Subenrat Insaeng

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Subenrat Insaeng athletics

Subenrat Insaeng (l.) 2017
Subenrat Insaeng (left) in Bhubaneswar 2017

nation ThailandThailand Thailand
birthday 10th February 1994 (age 26)
place of birth Surat Thani , Thailand
size 181 cm
Weight 82 kg
job Student
Career
discipline Discus throw
Best performance 61.97 m (July 19, 2018 in Kolín )Sport records icon NR.svg
Trainer Ekkawit Sawangphol
status active
Medal table
Asian Championships 0 × gold 1 × silver 1 × bronze
Southeast Asian Games 5 × gold 0 × silver 0 × bronze
Summer Universiade 0 × gold 0 × silver 1 × bronze
U20 Asian Championships 1 × gold 0 × silver 0 × bronze
Asian Championships
silver Bhubaneswar 2017 56.82 m
bronze Doha 2019 58.20 m
Southeast Asian Games logo Southeast Asian Games
gold Palembang 2011 52.25 m
gold Naypyidaw 2013 56.77 m
gold Singapore 2015 59.56 m
gold Kuala Lumpur 2017 55.23 m
gold Capas 2019 60.33 m
Logo of the FISU Universiade
bronze Kazan 2013 53.40 m
Junior Asian Championships
silver Hanoi 2010 46.54 m
gold Colombo 2012 56.82 m
last change: July 2nd, 2020

Subenrat Insaeng (born February 10, 1994 in Surat Thani ) is a Thai discus thrower .

Athletic career

Subenrat Insaeng gained her first international experience at international championships at the Asian Youth Games in Singapore in 2009 , where she won the silver medal with 49.28 m, as well as at the Asian Junior Championships in Hanoi 2010. At the 2010 Youth Olympic Games in Singapore for the first time she finished fifth in the final. In 2011 she took part in the Youth World Championships near Lille , but could not reach the final there as 17th in the qualification. At the Southeast Asian Games in Palembang , however, she won her first gold medal at these championships with 52.25 m. In 2012 she also won gold at the Junior Asian Championships in Colombo with 54.08 m and finished sixth at the Junior World Championships in Barcelona with 54.47 m.

In 2013 she originally took fourth place at the Summer Universiade in Kazan, Russia , but moved up to the bronze rank due to the doping disqualification of the Russian Vera Karmischina-Ganejewa . At the Southeast Asian Games in Naypyidaw , she won the gold medal again with 56.77 m. In 2014 she took part for the first time in the Asian Games in Incheon , South Korea , where she finished fifth with 54.77 m. In 2015 she won her third gold medal with 59.56 m at the Southeast Asian Games in Singapore and finished fourth at the Asian Championships in Wuhan with 58.47 m. She then took part again in the Summer Universiade in Gwangju and was fourth there with 57.75 m. She also qualified for the World Championships in Beijing , where she was eliminated with 55.14 m in qualification . In 2016 she took part in the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro , where she was eliminated in qualification with 56.64 m as 24th.

A year later she won the silver medal at the Asian Championships in Bhubaneswar with 56.82 m, but was more than three meters behind the winner, Chen Yang from China. In Kuala Lumpur she won her fourth gold medal at the Southeast Asian Games with 55.23 m and she also qualified again for the World Championships in London , where she was eliminated with 55.16 m in qualification . In 2018 she took part again in the Asian Games in Jakarta , where she finished fourth with 57.78 m. In the following year she won the bronze medal behind the two Chinese women Feng Bin and Chen Yang at the Asian Championships in Doha with a width of 58.20 m . Then she finished in her third participation in the Student World Games in Naples with 55.59 m in fifth place. In December she won the Southeast Asian Games in Capas with a new player record of 60.33 m.

In 2012 she became the Thai champion in discus throwing. She completed a master's degree in public administration at Thonburi University in Bangkok

Web links

Commons : Subenrat Insaeng  - Collection of images, videos and audio files