Asian Sr Fencing: South Korea, Kazakhstan clinch Women's Sabre and Men's Epee Team gold
New Delhi, June 23 (IANS) South Korea emerged on top in the Women's Sabre while Kazakhstan bagged gold in the Men's Epee competitions on the fifth day of competitions in the 26th Asian Senior Fencing Championship 2026 at Bharat Mandapam in New Delhi on Tuesday.
Day 5 marked a massive shift in intensity as individual campaigns dissolved into high-stakes, unified team strategies.
With national pride on the line and crucial qualification points for the Aichi-Nagoya Asian Games up for grabs, the strip witnessed tactical masterclasses, heartbreaking collapses, and the unmatched depth of Asia's fencing elite. The team knockout grids brought out the absolute best in the continental heavyweights, where the mental fortitude required to anchor a 45-touch relay separated the champions from the contenders.
The Women's Sabre team event was a breathless showcase of blistering momentum shifts and strategic substitutions. Spearheaded by individual silver-medalist Choi Sebin, the South Korean squad put on an absolute clinic in right-of-way dominance all the way to the finals. Led by individual continental champion Sano Yui, the Japanese team mounted a brilliant tactical resistance throughout the knockout stages to reach the final. Both teams went head-to-head in a gold medal bout that radiated pure class rotation after rotation, ultimately ending with the South Korean team claiming the gold medal.
The full-body target area of Men's Epee translated into a slow-burning, agonisingly tense chess match where a single positional error could cost an entire match. The Japanese epee team—anchored by individual champion Yamada Masaru and the brilliant timing of Olympic gold medalist Kano Koki—operated like a finely tuned machine to cruise into the finals.
Meeting them there were the Kazakh giants, led by the veteran poise of Ruslan Kurbanov, who marched ruthlessly through the bracket.
The Indian Women's Sabre team entered the direct elimination grid looking to weaponise their depth, relying on a mix of veteran international experience and young local energy. C.A. Bhavani Devi anchored the team with her signature aggressive flèche attacks, picking up crucial multi-touch deficits during her relays, while teammates Shreya Gupta, Jefarlin J.S., and Shruti Joshi fought valiantly to hold the line, matching the fierce blade-speed of their opponents in the early rotations.
While they were ultimately locked out of the deep medal rounds by a heavily favoured East Asian roster, their collective technical synergy and point aggregation proved that India’s women’s sabre core is rapidly closing the gap against the region's elite.
Facing a gruelling relay format in a weapon heavily dominated by towering Central Asian and Japanese systems, the Indian Men's Epee squad brought immense grit to the piste.
Individual standout Joseph Bennet teamed up with Sherjin Rajendran Shanthimol, Aloshious Koovakkal Joshy, and Shaurya Ashwini to tackle a highly tactical grid focused heavily on passivity management and lower-body target defense.