Boise State Taekwondo Hosts NWCTC Season Opener

Boise, ID, January 31, 2026 – The Boise State Taekwondo Club hosted the first Northwest Collegiate Taekwondo Conference (NWCTC) tournament of the 2025–2026 season on January 31, welcoming 27 athletes from four universities for a day of spirited competition in both poomsae (forms) and sparring.

Competitors from the University of Washington (UW), Montana State University (MSU), Boise State University (BSU), and Oregon State University (OSU) gathered in Boise for the tournament, which also served as a qualifier for the 2026 NCTA Cup.

After a full day of competition, the University of Washington captured the overall team title with 34 points, followed by Montana State University with 29 points, Boise State University with 12 points, and Oregon State University with 8 points.

NWCTC Director Catherine Tong highlighted the growing momentum of collegiate Taekwondo in the region.

“Now in our second competition season, the NWCTC is seeing incredible momentum. This tournament was a milestone for us, featuring a strong turnout from our member schools alongside new participants from Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and California. It was particularly rewarding to see fresh matchups and growing engagement from our newer clubs. We are grateful to the BSU Taekwondo Club for hosting, our new Tournament Committee for their event leadership and planning support, and the NCTA for the technical support that makes these regional opportunities possible.”

Strong Performances Across Divisions

Athletes delivered standout performances in both poomsae and sparring divisions.

In the Men’s Black Belt Poomsae division, Baden Kowal (MSU) captured first place, followed by Ivan Xu (UW) in second and Santiago Valle (MSU) in third.

The Men’s Color Belt Poomsae divisions also saw strong performances from Brian Dahlberg (UW), who took first place in the Men’s Blue Belt division, and Jamison Canonizado (UW), who won the Men’s Red Belt division.

Boise State athletes also turned in impressive performances in the poomsae divisions. Tyla Martin (BSU) earned first place in the Women’s Green Belt division, while Emalee Flores (BSU) captured the Women’s Red Belt title. In the Women’s Black Belt division, Marlena Nguyen (UW) finished first with Julia Engebretson (MSU) placing second.

Competitive Sparring Action

The sparring divisions featured fast-paced and competitive matches throughout the day.

Ryan Poffenroth (MSU) earned first place in the Men’s White/Yellow – Light division, while Adam Wyszynski (MSU) captured the Men’s White/Yellow – Heavy division title.

In the Men’s Black Belt sparring divisions, Ivan Xu (UW) took first place in the Men’s Black – Mid division, while Kidon Lamont (UW) won the Men’s Black – Heavy division with Joe Willert (BSU) finishing second.

The women’s sparring divisions also saw strong performances, including Grace Shaffer (MSU) winning the Women’s White/Yellow – Light division and Saraim Gebretsadik (UW) capturing first place in the Women’s Black – Mid division, followed by Katherin Sethjinda (UW) in second.

Building the Collegiate Taekwondo Community

As the opening event of the NWCTC season, the Boise State tournament provided an important opportunity for athletes to gain early-season competition experience and earn qualification points toward the 2026 NCTA Cup. The next NWCTC Tournament will be held on Saturday, March 7th at the University of Washington.

2026 NCTA National Collegiate and High School Championships to be held in Chapel Hill, NC on April 24-26

NCTA is pleased to announce that the 2026 National Collegiate and High School Taekwondo Championships will be held on Friday, April 24 through Sunday, April 26 at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill at Woollen Gymnasium, hosted by the Carolina Taekwondo Club. This event is planned to be a 10.0 USATKD sanctioned event for the collegiate championship divisions, with those collegiate championship divisions also serving as a qualifier for the USATKD National Championships analogous to the USATKD State Championships.

The tournament will begin with all collegiate and high school poomsae, breaking and demo team competition on Friday, all collegiate and high school championship individual sparring on Saturday, and the 3 v. 3 format NCTA Cup event on Sunday. As in past years, collegiate taekwondo clubs will vie for the chance to become national champions in the Overall (Brown & UT Austin defending champions), Black Belt (MIT & UC Davis defending champions) and Color belt (UT Austin defending champions) divisions. Those participating on Sunday will be competing to win the newly minted traveling NCTA Cup (Northeastern University defending champions).

Said NCTA President Dan Chuang, “NCTA has been consistently setting records for attendance each year for the past several years at our national events, and I expect these championships to be no different. In particular, NCTA now sanctions well over 10 collegiate tournaments per year, so we expect that momentum to carry through to our national championships. I can’t wait to see all of the athletes competing with pride representing their colleges.”

As announced earlier, the 2026 NCTA Team Trials for the FISU America Games will be a separate event held on April 3 in conjunction with the CUTA California State Championships, and should not be confused with the 2026 National Collegiate and High School Championships.

Information will be posted as it becomes available on the NCTA Championships page.

2026 NCTA Team Trials to be held in Fresno, CA on Friday, April 3

NCTA is pleased to announce that the team trials to represent USA at the 2026 FISU America Games (collegiate Pan American multi-sport Games) will be held on Friday, April 3 in Fresno, CA at the Fresno Convention Center. The 2026 FISU America Games will be held July 20 to August 1, 2026 in Lima, Peru, with taekwondo events taking place July 23-26 (the taekwondo team for USA would likely arrive one to two days earlier and depart on July 27). 

The event will be held in conjunction with the California Unified Taekwondo Association (CUTA) state championships. but will have its own separate registration. Said NCTA President Dan Chuang, “The NCTA is grateful to President Yong Choi and CUTA for their gracious support of the collegiate athletes. I am so excited to see these amazing collegiate student athletes vie for the opportunity to represent USA at these unique continental multi-sport Games.”

The divisions being contested at the trials will be:

1) Individual Kyorugi (sparring) (eight male and eight female senior weight classes)
2) Individual Recognized Poomsae (separate male and female)
3) Individual Freestyle Poomsae (separate male and female)
4) Mixed Pair Freestyle Poomsae (one male and one female)
5) Mixed Team Freestyle Poomsae (five athletes, at least two males and at least two females)

The FISU America Games will allow more than one player in each individual discipline to enter. Therefore, NCTA will select two athletes for each individual division to represent the USA.

More information, including selection procedures, will be available soon on the 2026 Team Trials page.

MIT Hosts Season-Opening ECTC Tournament

Photo credit: @trapninja7

Cambridge, MA, October 18, 2025 — The Massachusetts Institute of Technology hosted the first Eastern Collegiate Taekwondo Conference (ECTC) tournament of the 2025–2026 season, welcoming over 600 athletes from 24 universities across the Northeast. The tournament launched the ECTC calendar with a day of spirited competition, camaraderie, and sportsmanship as student-athletes competed in 3v3 Poomsae and Kyorugi (sparring) team formats. Winning the tournament in Division 1 (highly competitive schools) was Northeastern University, winning Division 2 (competitive schools) was Brown University, and Division 3 (developmental schools) was Columbia University.

Photo credit: @trapninja7

The ECTC is one of six regional leagues that make up the National Collegiate Taekwondo Association (NCTA) Regional League Initiative, now in its second year. This initiative connects collegiate teams across the country—spanning the Eastern, Western, Southern, Central, and Pacific regions—to expand opportunities for athletes to represent their schools and qualify for the NCTA Cup Championships each spring.

“Going into the second year of the NCTA Regional League Initiative, I am so pleased to see the most opportunities ever for collegiate athletes to participate and represent their schools in competition in their regions,” said Master Dan Chuang, NCTA President and ECTC Board Member. “Thank you to the hard work of our regional directors, as well as to NCTA Tournament Committee Chair Tara Sarathi for their hard work to make these events a reality. Thanks also to our ECTC Tournament Committee Co-Chairs, Will Estey and Rae Drach, and to NCTA/ECTC Referee Chair Jaime Schulte for their leadership at these huge ECTC events.”

Chuang also reflected on the continued success of the NCTA Cup, which debuted last season as the culmination of the collegiate Taekwondo year.

“The historic NCTA Cup was a resounding success, with head-to-head 3v3 Poomsae and sparring formats bringing an electric atmosphere as athletes gave their all on behalf of their teammates and schools to reach the podium,” said Chuang. “I am looking forward to seeing this event grow year over year and become a destination for teams at the end of a long season.”


Energy and Enthusiasm Highlight the Season Opener

Photo credit: @trapninja7

From the opening team Poomsae rounds to the final sparring matches, the MIT tournament was filled with energy and excitement. Teams representing schools such as Northeastern, Cornell, West Point, Columbia, NYU, Rutgers, Brown, in addition to MIT, created an electric environment, with athletes giving their all in front of cheering teammates and supportive crowds. The day reflected the best of collegiate Taekwondo—high-level competition, sportsmanship, and the shared excitement of a new season.

Photo credit: @trapninja7

“Seeing more than 600 athletes from 24 schools come together to kick off the season was truly inspiring!” said Will Estey, ECTC Tournament Committee Co-Chair. “The energy in the venue was incredible, and I’m so thankful to our referees, staff, volunteers, and athletes for making it happen. The ECTC spirit is as strong as ever!”

Photo credit: @trapninja7

Titus Tsai, President of MIT Sport Taekwondo, echoed the sentiment. “The number of athletes present was amazing to see, and I was particularly impressed by the level of the C team Poomsae, both MIT’s and across the league. So many people had to come together to make the tournament run as well as it did, and I’m so thankful to every one of them for putting in that effort and volunteering their time to help us out.”


Tournament Results

Poomsae Team Results

A Team (Advanced)

  • 🏆 West Point A1 – Yewon Jeong, Megan Cho, Enoch Choi
  • 🥈 Michigan A1 – Kaitlyn Sheng, Joshua Sheng, Geonhee Lee
  • 🥉 Rutgers A1 – Eric Gun, Hamin Kim, Aden Nguyen
  • 🥉 MIT A1 – Belinda Vela, Brian Le, Akila Saravanan

B Team (Intermediate)

  • 🏆 MIT B1 – Ricardo Carrillo, Yuying Lin, Titus Tsai
  • 🥈 Northeastern B1 – Cameron Minh-Bao Nguyen, Conrad Wu, Victoria Mung
  • 🥉 Brown B2 – Avery Maytin, Johanna Leang, Salah Ali
  • 🥉 UPenn B1 – Tianran Hu, Isabella Chu, Alana Shin

C Team (Beginner)

  • 🏆 Rutgers C1 – Alina Chen, Emily Ou, Suhani Mahale
  • 🥈 Brown C1 – Adelina Zheng, Grace Yang, Ryan Zou
  • 🥉 UPenn C1 – Ellis Charles, Adele Xinrui Qian, Jiyu Zhang
  • 🥉 Tufts C1 – Sorcha Sullivan, Daniel Zipperer, Yasmin Iyer

Men’s Sparring Team Results

A Team (Advanced)

  • 🏆 NYU A2 & Michigan A1 (tie)
    • NYU: Josh Huang, Jay Lin, Mitchell Toomey
    • Michigan: Isaac Kim, Joshua Sheng, Eeshan Satish Bhat, Mihir Barlinge
  • 🥉 Northeastern A1 – Jay Uttamchandani, Abhishek Narang, Jose Olmo
  • 🥉 Cornell A1 – Aria Haghighat, Oladipo Omokanwaye, Louis Arnoult Costafreda

B Team (Intermediate)

  • 🏆 MIT B1 & Northeastern B1 (tie)
    • MIT: Ricardo Carrillo, Jeryl Lewis, William Nolan
    • Northeastern: Cameron Minh-Bao Nguyen, Luke Knee, Jan Heinz
  • 🥉 Northeastern B2 – Hugh Vo, Brady Aber, Brandon Inga
  • 🥉 Brown B1 – Avery Maytin, Jerome Jacobs, Salah Ali

C Team (Beginner)

  • 🏆 Rutgers C1 & NYU C1 (tie)
    • Rutgers: Christian Perez, Nicholas Gatto, Jaxon Bentivegna
    • NYU: Kevin Che, Jae Jeon, Brian Lin
  • 🥉 NYU C2 – Joel Lee, Harlan Plass, Cooper Hu
  • 🥉 U Albany C1 – Noah Satterlee, Edgar Quinonez, Xavier Daniel

Women’s Sparring Team Results

A Team (Advanced)

  • 🏆 Columbia A1 & West Point A1 (tie)
    • Columbia: Ashley Choi, Emily Kam, Ward Selman
    • West Point: MJ McKenzie, Yewon Jeong, Megan Cho
  • 🥉 NYU A1 – Wenjia Qu, Serena Huang
  • 🥉 Northeastern A1 – Sydney Bao, Taylor McMordie, Sierre Ternoey

B Team (Intermediate)

  • 🏆 Cornell B1, Brown B2, Northeastern B1, Tufts B1 (tie)
    • Cornell: Varvara Babii, Lily Rose Mager, Olivia Wen
    • Brown: Lauren Olson, Johanna Leang
    • Northeastern: Ariana Mechem, Maia Delagneau, Victoria Mung
    • Tufts: Sara Murillo, Cat Sziklas, Celeste Boyer

C Team (Beginner)

  • 🏆 Brown C1 – Lily Hong, Holland Welch, Grace Yang
  • 🥈 Harvard C2 – Amanda Grundmann, Susanna Barouch, Caroline Song
  • 🥉 Harvard C1 – Amy Li, Christina Le, Chiara Chung-Halpern
  • 🥉 Yale C1 – Elizabeth Kim, Aysha Guvanchmyradova, Rose Chen

Division Winners

Division 1 Winners

  • 🏆 Northeastern – 308 pts
  • 🥈 MIT – 228 pts
  • 🥉 NYU – 220 pts

Division 2 Winners

  • 🏆 Brown – 248 pts
  • 🥈 West Point – 224 pts
  • 🥉 Michigan – 188 pts

Division 3 Winners

  • 🏆 Columbia – 104 pts
  • 🥈 Tufts – 64 pts
  • 🥉 Harvard – 60 pts

Looking Ahead

The ECTC season continues next month as teams travel to Brown University on November 22, 2025, for the second tournament of the 2025–2026 collegiate Taekwondo season. Across the nation, regional leagues will continue hosting competitions that build toward the 2026 NCTA National Collegiate Taekwondo Championships, where teams will compete for the prestigious NCTA Cup.

OSU Hosts Record-Breaking MCTC Championship to Kick-off Season

Columbus, OH – October 25, 2025 – The Midwest Collegiate Taekwondo Conference (MCTC) held its first championship event of the 2025-2026 season, hosted by Ohio State University.

With 230 competitors, this event became the largest contested championship in MCTC history. 16 schools were represented, including familiar region rivals and newcomers to the league.

“There were moments during the day that I forgot this was an MCTC event,” remarked David Lee, MCTC Founder and Vice President of NCTA. “With so many athletes cheering and chanting their collegiate battle cries, it really felt like the NCTA Championship at times.”

MCTC held its first-ever event back in 2015. “I remember it was a challenging prospect, trying to unite a large geographic region for a cause towards collegiate competition, camaraderie, and teamwork,” recalled Coach Lee. “Now, 10 years later, through a pandemic and a reboot, our league is positioned for continuous growth. I’m really grateful to President Dan Chuang and NCTA for believing in our mission and providing support to make sure we can provide the best collegiate experience for all teams.”

The competition was as energetic and fierce as it’s ever been. Teams continued to embrace 3v3 Poomsae and Sparring formats as they vied for Division I, Division II, and Division III trophies.

“These titles mean so much to these teams,” explained Coach Lee. “Not only are they emblems for their hard work and competitive spirit, a lot of our teams rely on local competitions like MCTC to fill their schedule and secure benefits for their teams like publicity, recruiting, and even funding.”

This is just the beginning for MCTC’s season. Officials are already hard at work planning a second competition in the spring semester of 2026 (location TBD). Points earned from this fall event will carry over to the spring event to decide the Ultimate Regional Champion for the 2025-2026 season. There are even talks to hold a few local events and training camps in the Rocky Mountain and western regions of the Midwest.

“We can’t wait to keep iterating and improving on all aspects of our league. I’m personally excited for the spring event to be our best tournament yet,” Coach Lee added.

Follow @mctc.tkd on Instagram to stay up to date
Email info@mctctkd.com for any questions about future events

Tournament Results

Overall Standings

Division I
First Place: Ohio State University
Second Place: University of Colorado Boulder
Third Place: University of Michigan

Division II
First Place: Washington University
Second Place: Purdue University
Third Place: University of Wisconsin Madison

Division III
First Place: University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Second Place: Northwestern University
Third Place: University of Chicago
Fourth Place and below:
Miami University OH
University of Minnesota
Michigan State University
University of Pittsburgh
University of Cincinnati
Cornell University
Kent State University

Poomsae

Poomsae A League
First Place: University of Colorado Boulder PA1
Second Place: University of Michigan PA1
Third Place: Michigan State University PA1
Third Place: Purdue University PA1

Poomsae B League
First Place: University of Colorado Boulder PB1
Second Place: Ohio State University PB2
Third Place: Ohio State University PB1
Third Place: University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign PB1

Poomsae C League
First Place: Ohio State University PC1
Second Place: University of Colorado Boulder PC1
Third Place: University of Chicago PC1
Third Place: Michigan State University PC1

Sparring

Sparring Women’s A League
First Place: Washington University Women’s A1
Second Place: Ohio State University Women’s A1
Third Place: MCTC Free Agent Team Women’s A1
Third Place: University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Women’s A1

Sparring Women’s B League
First Place: University of Colorado Boulder Women’s B1
Second Place: Ohio State University Women’s B1
Third Place: Miami University OH Women’s B1
Third Place: University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Women’s B2

Sparring Women’s C League
First Place: University of Colorado Boulder Women’s C1
Second Place: University of Michigan Women’s C1
Third Place: Purdue University Women’s C1
Third Place: Northwestern University Women’s C1

Sparring Men’s A League
First Place: DNP
Second Place: DNP
Third Place: TIE
Ohio State University Men’s A1
University of Chicago Men’s A1
Ohio State University Men’s A2
University of Michigan Men’s A2

Sparring Men’s B League
First Place: Ohio State University Men’s B2
Second Place: Ohio State University Men’s B1
Third Place: Northwestern University Men’s B1
Third Place: University of Wisconsin Madison Men’s B1

Sparring Men’s C League
First Place: DNP
Second Place: TIE – University of Chicago Men’s C1 and Miami University OH Men’s C1
Third Place: University of Michigan Men’s C2
Third Place: University of Michigan Men’s C1

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