 2023, Calderano went to compete in the 2023 World Table Tennis Championships. However, he had not trained for 10 days, after feeling the injury suffered in his previous competition, the WTT Champions Macau. In Macau, in the defeat to Chinese Ma Long, Calderano slipped during a point and felt pain in the hamstring muscle. Due to this, he was eliminated in the 1st round by Puerto Rican Brian Afanador, 74th in the world rankings, by 4 sets to 2, a table tennis player with whom Calderano had already played four other times, always with the Brazilian winning.[62]

In July 2023, Hugo Calderano reached the mark of 250 consecutive weeks in the world table tennis Top20.[63]

In September 2023, at the 2023 Pan American Table Tennis Championships, Calderano became four-time champion in singles and in the team category, remaining undefeated in this continental competition.[64][65]

In November 2023, participating in the 2023 Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile, Calderano made history by becoming the first three-time consecutive table tennis champion at the Pan American Games. He also won gold in Team and silver in Doubles.[66][67]

Other important results for Calderano in 2023 were: Runner-up in the 2022/23 T-League, WTT Contender Doha individual champion, WTT Contender Durban individual champion, Bronze medal at WTT Grand Smash Singapore, Bronze medal at WTT Star Contender Ljubljana and individual WTT Contender Muscat Champion.[68]

In January 2024, he was runner-up in the WTT Star Contender Goa, in India, a tournament that can be equated to a tennis Masters 1000. Calderano beat the German Dimitrij Ovtcharov, 12th in the world rankings, in the semi-final, and had previously beaten the South Korean Lim Jonghoon (18th) and the Swedish Anton Källberg (17th).[69]

At the WTT Champions (a tournament that brings together the 32 best in the world in table tennis) held in the city of Incheon, held at the end of March 2024, Calderano carried out one of the greatest campaigns of his life. In the quarter-finals, he eliminated Frenchman Felix Lebrun, 5th best in the world, who had taken the WTT Star Contender title from him in January. In the semi-final, he beat the current two-time world champion in singles, silver medalist in Tokyo 2020 and number two in the world rankings, the Chinese Fan Zhendong, by 4 sets to 2, reaching the final against another Chinese, Liang Jingkun, number 3 in the world.[70][71][72] Calderano finished runner-up in the tournament. He was the only non-Chinese to reach the semi-finals of this tournament, including the men's and women's.[73]

Singles titles

Year Tournament Final opponent Score Ref
2013 ITTF World Tour, Americas, Brazil Open Brazil Gustavo Tsuboi 4–2 [74]
2014 Latin American Championships Brazil Gustavo Tsuboi 4–1 [75]
2015 Latin American Championships Brazil Cazuo Matsumoto 4–3 [76]
Pan American Games Brazil Gustavo Tsuboi 4–3 [77]
2016 Latin American Championships Ecuador Alberto Mino 4–0 [78]
Latin American Cup Mexico Marcos Madrid 4–1 [79]
2017 ITTF Challenge, Brazil Open India Anthony Amalraj 4–1 [80]
Pan American Championships Brazil Thiago Monteiro 4–0 [81]
2018 Pan American Cup Brazil Gustavo Tsuboi 4–2 [82]
2019 Pan American Cup United States Kanak Jha 4–1 [83]
Pan American Games Dominican Republic Jiaji Wu 4–3 [84]
2020 Pan American Cup Brazil Gustavo Tsuboi 4–1 [85]
2021 WTT Star Contender Doha Slovenia Darko Jorgić 4–2 [86]
Pan American Championships Canada Eugene Wang 4–2 [87]
2022 WTT Contender Tunis France Alexis Lebrun 4–1 [88]
Pan American Championships United States Kanak Jha 4–0 [89]
2023 WTT Contender Durban Ukraine Yaroslav Zhmudenko 4–0 [90]
WTT Contender Doha South Korea Jang Woo-jin 4–1 [91]
Pan American Championships Chile Nicolas Burgos 4–1 [92]
WTT Contender Muscat England Liam Pitchford 4–3 [93]
Pan American Games Cuba Andy Pereira 4–0 [94]

Best results by type of tournament

Singles

In January 2022, Calderano peaked at number 3 in the world single rankings. [95]

Doubles

In 2017, the duo Calderano / Tsuboi was the 3rd best in the world rankings, behind only the Japanese Masataka Morizono and Yuya Oshima and the Chinese Xu Xin and Zhang Jike.[107]

Team

From April 2021 to June 2023, the Brazil team was the 6th best in the world.[115][116][117]

References

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  3. ^ Time Brasil Hugo Calderano (in Portuguese)
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  8. ^ Olimpíadas: conheça Hugo Calderano, o brasileiro que fez história no tênis de mesa
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  29. ^ Mundial: Calderano perde para terceiro do mundo e dá adeus à competição
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  31. ^ Sobre o Hugo
  32. ^ Em batalha de quase 3h, Brasil luta, mas perde da Alemanha e está fora do Mundial
  33. ^ Hugo Calderano garante medalha de ouro na Copa Pan-Americana
  34. ^ Hugo Calderano entra no top 10 do ranking mundial de tênis de mesa
  35. ^ Hugo Calderano faz história e fica com o bronze no Grand Finals de tênis de mesa
  36. ^ Calderano bate número 1 do mundo, mas cai para fenômeno japonês e é bronze no Grand Finals
  37. ^ Sobre o Hugo
  38. ^ Calderano leva o título da Copa Pan-Americana e se aproxima do Top 5 Mundial
  39. ^ Hugo Calderano vence no tênis de mesa e é bicampeão pan-americano
  40. ^ Ma Long vence Hugo Calderano e avança às quartas do Mundial de tênis de mesa em Budapeste
  41. ^ Sobre o Hugo
  42. ^ Em final brasileira, Calderano conquista o tricampeonato da Copa Pan-Americana de Tênis de Mesa
  43. ^ Sobre o Hugo
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  60. ^ Hugo Calderano é campeão e mantém invencibilidade no Pan
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  63. ^ Hugo Calderano chega a marca de 250 semanas consecutivas no Top20 da WTT
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  66. ^ Pan 2023: Hugo Calderano é ouro e conquista tricampeonato
  67. ^ Pan 2023: Calderano lidera Brasil ao ouro por equipes no tênis de mesa
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  69. ^ O sabor agridoce de uma prata importante para Hugo Calderano
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  71. ^ Calderano vence bicampeão mundial e vai à final do WTT de Incheon
  72. ^ Hugo Calderano derrota Fan Zhendong e vai à final do WTT de Incheon
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  83. ^ "Hugo Calderano retains title, powers way to gold". ittf.com. 4 February 2019. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  84. ^ "Hugo Calderano and Adriana Diaz, Tokyo bound". ittf.com. 8 August 2019. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  85. ^ "Pandemonium in Puerto Rico, Hugo Calderano and Adriana Diaz once again winners". ittf.com. 20 February 2020. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  86. ^ "WTT Star Contender Doha 2021". worldtabletennis.com. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  87. ^ "Hugo Calderano and Adriana Diaz crowned Pan American champions". ittf.com. 16 November 2021. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  88. ^ "WTT Contender Tunis 2022". worldtabletennis.com. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
  89. ^ "2022 ITTF Pan American Championships". ittf.com. Retrieved 8 November 2022.
  90. ^ "WTT Contender Durban 2023". worldtabletennis.com. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
  91. ^ "WTT Contender Doha 2023". worldtabletennis.com. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  92. ^ "2023 ITTF Pan American Championships". ittf.com. Retrieved 14 September 2023.
  93. ^ "WTT Contender Muscat 2023". worldtabletennis.com. Retrieved 26 January 2024.
  94. ^ "Pan 2023: Hugo Calderano é ouro e conquista tricampeonato". GLOBO.com. 1 November 2023. Retrieved 26 January 2024.
  95. ^ Hugo Calderano reaches the best ranking of his career: 3rd in the world in table tennis
  96. ^ Calderano é tetracampeão do Pan de Tênis de Mesa, Bruna Takahashi leva duas pratas e um bronze
  97. ^ Pan 2023: Hugo Calderano é ouro e conquista tricampeonato
  98. ^ É campeão! Hugo Calderano conquista WTT Contender de Doha e leva segundo título em sequência
  99. ^ Tênis de Mesa: Hugo Calderano conquista título do WTT Contender de Mascate
  100. ^ É campeão! Hugo Calderano conquista WTT Contender de Doha e leva segundo título em sequência
  101. ^ Hugo Calderano derrota Fan Zhendong e vai à final do WTT de Incheon
  102. ^ Hugo Calderano é superado por Ma Long nas semifinais e encerra campanha histórica no Grand Smash Singapura com o bronze
  103. ^ Calderano bate número 1 do mundo, mas cai para fenômeno japonês e é bronze no Grand Finals
  104. ^ Calderano leva bronze no WTT Cup Finals e encerra 2021 como melhor temporada da carreira
  105. ^ Hugo Calderano sofre virada incrível e perde para chinês nas quartas de final do Mundial
  106. ^ Hugo Calderano perde para Dimitrij Ovtcharov e está eliminado no tênis de mesa
  107. ^ Aberto do Brasil: Calderano e Tsuboi chegam a mais uma final de duplas em Circuito Mundial
  108. ^ Hugo Calderano e Gustavo Tsuboi são campeões nas duplas masculinas em Lima 2019
  109. ^ Mundial 2015: Após 61 anos, Cazuo e Thiago igualam melhor resultado brasileiro na história
  110. ^ Aberto do Brasil: Calderano e Tsuboi chegam a mais uma final de duplas em Circuito Mundial
  111. ^ Aberto do Brasil: Calderano e Tsuboi chegam a mais uma final de duplas em Circuito Mundial
  112. ^ Aberto do Brasil: Calderano e Tsuboi confirmam favoritismo e levam ouro nas duplas
  113. ^ Mundial 2015: Após 61 anos, Cazuo e Thiago igualam melhor resultado brasileiro na história
  114. ^ Mundial 2017: Calderano bate iraniano e está a um jogo das oitavas no individual
  115. ^ Em novo ranking de equipes, Brasil é o sexto melhor no masculino e volta a figurar no Top 20 do feminino
  116. ^ ITTF WORLD TEAM RANKING 2021 April
  117. ^ ITTF WORLD TEAM RANKING 2023 June
  118. ^ Hugo Calderano lidera Brasil na conquista da vaga olímpica por equipes
  119. ^ Hugo Calderano brilha e Brasil é ouro nas equipes masculinas do tênis de mesa nos Jogos Pan-Americanos 2023
  120. ^ Tênis de Mesa: Brasil é eliminado nas quartas de final na Copa do Mundo
  121. ^ Copa do mundo de tenis de mesa dia 3
  122. ^ Copa do Mundo 2015: Seleção masculina cai diante da China e fica em quinto
  123. ^ Em batalha de quase 3h, Brasil luta, mas perde da Alemanha e está fora do Mundial
  124. ^ Tênis de mesa por equipes: Brasil perde para Coréia do Sul nas quartas de final na Olimpíada de Tóquio

External links

Awards
Preceded by Brazilian Athlete of the Year (Fan's Choice)
2019
Succeeded by
Incumbent
This page was last edited on 13 April 2024, at 21:41
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