Argentina
WT · Kukkiwon
El Taekwondo llegó a Argentina en la segunda mitad de la década de 1960, traído por maestros coreanos inmigrantes que se asentaron en el barrio de Flores, Buenos Aires — epicentro de la comunidad coreana más grande de Latinoamérica. Lo que distingue a Argentina es su combinación de herencia asiática y pasión sudamericana: el deporte creció orgánicamente desde las academias de la comunidad coreana hasta convertirse en un programa de alto rendimiento que alcanzó su cúspide con la medalla de oro olímpica de Sebastián Crismanich en Londres 2012 — la única de su tipo en la historia del deporte argentino. Post-Crismanich, una nueva generación encabezada por Lucas Guzmán llevó la bandera argentina a dos Juegos Olímpicos consecutivos (Tokio 2020 y París 2024), consolidando a Argentina como potencia regional en el circuito WT.
Pioneers
The Pioneers — Korean masters in Buenos Aires
The Korean community as the engine of Argentine TKD
Taekwondo arrived in Argentina through the Korean immigration wave of the 1960s and 1970s. The first masters — almost all newly arrived immigrants — opened their first academies in the Flores and Floresta neighbourhoods of Buenos Aires, an area that would become Argentina's 'Koreatown' with an estimated community of 40,000 to 50,000 people. The first formal academies are documented around 1971.
The sport grew in a difficult political context: the 1976–1978 military dictatorship did not slow its expansion, and TKD was one of the few sports that remained active and organised throughout that period. In 1977, Oscar del Prado became the first documented national champion, a milestone that drove the institutionalisation of the sport.
“Argentina was one of the first South American countries to organise formal Taekwondo competitions.”
Institutional
Institutionalisation — From AAT to CAT
From Olympic recognition to nationwide expansion
On 20 July 1978, the Argentine Taekwondo Association (AAT) was founded as the first national organising body. In 1985, the organisation received official recognition from the World Taekwondo Federation (WTF) at its Seoul General Assembly, and in 1986 it was recognised by the Argentine Olympic Committee (COA).
With this institutional backing, Argentine TKD entered its first phase of national expansion: during the 1980s, the sport spread to the provinces of Córdoba, Mendoza and Rosario, and a federative structure across all 24 provinces began to consolidate. The body would later adopt the name Confederación Argentina de Taekwondo (CAT), affiliated with World Taekwondo and the COA, with presence in all 24 provinces and over 2,000 academies.
“The 1986 COA recognition was key to accessing ENARD funding and professionalising the competitive programme.”
Pan American Host
Mar del Plata 1995 — Argentina as Pan American host
The first major catalyst for Argentine TKD
In March 1995, Mar del Plata hosted the XII Pan American Games — the first and only event of its kind that Argentina has organised. The Games gathered 42 nations and over 5,000 athletes. Taekwondo was on the official programme, and Argentina took advantage of home conditions to win 10 medals in the discipline — its best Pan American haul up to that point.
Patricia Santana was one of the standout local athletes, adding a bronze medal. The event left permanent sporting infrastructure in Mar del Plata and projected Argentine TKD at regional level. It was the greatest catalyst of TKD popularity in Argentina before Crismanich's Olympic gold.
“The 1995 Mar del Plata Pan American Games were the greatest catalyst of TKD popularity in Argentina before the Olympic gold.”
Olympic Gold
The Crismanich Era — London 2012 Gold
Argentina's only Olympic medal in TKD
Sebastián Eduardo Crismanich, born on 7 December 1985 in Buenos Aires, marked the highest point of Argentine Taekwondo. He competed in three Olympic Games: Athens 2004, Beijing 2008, and London 2012. Under coach Gabriel Tarifeno's direction, in the London final he defeated Iran's Mohammad Bagheri Motamed to claim the -80 kg gold medal — Argentina's first Olympic Taekwondo medal.
The impact was immediate: enrolment in academies in Buenos Aires and Greater Buenos Aires multiplied. Crismanich announced his retirement on 2 July 2016, without qualifying for Rio. After retiring, he founded academies in Corrientes and Buenos Aires, became president of the Corrientes Taekwondo Federation, was named Olympic torchbearer in Florianópolis (Rio 2016), and joined the COA Athletes' Commission.
“London 2012 gold remains the only Olympic medal in WT TKD in Argentine history.”
New Guard
The Post-Crismanich Generation — Lucas Guzmán and the new guard
Three medals in Lima, three in Santiago, two Olympic Games
After Crismanich's retirement, the generational handover was led by Lucas Guzmán (Merlo, Buenos Aires, 1994). At Lima 2019 he won Pan American gold in -58 kg, and that same year he took bronze at the Manchester WT World Championships. At Tokyo 2020 he reached the bronze medal bout but finished 4th. At Santiago 2023 he added Pan American silver, and at Paris 2024 he represented Argentina at his second consecutive Olympic Games, announcing his retirement in April 2025.
Alongside Guzmán emerged a new generation: Giulia Sendra (-49 kg) won bronze at Lima 2019 and Santiago 2023, while José Luis Acuña (-68 kg, Neuquén) added bronzes at both Pan American Games, gold at the Rio 2025 G2 Open, and is targeting Los Angeles 2028. Argentina collected 3 Pan American medals in both Lima and Santiago, confirming the strength of the post-Crismanich programme.
“Lucas Guzmán — the only Argentine to qualify for two consecutive Olympic Games in TKD post-Crismanich.”
Taekwondo en Argentina
- ›🥇 Oro Olímpico Londres 2012 — -80 kg
- ›Participante Atenas 2004 y Pekín 2008
- ›Única medalla olímpica en la historia del TKD argentino
- ›Presidente de la Federación Correntina de Taekwondo
- ›Portador antorcha olímpica Río 2016
- ›🥇 Oro Panamericano Lima 2019 — -58 kg
- ›🥉 Bronce Mundial WT Manchester 2019
- ›4.° Juegos Olímpicos Tokio 2020
- ›🥈 Plata Panamericano Santiago 2023
- ›Olímpico París 2024
- ›🥉 Bronce Panamericano Lima 2019 — -49 kg
- ›🥉 Bronce Panamericano Santiago 2023
- ›Campeona suramericana juvenil
Sigue explorando
La historia del Taekwondo continúa en cada dojang, en cada clase, en cada estudiante.