Mount Olympus Is Not A Highlight Reel
A viral “Mount Olympus of Taekwondo” post sparks a bigger argument: who actually earns greatness in a sport built on results, not hype. We draw a hard line between highlight culture and championship culture, then start naming the legends people keep skipping when they talk about the best Olympic taekwondo fighters of all time. If you care about history, standards, and what real dominance looks like, this one is for you.
From there we pivot to the uncomfortable truth longtime fans keep saying out loud: modern WT taekwondo can look like a different sport. We break down how electronic hogus, the Protector and Scoring System, and point incentives reshape technique from the beginner level up, rewarding stuck legs, canceling, and sensor hunting over retraction, angles, rhythm, and clean basics. The athletes are not the problem, the system is, and we talk about what coaches can do right now to build complete fighters anyway.
We also pause to honor Day One Moon and what it means to lose pioneers who built national programs from scratch. Then we get practical, comparing Europe vs Pan Am depth, the wild card pipeline, and why credibility slips when access replaces earned selection. Finally, we talk governance: board oversight, missing transparency, and the Olympic Charter window around LA 2028 that could allow the community to challenge USA Taekwondo’s NGB status and force real accountability.
If this conversation hits home, share it with your coaching circle, subscribe, and leave a review. Who is on your taekwondo Mount Olympus, and what is the first rule change you would make?