Puspa Arumsari

Puspa Arumsari (born 10 March 1993) is an Indonesian pencak silat practitioner. She is a gold medalist at the 2016 Pencak Silat World Championship which was coincidentally held in Indonesia.[2] Puspa represented Indonesia at the 2018 Asian Games and claimed gold medal in the women's individual tunggal event where Pencak silat was one of the newest sports to be introduced at the 2018 Asian Games.[3][4] This became Indonesia's first Asian Games gold medal in its own martial art, pencak silat.[5]

Puspa Arumsari
Born (1993-03-10) 10 March 1993
Jakarta, Indonesia
NationalityIndonesian
Height163 cm (5 ft 4 in)
Weight54 kg (119 lb; 8 st 7 lb)
StylePencak silat
Medal record
Women's pencak silat
Representing  Indonesia
World Championships
2016 Denpasarsingle
2022 Melakasingle
2015 Phuketsingle
2022 Melakasolo creative
World Martial Arts Masterships
2019 Cheongjusingle
Asian Games
2018 Jakarta–Palembangsingle
SEA Games
2019 Philippinessingle
2023 Cambodiasingle
2021 Vietnamsingle
2017 Kuala Lumpursingle
ASEAN University Games
2014 Palembang single[1]

Achievements

International Games / Tournaments
Year Venue Event Result Games / Tournaments
2014 Palembang, Indonesia Women's single Gold ASEAN University Games[6]
2015 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Women's single Silver Malaysia Open
2015 Phuket, Thailand Women's single Silver 16th World Pencak Silat Championships
2016 Denpasar, Indonesia Women's single Gold 17th World Pencak Silat Championships[7]
2017 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Women's single Bronze Southeast Asian Games
2018 Jakarta, Indonesia Women's single Gold Asian Games
2019 Cheongju, South Korea Women's single Bronze World Martial Arts Masterships
2019 Antwerp, Belgium Women's single Gold Belgium Open[8]
2019 Subic Bay, Philippines Women's single Gold Southeast Asian Games
2022 Hanoi, Vietnam Women's single Silver Southeast Asian Games
2022 Melaka, Malaysia Women's single Gold 19th World Pencak Silat Championships[9]
2022 Melaka, Malaysia Women's solo creative Silver 19th World Pencak Silat Championships
2023 Phnom Penh, Cambodia Women's single Gold Southeast Asian Games

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.