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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Categories  





2 Schedule  





3 Medal overview  



3.1  Men's events  





3.2  Women's events  





3.3  Medal table  







4 See also  





5 References  





6 External links  














2009 World Judo Championships






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Judo
Judo
2009 World Judo Championships
VenueRotterdam Ahoy
LocationNetherlands Rotterdam, Netherlands
Dates26–30 August 2009
Competitors538 from 97 nations
Competition at external databases
LinksIJF • EJU • JudoInside

← Rio de Janeiro 2007

Tokyo 2010 →

The 2009 World Judo Championships was held in the Ahoy indoor sporting arena in Rotterdam, the Netherlands on 26 to 30 August.[1]

Women's heavyweight champion Tong Wen was stripped of her gold medal because of a doping offence, but was later reinstated.[2]

Categories

[edit]

Schedule

[edit]

Medal overview

[edit]

Men's events

[edit]
Event Gold Silver Bronze
Extra-lightweight (60 kg)
details
 Georgii Zantaraia (UKR)  Hiroaki Hiraoka (JPN)  Hovhannes Davtyan (ARM)
 Elio Verde (ITA)
Half-lightweight (66 kg)
details
 Khashbaataryn Tsagaanbaatar (MGL)  Sugoi Uriarte (ESP)  Miklós Ungvari (HUN)
 An Jeong-Hwan (KOR)
Lightweight (73 kg)
details
 Wang Ki-Chun (KOR)  Kim Chol-Su (PRK)  Dirk Van Tichelt (BEL)
 Mansur Isaev (RUS)
Half-middleweight (81 kg)
details
 Ivan Nifontov (RUS)  Siarhei Shundzikau (BLR)  Ole Bischof (GER)
 Kim Jae-Bum (KOR)
Middleweight (90 kg)
details
 Lee Kyu-Won (KOR)  Kirill Denisov (RUS)  Hesham Mesbah (EGY)
 Dilshod Choriev (UZB)
Half-heavyweight (100 kg)
details
 Maxim Rakov (KAZ)  Henk Grol (NED)  Ramadan Darwish (EGY)
 Takamasa Anai (JPN)
Heavyweight (+100 kg)
details
 Teddy Riner (FRA)  Óscar Braison (CUB)  Abdullo Tangriev (UZB)
 Marius Paškevičius (LTU)

Women's events

[edit]
Event Gold Silver Bronze
Extra-lightweight (48 kg)
details
 Tomoko Fukumi (JPN)  Oiana Blanco (ESP)  Chung Jung-Yeon (KOR)
 Frédérique Jossinet (FRA)
Half-lightweight (52 kg)
details
 Misato Nakamura (JPN)  Yanet Bermoy (CUB)  Ana Carrascosa (ESP)
 Romy Tarangul (GER)
Lightweight (57 kg)
details
 Morgane Ribout (FRA)  Telma Monteiro (POR)  Kifayat Gasimova (AZE)
 Hedvig Karakas (HUN)
Half-middleweight (63 kg)
details
 Yoshie Ueno (JPN)  Elisabeth Willeboordse (NED)  Claudia Malzahn (GER)
 Alice Schlesinger (ISR)
Middleweight (70 kg)
details
 Yuri Alvear (COL)  Anett Mészáros (HUN)  Mina Watanabe (JPN)
 Houda Miled (TUN)
Half-heavyweight (78 kg)
details
 Marhinde Verkerk (NED)  Marina Pryschepa (UKR)  Heide Wollert (GER)
 Yi Sun (CHN)
Heavyweight (+78 kg)
details
 Tong Wen (CHN)  Karina Bryant (GBR)  Idalys Ortiz (CUB)
 Maki Tsukada (JPN)

Medal table

[edit]

  *   Host nation (Netherlands)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Japan3137
2 South Korea2035
3 France2013
4 Netherlands*1203
5 Russia1113
6 Ukraine1102
7 China1012
8 Colombia1001
 Kazakhstan1001
 Mongolia1001
11 Cuba0213
 Spain0213
13 Hungary0123
14 Belarus0101
 Great Britain0101
 North Korea0101
 Portugal0101
18 Germany0044
19 Egypt0022
 Uzbekistan0022
21 Armenia0011
 Azerbaijan0011
 Belgium0011
 Israel0011
 Italy0011
 Lithuania0011
 Tunisia0011
Totals (27 entries)14142856

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "World Championships Rotterdam 2009". International Judo Federation. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
  • ^ "Olympic judo champion Tong wins doping ban appeal". China Daily. 24 February 2011. Archived from the original on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2009_World_Judo_Championships&oldid=1218377651"

    Categories: 
    2009 World Judo Championships
    World Judo Championships
    2009 IJF World Tour
    2009 in judo
    2009 in Dutch sport
    Sports competitions in Rotterdam
    International sports competitions hosted by the Netherlands
    Judo competitions in the Netherlands
    August 2009 sports events in Europe
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description matches Wikidata
    Articles using sports links with data from Wikidata
    Webarchive template wayback links
     



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