Yıldız Aras

Yıldız Aras
Born (1977-11-10) November 10, 1977
Istanbul
Residence Istanbul
Nationality Turkey
Division +60 kg, open
Style Karate Kumite
Team Kocaeli Büyükşehir Belediyesi Kağıt Spor Kulübü
Rank 3rd, 1st (open)
University Marmara University
Yıldız Aras
Medal record
Women's Karate
World Championships
2006 Tampere open
2004 Monterrey team
2002 Madrid team
2000 Munich open
1998 Rio de Janeiro open
1998 Rio de Janeiro team
World Games
2005 Duisburg open
World Cup
1997 Manila open
European Championships
2009 Zagreb +68kg
2008 Tallinn +60kg
2008 Tallinn open
2007 Bratislava +60kg
2007 Bratislava open
2006 Stavanger +60kg
2006 Stavanger open
2005 Tenerife +60kg
2005 Tenerife open
2004 Moscow open
2004 Moscow team
2003 Bremen +60kg
2003 Bremen open
2002 Tallinn open
2001 Sofia team
2000 Istanbul open
2000 Istanbul team
1999 Euboea team
1998 Belgrade team
1997 Santa Cruz de Tenerife team
1996 Paris open
Mediterranean Games
2005 Almeria +65kg
2005 Almeria open
2001 Tunis open
1997 Bari open
World University Karate Championships
2000 Kyoto +60kg
2000 Kyoto team
European Cadet & Junior Championships
1997 Greece +60kg

Yıldız Aras (born November 10, 1977 in Istanbul, Turkey) is a Turkish female karateka competing in the kumite +60 kg and open divisions. Aras is member of the Kocaeli Büyükşehir Belediyesi Kağıt Spor Kulübü Karate team. As of May 2009, she is world's best in women's kumite open division.[1]

Personal life

She was born as the fifth daughter to her father from Kars and to her mother from Sivas. She is a graduate of the School of Physical Education and Sports at the Marmara University in Istanbul.[2]

Sports career

Inspired from the TV films depicting martial arts that became very popular in Turkey in the late 1980s, she entered in 1987, at the age of only 10, into a karate course in her neighborhood. She became a member of the Ersoy Çırlar Sport Club. Her first trainer was Yüksel Baltay, a former national karateka.[2]

Aras was admitted to the national team in 1994. She has been nicknamed by foreign sportspeople as the "Strong Girl". Holding three world champion titles, seven European champion titles, and three Mediterranean Games champion titles, she is the most successful Turkish sportsperson ever, but without any Olympic medal, since karate is not an acknowledged discipline at the Olympic Games.[2]

Achievements

Individual

2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1998
1997
1996

Team

2004
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
1997

World ranking

As of May 9, 2009, she ranks:[1]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, April 27, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.