Leaping, crouching and charging ahead, the city’s first men’s foil world champion reshapes conventional norms with his own technique
Ryan Choi Chun-yin, Hong Kong’s newly crowned world champion in men's foil fencing, attributes his unconventional style to a restless spirit.
“I leap, crouch and charge forward,” he told the South China Morning Post, reflecting on what he described as a very unorthodox approach to the sport.
Born on October 9, 1997, in Hong Kong—just months after the territory’s handover—Choi began fencing at age nine at a school in Kowloon.
He admits he initially resisted the sport, viewing it as “violent and dangerous,” but stayed on after his mother’s encouragement and the coach’s early praise.
“He kept saying I was talented, which made me very proud,” Choi recalled.
His leap into prominence has been meteoric.
In May 2025 he captured his first senior international gold at the Shanghai Grand Prix.
He followed that with victory at the Asian Fencing Championships in June, and sealed his momentous streak by defeating Russia’s Kirill Borodachev 15-9 to become Hong Kong’s first ever men’s foil world champion in Tbilisi, Georgia, in July.
His triumph simultaneously elevated him to world No. 1 in the Fédération Internationale d’Escrime rankings.
Chief coaches Maurizio Zomparelli and Giacomo Fanizza embraced his atypical method rather than overhaul it, observing that his leap-crouch-charge rhythm didn’t conform with tradition—but it worked.
“I am not a traditional fencer,” Choi said.
“But now I have reached the top using my style, maybe it will inspire fencers worldwide that you don’t have to follow tradition.”
Choi’s victory follows Hong Kong’s fencing surge led by Olympic champions such as Edgar Cheung Ka-long and Vivian Kong, yet stands out for achieving the first men’s foil world title for the territory.
The path was not smooth: earlier this season Choi had discussed quitting after a run of poor results, only to be persuaded to persevere and channel his instinctive movement into a compelling, elite-winning approach.
As Choi moves into the next phase of his career his coaches plan to optimise rather than suppress his natural style—ensuring his explosive rhythm sustains stamina over long tournaments.
With his leap-crouch-charge trademark now global-known, Choi’s success challenges fencing orthodoxy and signals a new era of creative athletic identity in the sport.
“I leap, crouch and charge forward,” he told the South China Morning Post, reflecting on what he described as a very unorthodox approach to the sport.
Born on October 9, 1997, in Hong Kong—just months after the territory’s handover—Choi began fencing at age nine at a school in Kowloon.
He admits he initially resisted the sport, viewing it as “violent and dangerous,” but stayed on after his mother’s encouragement and the coach’s early praise.
“He kept saying I was talented, which made me very proud,” Choi recalled.
His leap into prominence has been meteoric.
In May 2025 he captured his first senior international gold at the Shanghai Grand Prix.
He followed that with victory at the Asian Fencing Championships in June, and sealed his momentous streak by defeating Russia’s Kirill Borodachev 15-9 to become Hong Kong’s first ever men’s foil world champion in Tbilisi, Georgia, in July.
His triumph simultaneously elevated him to world No. 1 in the Fédération Internationale d’Escrime rankings.
Chief coaches Maurizio Zomparelli and Giacomo Fanizza embraced his atypical method rather than overhaul it, observing that his leap-crouch-charge rhythm didn’t conform with tradition—but it worked.
“I am not a traditional fencer,” Choi said.
“But now I have reached the top using my style, maybe it will inspire fencers worldwide that you don’t have to follow tradition.”
Choi’s victory follows Hong Kong’s fencing surge led by Olympic champions such as Edgar Cheung Ka-long and Vivian Kong, yet stands out for achieving the first men’s foil world title for the territory.
The path was not smooth: earlier this season Choi had discussed quitting after a run of poor results, only to be persuaded to persevere and channel his instinctive movement into a compelling, elite-winning approach.
As Choi moves into the next phase of his career his coaches plan to optimise rather than suppress his natural style—ensuring his explosive rhythm sustains stamina over long tournaments.
With his leap-crouch-charge trademark now global-known, Choi’s success challenges fencing orthodoxy and signals a new era of creative athletic identity in the sport.







































