2011 World Judo Championships

2011 World Judo Championships
Venue Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy
Location Paris, France
Dates 23–28 August
Competitors 871 from 132 nations
2011 World Judo Championships
Men Women
  60 kg     48 kg  
66 kg 52 kg
73 kg 57 kg
81 kg 63 kg
90 kg 70 kg
100 kg 78 kg
+100 kg +78 kg
Team Team

The 2011 World Judo Championships was held at the Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy in Paris, France from 23 to 28 August.[1]

Schedule

Event Date Starting Time Event Details
23 August 15:30 Men –60 kg
Men –66 kg
Women –48 kg
24 August 15:30 Men –73 kg
Women –52 kg
Women –57 kg
25 August 15:30 Men –81 kg
Women –63 kg
26 August 15:30 Men –90 kg
Women –70 kg
Women –78 kg
27 August 15:30 Men –100 kg
Men +100 kg
Women +78 kg
28 August 15:00 Men team
Women team

Medal summary

Men's events

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Extra-lightweight (60 kg)
 Rishod Sobirov (UZB)  Hiroaki Hiraoka (JPN)  Ilgar Mushkiyev (AZE)
 Georgii Zantaraia (UKR)
Half-lightweight (66 kg)
 Masashi Ebinuma (JPN)  Leandro Cunha (BRA)  Cho Jun-Ho (KOR)
 Musa Mogushkov (RUS)
Lightweight (73 kg)
 Riki Nakaya (JPN)  Dex Elmont (NED)  Navruz Jurakobilov (UZB)
 Ugo Legrand (FRA)
Half-middleweight (81 kg)
 Kim Jae-Bum (KOR)  Srđan Mrvaljević (MNE)  Leandro Guilheiro (BRA)
 Sergiu Toma (MDA)
Middleweight (90 kg)
 Ilias Iliadis (GRE)  Daiki Nishiyama (JPN)  Takashi Ono (JPN)
 Asley Gonzalez (CUB)
Half-heavyweight (100 kg)
 Tagir Khaybulaev (RUS)  Maxim Rakov (KAZ)  Irakli Tsirekidze (GEO)
 Lukas Krpalek (CZE)
Heavyweight (+100 kg)
 Teddy Riner (FRA)  Andreas Tölzer (GER)  Aleksandr Mikhailine (RUS)
 Kim Sung-Min (KOR)
Team
 France  Brazil  South Korea
 Japan

Women's events

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Extra-lightweight (48 kg)
 Haruna Asami (JPN)  Tomoko Fukumi (JPN)  Eva Csernoviczki (HUN)
 Sarah Menezes (BRA)
Half-lightweight (52 kg)
 Misato Nakamura (JPN)  Yuka Nishida (JPN)  Ana Carrascosa (ESP)
 Andreea Chițu (ROU)
Lightweight (57 kg)
 Aiko Sato (JPN)  Rafaela Silva (BRA)  Corina Căprioriu (ROU)
 Kaori Matsumoto (JPN)
Half-middleweight (63 kg)
 Gevrise Emane (FRA)  Yoshie Ueno (JPN)  Anicka van Emden (NED)
 Urška Žolnir (SLO)
Middleweight (70 kg)
 Lucie Décosse (FRA)  Edith Bosch (NED)  Yoriko Kunihara (JPN)
 Anett Mészáros (HUN)
Half-heavyweight (78 kg)
 Audrey Tcheuméo (FRA)  Akari Ogata (JPN)  Kayla Harrison (USA)
 Mayra Aguiar (BRA)
Heavyweight (+78 kg)
 Tong Wen (CHN)  Qin Qian (CHN)  Mika Sugimoto (JPN)
 Elena Ivashchenko (RUS)
Team
 France  Japan  Germany
 Cuba

Medal table

 Rank  Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 France6017
2 Japan57517
3 China1102
4 Russia1034
 South Korea1034
6 Uzbekistan1012
7 Greece1001
8 Brazil0336
9 Netherlands0213
10 Germany0112
 Kazakhstan0101
 Montenegro0101
13 Cuba0022
 Hungary0022
 Romania0022
16 Azerbaijan0011
 Czech Republic0011
 Georgia0011
 Moldova0011
 Slovenia0011
 Spain0011
 Ukraine0011
 United States0011
Total 16 16 32 64

Participating nations

871 competitors from 132 nations compete.[2]

References

  1. "Paris Hosts World Judo Championships". eprtravelnews.com. 2 August 2011. Retrieved 2011-08-02.
  2. Participating nations
  1. Kosovo is the subject of a territorial dispute between the Republic of Kosovo and the Republic of Serbia. The Republic of Kosovo unilaterally declared independence on 17 February 2008, but Serbia continues to claim it as part of its own sovereign territory. The two governments began to normalise relations in 2013, as part of the Brussels Agreement. Kosovo has received formal recognition as an independent state from 111 out of 193 United Nations member states.
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