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About
the ECTC
Overview of
the ECTC
The Eastern Collegiate
Taekwondo Conference has a proud heritage and history. Over the course
of the last two decades much has changed about the ECTC, including a re-naming
of the leauge from the Ivy Northeast Collegiate Taekwondo League (INCTL)
to the ECTC in December 2008, but one thing has remained constant - the
league has always provided a great venue in which collegiate Taekwondo
athletes to grow, learn and compete together. The league has fostered
the growth of collegiate Taekwondo tremendously. Not only is the competition
fierce with many national level competitors participating, but it provides
a great environment for beginners to enter the competitve world of Taekwondo.
Competitors only gain not only competition experience by participating
in ECTC sanctioned events, but they also make life long friendships.
Competition within
the league consists of 5 tournaments held throughout the course of the
academic year - currently 2 in the fall and 3 in the spring. Tournaments
consist of poomse (forms) and kyorugi (sparring) events. Athletes earn
points for their teams by medaling in their particular poomse or kyorugi
division. Sparring in the league is performed on a team basis;
that is, athletes from the same school form 3-person teams, with each
competitor at a different weight division. In order to advance in the
single elimination draw, a team of 3 competitors must win at least 2 matches
over another team from an opposing school to advance in the draw. Team
sparring has fostered a strong sense of teamwork and camaraderie over
the years, and is a big part of what makes the ECTC so special to its
members.
Overall standings
at each tournament are determined by the number of points earned by individual
poomse competitors and team kyorugi competitors. Furthermore, a year-long
points race is contested by all member schools consisting of the total
number of points earned by each school across all tournaments. The team
with the most points at the end of the year wins the ECTC League Championship
and take the ECTC League Cup home until the next season.
Officers and
Directors
Board of Directors
Han Cho (Cornell)
Dan Chuang (MIT)
Mike Harb (Tufts)
Rex Hatfield (Princeton)
Albert Lee (NYU)
Jaime Schulte (U. Vermont, Referee Chair)
Referee Officers
Jaime Schulte,
Referee Chair
Paul Cummings, Vice Referee Chair
Tournament
Commitee
Sam Davis, Chair
E. David Aja
Varian Bosch
David Chan
Jacque Cole
Heidi Fagerquist
Guillaume Fennebresque
Carissa Fu
Naji Husseini
Steven Kim
Ping Liu
Tim Marmo
Aaron Sampson
Chris Williams
The ECTC Cup
Since its inception,
the ECTC Cup (formerly known as the INCTL Cup) has been won by the school
that scored the most points throughout the tournament season at ECTC Sanctioned
tournaments. The cup itself was purchased and donated to the league by
its founders, Masters Sung Chul and Jun Chul Whang.
Cup winners:
1997-1998 Cornell
1998-1999 Cornell
1999-2000 Cornell
2000-2001 Cornell
2001-2002 Cornell
2002-2003 MIT
2003-2004 MIT
2004-2005 MIT
2005-2006 MIT
2006-2007 Cornell
2007-2008 MIT
2008-2009 Cornell
2009-2010 Cornell
2010-2011 MIT
2011-2012 MIT
Origins of
the INCTL (now known as the ECTC)
By Master Sung Chul Whang and Master Jun Chul Whang
League Founders
The Origins of
the Ivy-Northeast Collegiate Taekwondo League date back to the winter
of 1983, when members of the Dartmouth Team (which at that time was still
a Karate Team, not having officially changed over to Taekwondo), led by
Sung Chul and Jun Chul Whang, arranged a weekend trip to compete against
Yales Taekwondo team and Princetons Tangsoodo team.
The first stop
on that inaugural tour was Yale, and with the most unceremonious of beginnings
could not have predicted the success that was to ensue for the League
over the next two decades. The Dartmouth team arrived about two hours
late with a speeding ticket, keeping the entire Yale team and what seemed
like hundreds of Yale fans and spectators, as well as a very gracious
Grandmaster Hwang Senior waiting for about two hours. As there were no
rules, which had been previously agreed upon, an additional half hour
was spent negotiating the rules. Surprisingly, the competition at that
first meet turned out to be quite spirited (Dartmouth won 4 of 7 matches),
and the Dartmouth team parted with a renewed sense of mission for the
following days match with Princeton. At Princeton, again after lengthy
negotiations about competition rules, an equally spirited day of competition
was shared, with fans for each side cheering loudly for the teams. Again,
Dartmouth won a majority of the matches.
This trivia of
history is highlighted to point out the rather humble beginnings of the
League, so that the hundreds of students currently enrolled in League
member college programs, and the thousands of others for whom the collegiate
Taekwondo experience played a big part of college life, can appreciate
how far the League has come along in nearly two decades.
The next year,
in the winter of 1984, Dartmouth hosted its first tournament, and teams
from both Princeton and Yale participated. This was the first tournament
in which competition was fought in the 5-man A and B team format. Competition
was point sparring, with two, three-minute rounds or matches ending when
one side scored three points. There were no female competitors as yet.
Forms competition was introduced in the ensuing years, as was womens
competition.
Columbia and MIT
began to participate in informal League competition. Columbia, whose program
has been under the under the leadership of Master B.M. Lee (currently
of Honda Martial Arts) for decades, began hosting tournaments as well.
In the mid 1980s,
competition format was changed for conform to WTF rules. Several factors
led to this change, including the growing popularity of WTF style competition,
the switchover of the Dartmouth Karate program into a Taekwondo program
(and its leadership in implementing rules for competition) and the presence
in the League of Master Javier Arizmendi, former member of the Mexican
National Team (Pan Am Silver medallist, among numerous other accomplishments),
and the Leagues original Superstar.
Several other
changes were instituted in the mid to late-1980s, including the
expansion of the League to include the Cornell program (begun in the fall
of 1986 by Han Don Cho and Sung Chul and Jun Chul Whang), and the requirement
that headgear be worn. League membership was further expanded by inclusion
in competition of a very young but very strong program at U. Penn.
By the late 1980s,
the tradition of yearly competitions became established at Yale and Columbia,
followed by competitions hosted at Cornell for the first time in 1989,
and NYU the following year. By this time, many other schools began participating,
if only infrequently, in League competition. The Taekwondo club at Yale
University has continued to host an annual tournament since the Dartmouth
team's first visit in 1983, and will soon be hosting 20th Yale invitational.
Although several
more years went by without formally incorporating, that meeting was the
genesis of the INCTL in its current form. Since then, the INCTL has been
formally organized as a a non profit corporation whose tax-exempt status
has been recognized by the IRS. The National Collegiate Taekwondo Association
as the first collegiate Taekwondo league in the US has formally recognized
the INCTL. The INCTL also named their Board of Directors: Masters Han
Don Cho (Cornell), Sung Chul and Jun Chul Whang (of formerly of Dartmouth
and Cornell and currently of West Side Taekwondo), Mark J. Lesly (NYU
and the New York Jidokwan Center, and currently the NCTA Northeast Regional
Director) and Rex Hatfield (Princeton and the NCTA Secretary General for
many years). While not in attendance at that initial meeting, Dan Chuang
(of Cornell, University at Buffalo and MIT) recently has been elected
to the Board of Directors of the League.
National level
competitors, including US and other countries National Team, Junior
National Team and Collegiate Team members such as Javier Arizmendi, Mark
Simmons, Peter Lee, Jennifer Huang, Ani Ahn, William Palmieri, Tom Lynn,
Jr., Kenia (Sosa) Lynn., Chinedum Osuji, Jin Suh and Antony Graf, Leslie
Grogan, Christina Park, Dan Chuang, Andrea Velasquez, Charity McClay and
Richard Sinn, among others, have participated in our League competitions.
Ms. Lynn, Ms. Grogan, Ms. Huang, Mr. Chuang, Mr. Palmieri and Mr. Osuji
are among the competitors who began their Taekwondo careers during their
college years at League schools, while many others arrived on the scene
with years of experience in the competition circuit.
Through all the
changes over the past two decades, one thing has not changed since that
first trip by the Dartmouth Team in 1983: the excitement and the fervor
which League competition arouses. Go to any League competition today,
and you still feel the nail-biting excitement of the final matches where
the Mens B-Team championships, the Womens A-Team championships,
or the A-Team finals, will be decided. You will see teammates encouraging
there own, and cheering wildly when points score.
The League and
its individual members have gained in experience and accomplishment since
the early days of its formation.
In the 2001-2002
season, a new dimension was introduced into League competition in September
2001 with the INCTL All-Star Selection tournament, held at Temple University.
This competition was open to all members of League schools, currently
enrolled in university, for the selection of a 4-man 4-woman All Star
Team to go to Puerto Rico and train at the P.R. Olympic Training Center
with Puerto Ricos finest TKD athletes. The team was comprised of
members from Cornell, NYU, U. Penn, MIT and Princeton (with coaches from
Princeton and MIT) and came away from the trip with a sense of having
gained invaluable experience as TKD competitors. Perhaps more importantly,
the team came back having established even firmly the ties that bind our
League together. The second INCTL All-Star Selection tournament held at
West Point Military Academy in October 2002 had some revised rules and
a much larger turnout, which provided for a great tournament. The 2002
2003 team consists of players from Cornell, MIT, Pratt and Princeton.
The League has
come far in 20 years. In the next 20, the League is sure to accomplish
even more.
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