Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Competitor for Canada | ||
Summer Olympics | ||
Men's Judo | ||
Bronze | 1984 Los Angeles | Heavyweight |
Pan American Games | ||
Gold | 1983 Caracas | Heavyweight |
Maccabiah Games | ||
Gold | 1981 Israel | Heavyweight |
Gold | 1985 Israel | Heavyweight |
Sensei Mark Berger (born January 3, 1954, in Tchernovitz, Ukraine)[2] is a Canadian judoka.
He immigrated to Canada from Ukraine and East Germany.
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“He could not speak English back then in the mid 70’s when he arrived here,” said Moe Oye, the coach who took Berger under his wing. “He could sure fight though.” He was big, stocky and powerful at 260 pounds, but those attributes alone do not make an Olympian. Fortunately - Berger had uncanny speed and skill - unusual traits for a husky man. “Mark was so quick and powerful he literally exploded into his technical manoeuvres. Once a man of his stature and skill moved on you, it was game over.”
Berger’s meteoric rise came in 1978, with a gold medal performance in the Western Canada Games. His first national medals, bronzes, came a year later in Canada Cup and Openweight championships.
By 1980 Berger was dominating the national scene and earned his first international medal for Canada, a bronze, in the United States Open, where he won the gold in 1982.
He won the Canadian national title in 1980, 1981, 1983, 1984, and 1986.
He finished 6th in the World Championships in 1981, and 5th in 1984.
Berger, who is Jewish,[1] won a gold medal in the heavyweight division in the 1981 and 1985 Maccabiah Games in Israel.
Berger won a silver medal at the 1985 Commonwealth Games.
Berger won a gold medal at the 1983 Pan American Games, and was voted the province’s Athlete of the Year.
In 1984 at the Los Angeles Olympics, he earned a bronze medal in judo in the heavyweight division. He defeated Radomir Kovacevic of Yugoslavia to win the bronze medal.
He was inducted in 1994 into the Manitoba Sports Hall of Fame and Museum.[3]
In 1996 he was inducted into the Judo Canada Hall of Fame.[4]