Jump to content

Matthew Yap

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Monkbot (talk | contribs) at 13:18, 15 December 2020 (Task 18 (cosmetic): eval 26 templates: del empty params (72×);). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Matthew Yap
Yap at the Asian Championships 2018
Personal information
Full nameMatthew Yap Zhe Ren
NationalitySingaporean
Born (1999-08-15) 15 August 1999 (age 25)
Singapore
OccupationPowerlifting Coach
Height171 cm (5 ft 7 in)
Weight74kg (163lb)
(former) 66kg (145lb)
Sport
CountrySingapore
SportPowerlifting
Weight class74kg
Coached byMarcus Yap | Yeong QQ
Medal record
Representing  Singapore
World Championships
Gold medal – first place 2017 Minsk Squat
Bronze medal – third place 2017 Minsk Bench Press
Silver medal – second place 2017 Minsk Total/Overall
Asian & Oceania Championships
Gold medal – first place 2016 Christchurch Squat
Gold medal – first place 2016 Christchurch Bench Press
Gold medal – first place 2016 Christchurch Deadlift
Gold medal – first place 2016 Christchurch Total/Overall
Asian Championships
Gold medal – first place 2017 Kerala Squat
Silver medal – second place 2017 Kerala Bench Press
Gold medal – first place 2017 Kerala Deadlift
Gold medal – first place 2017 Kerala Total/Overall
Gold medal – first place 2018 Ulaanbataar Squat
Bronze medal – third place 2018 Ulaanbataar Bench Press
Silver medal – second place 2018 Ulaanbataar Deadlift
Gold medal – first place 2018 Ulaanbataar Total/Overall
Gold medal – first place 2019 Almaty Squat
Gold medal – first place 2019 Almaty Bench Press
Gold medal – first place 2019 Almaty Deadlift
Gold medal – first place 2019 Almaty Total/Overall

Matthew Yap Zhe Ren, 叶哲仁 (born 15 Aug 1999) is a Singaporean Powerlifter & Coach, a 4-time Asian Champion and a World Silver medalist. He has broken 4 World records, 13 Asian records and 44 National records as of December 2019. He is currently a Powerlifting Coach and has brought his team several victories at international competitions.

Yap competes and represents Singapore in the International Powerlifting Federation (IPF) and has competed in the Asian & Oceania Classic Championships 2016 held in Christchurch, New Zealand[1] where he claimed his first gold medal on the international platform, 5th World Classic Championships 2017 held in Minsk, Belarus[2] and got a Silver medal as well as his very first World record, Asian Classic Championships 2017 held in Kerala, India[3] defending his Asian Champion title and the Asian Classic Championships 2018 held in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia[4] and won his third consecutive Asian Champion title.

Yap is a coach with CoachbyMARC, a platform for Powerlifting and Strength & Conditioning founded by his elder brother Marcus Yap.


Biography

Matthew Yap is born and raised in Singapore and started his Powerlifting journey at the age of 14 in 2013, coached by his elder brother, Marcus Yap.

Yap got inspired by his elder brother and started training regularly. Soon after, he participated in his first competition in December 2014 at age 14 by Powerlifting Singapore and got a silver medal. At that time, Marcus is the 2015 Asian & Oceania Championship gold medalist and also an Asian record holder.

He has two siblings, an elder brother, Marcus Yap and a younger brother, Matthias Yap who both represent Singapore in Powerlifting.[5][1]

As of Dec 2019, Yap broke 4 World Records, 13 Asian Records and 44 National Records and is a four-time Asian Champion as well as a World Silver medalist.[2][1][4][6][7]

International career

Asia & Oceania Classic Championships 2016 (Christchurch, New Zealand)

Yap won his first Asian Champion title and brought home four gold medals for the individual categories in the Squat, Bench Press, Deadlift & Total.[1] He also broke and set new Asian records in the Squat at 197 kg, the Bench Press at 123 kg and the Total at 530 kg in the Under 66 kg, Sub Junior (aged 14–18) category.

In this competition, he won the Best Lifter by Wilks in the Sub Junior category.

5th IPF World Classic Championships 2017 (Minsk, Belarus)

Yap obtained a Silver medal at a cumulative Total of 555 kg which made him #2 in the Under 66 kg, Sub Junior category in the world. He also broke his first ever World record in the Squat, setting it at 208 kg which also gave him a Gold medal.[2][8][9][10][11][12][13] He finished off with a 130 kg Bench Press which earned him the Bronze and a 212.5 kg Deadlift.

Asian Classic Championships 2017 (Kerala, India)

Yap successfully defended his Asian title which was won in 2016. He also broke three World records in two categories (Squat & Total) in the Men's Under 66 kg Sub Junior category.[3][6][14] His first World record of the competition came from his second attempt of 208.5 kg in the Squat and his second World record coming from his third attempt of 215.5 kg which earned him the Gold medal. He also ended off with a 135 kg Bench Press as well as a 237.5 kg Deadlift which broke and set a new Asian record. His third world record was breaking the 5-year long standing Total record by Eddie Burgland (SWE) and set it at 588 kg.

He finished the competition with three Gold medals and one Silver medal, defeating his rival Chebanov Dmitri (KAZ) who had defeated him by a huge margin in the World Classic Championships.

In this competition, he promised his late grandmother to retain his title in honour of her.[15][16]

He also won the Best Lifter (2nd) by Wilks in the Sub Junior category.

Asian Classic Championships 2018 (Ulaanbataar, Mongolia)

Yap's hunt for his 3rd Asian title was successful and broke the Asian Squat record in the Men's Under 74 kg Junior (19-23) category.[17][18][19] This was his first competition at a new age class and a higher weight class and ended off his competition with two Gold medals, one Silver medal and one Bronze medal. His final Squat attempt of 248 kg got him the Gold medal as well as his first Asian record in this category, a Bench Press at 145 kg earned him a Bronze medal and a Deadlift at 265 kg earned him the Silver medal.

In this competition, he won the Best Lifter (2nd) by Wilks in the Men's Junior category.

Team CoachbyMARC at the Asian Championships in Almaty, Kazakhstan. (Dec 2019)


Asian Classic Championships 2019 (Almaty, Kazakhstan)

Yap competed in the Under 74kg Junior (19-23) category and retained his Asian title, becoming the four-time Asian champion. [7] He ended off with claiming Gold medals for all the categories, with a 245kg Squat, a 155kg Bench Press and a 275.5kg Deadlift which is also the Asian record.

He ended off with a cumulative Total of 675.5kg which broke and set a new Asian record as well.

In this competition, Yap won the Best Lifter (champion) by IPF Points in the Men's Junior category.



Achievements

Yap and his Coach, Marcus Yap.

Yap's consolidated achievements

  1. Singapore Powerlifting Open 2014 (Under 66 kg, Sub Junior) - Silver
  2. Singapore Powerlifting Open 2015 (Under 66 kg, Sub Junior) - Silver
  3. Singapore Powerlifting Open 2016 (Under 66 kg, Sub Junior) - Gold, Three national records in the Squat (190.5 kg), two national records in the Bench Press (111.5 kg), two national records in the Deadlift (205 kg), three national records in the Total/Overall (507 kg).
  4. Asia & Oceania Classic Championships 2016 (Under 66 kg, Sub Junior),[1] Gold in Squat (197 kg), Gold in the Bench Press (123 kg), Gold in the Deadlift, Gold in the Total/Overall (530 kg). National record and Asian record in the Squat, national record and Asian record in the Bench Press, national record in the Total/Overall.
  5. Singapore Powerlifting Open 2017 (Under 74 kg, Sub Junior & Open) - Gold, Two national records in the Squat (204 kg), national record in the Bench Press (126.5 kg), national record in the Total/Overall (558 kg).
  6. 5th IPF World Classic Championships 2017, Minsk Belarus (Under 66 kg, Sub Junior),[8] Gold in the Squat (208 kg), Bronze in the Bench Press (130 kg), Silver in the Total/Overall (550 kg). National record, Asian record and World record in the Squat, two national records in the Bench Press, national record in the Deadlift, national record in the Total/Overall.
  7. Asian Classic Championships 2017 (Under 66 kg, Sub Junior),[3] Gold in the Squat (215.5 kg), Silver in the Bench Press (135 kg), Gold in the Deadlift (237.5 kg), Gold in the Total/Overall (588 kg). Two national, Asian and World records in the Squat, national record in the Bench Press, national record and Asian record in the Deadlift. National record, Asian record and World record in the Total/Overall.
  8. Singapore Powerlifting Invitational 2018 (Under 74 kg, Junior), National record in the Squat (240.5 kg) and national record in the Total/Overall (630 kg).
  9. Asian Classic Championships 2018 (Under 74 kg, Junior),[4] Gold in the Squat (248 kg), Bronze in the Bench Press (150 kg), Silver in the Deadlift (265 kg), Gold in the Total/Overall (663 kg). National and Asian record in the Squat.
  10. Asian Classic Championships 2019 (Under 74 kg, Junior),[7] Gold in the Squat (245 kg), Gold in the Bench Press (155 kg), Gold in the Deadlift (275 kg), Gold in the Total/Overall (675.5 kg). Asian record in the Deadlift and Total.

Coaching career

Team CoachbyMARC, after the Asian Championships. (Dec 2018)

Since breaking several World records, Yap has found his passion in coaching. He is coaching at CoachbyMARC, an Online Coaching platform for Powerlifting and strength athletes.

Yap runs CoachbyMARC alongside his business partner, Yeong Qing Quan who is an Asian Squat gold medalist. Both coach a range of athletes from newbies to national champions preparing to represent Singapore in international competitions.[19][20]


Yap coached a team of athletes in the 2019 Asian Classic Championships held in Almaty, Kazakhstan:

Shirley Chu - Asian Champion[7][21]

Cindy Witono - Asian Silver Medallist [7][21]

Brandon Er - Asian Bench Press Silver Medallist [7][22]

Park Min Ho (KOR)


Media appearances

Yap has been featured considerably on local media outlets in Singapore such as Channel News Asia, The Straits Times, Today Online, Mothership.sg, etc.[19][2][10][18]

His world record attempt at the World Classic Championships had also gone viral and garnered over 800,000 views on Facebook[23][24] and was also invited for media interviews in local media outlets.[25][26]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Powerlifting: Yaps lead Singapore to fruitful medal haul in powerlifting meet". The Straits Times.
  2. ^ a b c d "Powerlifting: Brave gamble by Yap earns world record". The Straits Times.
  3. ^ a b c "Singaporean powerlifter Matthew Yap breaks two world records at Asian championship". Channel News Asia.
  4. ^ a b c "Singaporean Yap brothers win 6 golds at Asian Classic Powerlifting Championships". Yahoo News.
  5. ^ "Strength runs in the family: The record-breaking brothers raising the bar for Singapore". Channel News Asia.
  6. ^ a b "Powerlifting: Matthew Yap, 18, garners two world marks in becoming Asian champion". The Straits Times.
  7. ^ a b c d e f "WEEKLY ROUND-UP: Sports happenings in Singapore (2-8 Dec)". sg.news.yahoo.com. Retrieved 2019-12-10.
  8. ^ a b "Powerlifting: Singapore teen sets new sub-junior squat world record". Channel News Asia.
  9. ^ "Lifting: Singapore teen Matthew Yap tops world squat record at World Classic Powerlifting C'ships". The Straits Times.
  10. ^ a b "S'pore teen breaks world record, strikes gold at world powerlifting championships". Today Online.
  11. ^ "18-year-old Singaporean powerlifter sets new world record". Asia One.
  12. ^ "Singaporean teenager sets new powerlifting world record". Yahoo News.
  13. ^ "Singaporean powerlifter Matthew Yap sets new squat world record". Active SG.
  14. ^ "S'pore powerlifter Matthew Yap smashes 3 world records, 2 national records in India meet". Mothership.sg.
  15. ^ "This one's for my grandmother, says Asian powerlifting champion Matthew Yap". Today Online.
  16. ^ "S'pore powerlifter Matthew Yap promised late grandma, his biggest fan, he would keep Asian title". Mothership.sg. Retrieved 2019-09-01.
  17. ^ "Yap Brothers power on in Asian Classic". The New Paper.
  18. ^ a b "S'pore powerlifting brothers win 6 gold medals at Asian powerlifting championship". Mothership.sg.
  19. ^ a b c "Singapore breaks 7 Asian records, bags 41 gold medals at Asian powerlifting meet". Channel News Asia.
  20. ^ "Camaraderie drives Singapore national powerlifters towards success despite little support". Yahoo News.
  21. ^ a b "Asian Classic Powerlifting Championships 2019 - Women's". SBD Singapore. Retrieved 2020-02-26.
  22. ^ "Asian Classic Powerlifting Championship 2019 - Men". SBD Singapore. Retrieved 2020-02-26.
  23. ^ Powerlifting: Singapore teen sets new sub-junior squat world r..., retrieved 2019-09-01
  24. ^ 17-year-old powerlifts 208 kg to a world record, retrieved 2019-09-01
  25. ^ 987FM - We're here in the studios with The Shock Circuit..., retrieved 2019-09-01
  26. ^ "How Singaporean Powerlifter Matthew Yap Broke The World Squat Record". Men's Health Singapore. 2017-08-24. Retrieved 2019-09-01.