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Judo News Page 8
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Monday 24th January 2005 Claudia Heill of Austria is 23 today. Although she has yet to win a European title her Olympic silver medal in Athens at 63 kgs positions her closer to Austria's greats such as Edith Hrovat and Gerda Winkelbauer who, between them, won 13 European titles. Unfortunately for both, the Olympics did not include women  during their contest career. To reach the Olympic silver, Heill defeated Sarah Clark GBR with ko-uchi-gari (on the right), Os Hong of North Korea and Urska Zolnir SLO. Against Ayumi Tanimoto in the final she could not avoid her Japanese opponents wazari and ippon resulting from yoko-shiho-gatame in 1:17 minutes. Never the less, Heill has plenty of time and spirit to pursue European gold medals over the next few years.
Friday 21st January 2005. Today World Champion Ann Hughes of Great Britain is celebrating her birthday. A product of one of the greatest judo coaches in the world, Roy Inman, she also won a World silver (Belgrade 1989) and a bronze at Essen in the same year (1986) that she won the gold as the IJF merged the mens and womens championships together. The bronze medal ensured that she took part in the 1988 Seoul Olympics but she lost the bronze to Regina Philips FRG. Her competition career spanned more than 13 years with her last medal in 1990, a bronze at the Commonwealth Games in Aukland. Usually fighting at 56kgs, on the left she is waiting to be presented to the Queen in 1992 at Buckingham Palace and on the right she is between Heather Ford and Loretta Doyle at the 1981 British Open.
20th January 2005 The all time judo legend, Isao Okano (on the left teaching at the Budokwai), is 61 today. Middleweight Olympic champion in 1964 and World Champion in 1965, he took over the Japanese team after their poor 1972 Olympic performance where they won three out of the six golds. Twelve months later he led them to six golds at the Laussane Worlds (on the right he is leading the 1973 team). The following year the Japanese Association considered he had offended judo and sacked him as manager for being on the front cover of the French  magazine with Anton Geesink promoting the wearing of red and blue judogi in competitions fifteen years before it happened. The following year, managed by Nobuyuki Sato,  they won only four of the medals at the Vienna Worlds!  
19th January 2005.  Natascha van Gurp of Holland celebrates her 22nd birthday today while preparing for the new European tournament season. At 22 she has taken part in fifty five national and international tournaments since the age of 13. Her best position has been a 52 kgs silver medal at the 2002 Rotterdam European Junior Championships. In the senior Europeans she has progressed from 7th at Dusseldorf in 2003 to 5th at Bucharest in 2004. At this rate she is in line for a medal at the 2005 Europeans. She is a strikingly pretty girl with long blond hair who intends to make her mark on Dutch and European judo and there could not be a better opportunity than at the May Europeans to be held at Rotterdam. 
16th January 2005. Athens Olympic bronze medallist, World silver medallist and three times European champion, Ariel Zeevi is 28 today. Certainly the best judoka produced by Israel, a country not renowned for its sporting achievement, and only the fifth Israeli in fifty years to wear an Olympic medal. Zeevi is always determined and with an uncompromising style intended to score an ippon every time. Here on the right Zeevi is throwing Iveri Jikurauli with the Georgian's own speciality uranage to claim the gold medal at the 2004 Paris Tournament.   Later at the Bucharest Europeans he destroyed Jikurauli again with a low Kures style kata-guruma you'd expect to see from the Georgian.
Sports : Cuban Male Judokas in First Competition in 2005
CubaXP - Cuba
Cuban male judokas will this month participate in their first competition this year: the National Judo Championship in eastern Las Tunas province. ...
14th January 2005. Henry Hubert of Germany is 27 today. Now fighting at heayweight he had recent success at the October Luebeck German Championships where he won gold. His last tournament as a light heavyweight was at the British Open in 2003 (left) where he beat Franz Birkfellner of Austria for the gold (right). With Frank Moeller retired from competion, Hubert will be competing with the young but heavier Andreas Toelzer for the top slot in German judo. Toelzer reached fifth at last weekend's openweight Kano Cup in Tokyo, losing the semi-final to Yuri Ryback BLR. Hubert has yet to take part in a European championships. Will this be the year?
11th January 2005             Today Adrian Kulisch of Germany celebrates his 24th birthday. Fighting at 66 kgs he is beginning to make a consistent mark on German judo. Recently he won the German Championships at Luebeck in October and the German Open Braunschweig in July.  His record at European and A Tournament level is not so good finishing 13th at the 2004 Bucharest Europeans and 17th at both the Rotterdam and Prague Tournaments in the same year. As a junior at 60 kgs, he consistently medalled.  Here he is shown at the Hamburg Otto World Cup last year attacking Yehouatan Arami ISR on the left with his response to the victory on the right.
NEWS 9th January 2005. INOUE IS BACK! Today, Sunday, Kosei Inoue JPN is at last back on top, with a gold at the prestigious Kano Cup, Tokyo, following his disastrous Olympic performance where, as the most fancied champion, he sank out of sight to unfancied Europeans. Unable to recover from his near six month low it took his widowed father, Akira, to help him bounce back from the depression that made him avoid competition, the possibility of more defeats and embarrassment.  Now, getting back to form and undefeated in the Worlds since 1999 he must surely be at the  Cairo Worlds in September to defend his title. But will he start the European circuit in Moscow on the 22nd or wait for Paris two weeks later?
9th January 2005 OSAKA - NO RETIREMENT FOR TANI At the age of 29, Olympic champion judoka Ryoko Tani JPN said Thursday she will continue her competitive career at least until the 2008 Beijing Olympics and her primary goal for this year is to win an unprecedented seventh straight world title. "What I should do this year is to break my own record," Tani said during national team training being held in Osaka Prefecture, referring to the unprecedented six consecutive titles she has won at 48 kilogram in the world championships.     Source: Kyodo News 
7th January 2005 Today is the 27th birthday of 2001 World champion Anis Lounifi TUN. Lounifi was  the first North African to take a gold medal at the Worlds when he defeated Cedric Taymans BEL in the final, right. Before the 2003 Osaka Worlds he maintained the standard winning the African 66 kgs title a year later. At Osaka he went down to 60 kgs again winning a bronze medal, but losing to Min Ho Choi of Korea who was unstoppable on the day. Athens was a disappointment, going out in the second round, but with this years Worlds scheduled for Cairo in September others will be worrying as to which weight he will fight in.
5th January 2005   Today is Olympic champion Maki Tsuda's 23rd birthday. On the right she is shown at the 2004 Tournoi de Paris with a bronze medal and exceedingly miserable while on the left she radiates happiness with her Olympic gold medal. Still on top of the world she won the December Japanese Fukuoka Tournament for the first time, improving on her previous silver and two bronze medals. Her speciality is groundwork were she makes use of her considerable weight to hold her opponent. In Athens she won all her contests by ippon from holds except in one instance where the ippon resulted from a kosoto-gake (mino outer hook) throw.
3rd January 2005.  Angelo Parisi is 52 years old today. Originally Italian, then British when his parents moved to Battersea, London and set up an ice cream company. Later he married in France and took French nationality. He still holds the record for the greatest number of Olympic medals with 1 gold, 2 silver and 1 bronze from 1972 to 1984 missing Montreal in '76. His first medal was at Munich as a baby faced, but very strong London Budokwai member. A gold and silver followed at Moscow and another silver in Los Angeles where he lost to Hitoshi Saito JPN. A most natural judoman whose greatest competitive strength was his uncanny ability to throw left and right as if each side was his most natural.

Sunday 2nd January 2005 Today double Olympic champion, Hitoshi Saito JPN is 44 years old. His two gold medals were won in the under 95 kgs division at Los Angeles in 1984 and Seoul in 1988. His greatest rival came from his own country, Yasuhiro Yamashita, who was four years older and won the Open title in 1984. At Seoul the Open category was removed, but by then Yamashita had retired from competition giving Saito clear room to defend his title.  Shinji Hosokawa's birthday also falls on the same day but he is one year older. Almost as invincible in his time he won Olympic gold at Los Angeles and silver at Seoul.

News 1st January 2005 Sydney Olympic champion Kosie Inoue of Japan, shown on the far left with his 2000 gold medal dedicated to his  deceased mother, rated amongst the top ten Japanese news stories of 2004 for his appallingly bad Athens performance. Above he is being grilled by the press after his failure. SEE STORY.  1980's European Superstar Brian Jacks appeared to be back in the headlines when his name was listed on one of the Asian tsunami web sites yesterday. The Mail on Sunday followed the story up but happily found that he was safely staying in Thailand at the time, but luckily not at his house at the devastated Phuket Beach. 
BIRTHDAY & NEWS 30th December 2004 

Jozef Krnac (SLV) was one of the European sensations of the Athens Olympic Games. The Slovakian celebrates his birthday today and can look back to a great 2004. In the Olympic final U66 he lost to Japanese Masato Uchishiba. In his semi final he surprised Cuban Yordanis Arencibia who had shown great skills that day. Krnac totally devastated the Cuban favourite.

Krnac this year also won the A-tournament of Prague started his international career with a world junior title in Porto 1996. It took 8 years to be back on world level, but than on a bigger stage; the Olympic Games.

NEWS: The funeral of Errol Carnegie takes place today at Forest Gate, London, E7. His obituary can be read at http://www.britishjudo.org.uk/home/errolcarnegie.php

JUDO STORY: Schoolgirl uses judo skills to throw perverted postman  More stories........

NEWS 24th December 2004 Journalists in Minsk, Belarus named Ihar Makarov, the under 100 kgs gold medallist at Athens, their Male Sports Personality of the year. Prior to Athens, his greatest success had been a bronze medal at the 2003 Osaka Worlds, but Athens brought him out of his shell and he beat the man, Elco Van der Geest NED, who comfortably beat the favourite, Kosie Inoue JPN, squeezing past him by a  yuko (5 points). In the final he met Sung Ho Jang KOR and tumbled him for a wazari to win. On the right, with Makarov, are Jang (silver), Jurack GER and Zeevi ISR (bronzes)

NEWS 23rd December 2004 Sophie Cox of Great Britain is 23 today. She is a determined woman who not only knows how to fight, reaching second in the European Judo Championships last May at Bucharest, but occasionally plays rugby enjoying the melee of the scrum and tackle.  At the Athens Olympics she reached the quarter-final in the 57 kgs division but lost to the current World Champion Sun Hui Kye of North Korea who was also the surprise Olympic champion in 1996. Unfortunately relegated to the repercharge she was unable to pick herself up after the defeat and went out in the second round finishing 9th. Since then she has been very busy winning titles in Scotland, Britain, Wales and Finland. Based at the Bisham Abbey National Sports Centre, along with other elite fighters, she is training hard for the Europeans at Rotterdam in May and the Cairo Worlds in September. And at 23 she is not there just for the ride!

NEWS 21st December 2004 Germany came fith at the 17th World Student Judo held at Moscow with a total haul of 1 gold and 4 silver medals. Gerhard Dempf (left at Osaka) won the 90 kgs gold beating Haibulaev of Russian in the final. The silvers went to Ole Bischof (81kgs), Claudia Malzahn (63kgs), Jenny Karl (78 kgs) and Katrin Beinroth (o78kgs). Olympic champion Zurab Zviadauri GEO was scheduled to appear at Dempf's weight but did not materialise giving a lucky and brief victory to James Austin GBR. The once unbeatable Munich double world champion, Alexandre Mikhaylin of Russia, returned to the gold standard at the over 100 kgs beating Abdullo Tangriev of Uzbekistan who later won the open divison. FULL RESULTS Men: Open, o100 kgs, 100 kgs, 90 kgs, 81 kgs, 73 kgs, 66 kgs, 60 kgs. Women: Open, o78 kgs, 78 kgs, 70 kgs, 63 kgs, 57 kgs, 52 kgs, 48 kgs.

NEWS 20th December 2004 - Japan captured the most gold medals at the 17th World Student Judo Championships held at Moscow on Sunday. They lead the race with five golds and one silver from the men's and women's events. France were runners up with three gold, two silver and three bronze medals - a significant improvement at world level over their solitary Athens silver medal from Frederique Jossinet (right). Russia were third with two golds, one silver and three bronzes. Forty-one countries took part with a total of 250 players. 

NEWS 19th December 2004 World champion Arash Miresmaeili of Iran (left at Osaka) failed to get past the first round of the 66 kgs category of the 17th World Student Judo Championships in Moscow yesterday. He was defeated by his South Korean opponent who was then knocked out of the tournament in his next contest, denying Miresmaeili the chance of a medal in the repercharge. Miresmaeili 23, who was fifth in Sydney, controversially refused to fight at Athens when he was drawn against E Vaks of Israel. At the time, a reliable source in the IJF said that there were concerns that the reasons were possibly more complicated. At the February Paris Tournament training camp he seemed to be caught for doping irregularities. Subsequently he failed to appear at the summer training camps although his colleagues did.  Go to World Judo Stories for further information

NEWS 18th December 2004 

The Chinese State Judo Administration are looking for coaches from Korea and Japan to prepare their team for the Beijing Olympics. At Athens the Chinese were second to the Japanese in the medal table but a long way behind their tally of 8 gold medals and 2 silvers, with one gold from 52 kgs Dongmei Xian shown here, one silver and 3 bronze. The Chinese obviously feel they can do better in time for the Beijing Olympics. Access to the full article is via the WORLD JUDO STORIES PAGE

17th December 2004 Bundesliga and European Club Cup discussion on JudoInfo site with this link

Olympic heavyweight champion Keiji Suzuki (left in Athens) has undergone on operation on his elbow to remove bone chips. He will be training again in February but, according to Hitoshi Saito, not expected to be back on the competition circuit until April. Pick up the story at JudoInside with this link.

Hitoshi Saito is shown here with his o95 kgs Los Angeles Olympic gold medal. 

16th December 2004 NEW IJF JUDOGI RULES ANNOUNCED BY YASUHIRO YAMASHITA

16th December 2004 Obituary - Errol Carnegie (1953 - 2004)

TIME LINE 15th December. At the World University Championships in Joncquičre, Canada, Korean Cho In-Chul is one of the most impressive world champions while Nicolas Gill won the U95kg category on home soil. Spain’s Isabel Fernández won U56, Séverine Vandenhende U61 (left). Two Italians finish first, Emanuela Pierantozzi (U66) and Ylenia Scapin U72. Céline Lebrun won the over 72kg. 

At the 1973 British Open in London, Budokwai club members almost wiped the board with Constantine Alexander winning the U63kg. David Lawrence U70, Brian Jacks U80 (right) and Angelo Parisi (right), the over 93 kgs, At the time Parisi was British but started life as an Italian, . The remaining weight, at under 93 kgs, went to David Starbrook from the rival Renshuden club. The next year  Parisi switched his nationality to French, enticed there by a French wife and the French Judo Federation. In return the British Judo Association, rather meanly, prevented Parisi participating in the 1976 Montreal Olympics but could not stop him winning gold and silver at Moscow in 1980. Yamashita, sidelined as a spectator at Moscow because of the boycott, said that “Parisi was the most natural judoka he had ever seen”. Even having missed the 1976 Olympics Parisi still holds the largest men’s haul of 4 medals, won between 1972 and 1984 from three Olympics.

 

TIME LINE 14th December. Kate Howey (left) lost her final of the 1997 Fukuoka Tournament in Japan. Chinese Dongya Qin is too strong for world champion Howey. In 1986 same day, same place, Karen Briggs won the lightweights with Fumiko Ezaki finishing second. Just like Ann Hughes who lost the U56kg final to Polish Maria Gontowicz-Szalas.  At the World University Championships in Malaga, the result of the heavy weight classes are more than interesting. U100 Dutch Danny Meeuwsen loses to former Olympioc Champion (1992) Antal Kovacs. Keiji Suzuki, Athens Olympic champion finishes third, together with Igor Makarov, Athens Olympic Champion U100kg.   In the heavyweights, Yasuyuki Muneta (right) defeats Aleksandr Mikhailine in the final. Dennis van der Geest (NED) ends as third, not an easy study this lesson in Malaga.

TIME LINE 13 December  Sharon Rendle won the Fukuoka tournament of 1987 beating world champion of 1984, Kaori Yamaguchi in the 52 kgs category. In 1998 the British Trials are held in Cardiff. John Buchanan is too strong for Jamie Johnson. Eric Bonti (right) surprisingly beat Jean-Paul Bell and Ryan Birch beat Winston Gordon to briefly sum up some interesting finals. In the women’s categories Nicola Fairbrother beat Debbie Allan, Kate Howey defeated Rachel Wilding while Chloe Cowen beat Michelle Rogers.  In 1980 the Trials are held in London, where Densign White (left)  beat Dave Walker. Mark Chittenden finally beat Nick Kokotaylo for the last time. After that Kokotaylo won 9 titles. In 2003 in Stoke on Trent, James Warren beat David Somerville for the British Trials. Five years after his first national title, Budokwai member and Fighting Films odd-job man Eric Bonti (right) gets another one, beating Matthew Purssey. Simone Callender wins her sixth title beating Kerri Manfredi.  

TIME LINE 12th December. At the European Championships of 1975 in Munich, Christine Child GBR  (picture on 1st December) is successful at over 72 kgs. She beats Margherita De Cal (ITA), Margaret McKenna came third.  At the European Championships of 1976, Jane Bridge won the lightweight title beating Italian Emilia Davico. Ellen Cobb GBR loses her final to Chistiane Kieburg from West Germany.

Lee McGrorty is one of the winners of the 1999 Scottish Open. Steven Vidler (U90) and James Millar (U60) are other big Scottish names. Fiona Robertson beats sister Donna this time at U52kg, a running gag those two.  

At the 1979 world championships in Paris, Russia, France and Japan rule. The world champions are Thierry Rey, Nikolai Solodukhin, Kyoto Katsuki, Shojo Fujii, German Detlef Ultsch, Tengiz Khubuluri and Yasuhiro Yamashita. Sumio Endo (left and right above) wins the open class. Shojo Fujii (Jpn) wins his fourth world title in a row and the first of four world titles goes to the greatest modern day judo man, Yasuhiro Yamashita (right with David Finch at the London Budokwai).

TIME LINE 11th December. Josephine Horton lost her final of the Fukuoka tournament in 1994 to Dutch Angelique Seriese (left). Nicola Fairbrother took bronze at U56kg. In 1988 Karen Briggs (right) was more successful, she won the U48 beating Kerstin Emich from West Germany. Sharon Rendle beat Noriko Mizoguchi U52kg.  

The British team finished third at the Europeans in 1954. Their time will come. Dicky Bowen, Grabert, MacDermotte, Whyman and Douglas Young are Britain’s team of five.

TIME LINE 10th December. Today in 2000 two brothers won the European junior title in Cyprus. Thomas Cousins beat Antoni Chmielewski in his U81 final, Peter won the U90kg beating Dutch Thierry Mastenbroek. Under 73kg it’s the other way around, Matthew Purssey lost to Dutch Guillaume Elmont. Elmont is shown on the left and to the right in white perfoming an unusual throw at the Hamburg Otto World Sophie Cox was the only British woman to win a medal in Nicosia. Cox reached third U57kg.

At the Fukuoka tournament of 1989 Sharon Rendle won the U52 weight class beating Chinese Chen Yingu. Noriko Narazaki (JPN) and Jessica Gal (NED) finish third. Sharon Lee lost her final in the open class to Zhuang Xiaoyan (CHN). In 1988 Diane Bell finished third U61, Jane Morris was also third U66kg

TIME LINE 9 December. The British team is successful at the Fukuoka tournament of 1985. Under 48kg double world champion Karen Briggs beat Marie-France Collignon. The same day but in 1990, Briggs finished third in Fukuoka. Back to 1985, double European champion Ann Hughes (left outside Buckingham Palace) beat Austrian Gerda Winklbauer. One year later Hughes won the world title under 56kg. Diane Bell finished third at under 61 kg after Gabi Ritschel (GER) (right at the 1987 Paris Europeans) and Céline Géraud, currently TV presenter and judo commentator for France 2. Joyce Malley became University World Champion of 1984 in Strasbourg (FRA).             At the British Trials of 1984, Stephen Gawthorpe won his last of three titles at U65kg. At under 71 kg Mark Earle won his only British title, he is more successful as coach to some of Britain’s top judoka. 1981 world champion Neil Adams (left at the High Wycombe Judo club) won his fourth of ‘just’ five national titles. Diane Bell won her last title U56 kilograms. After 1984 she moved to the U61 and became world champion twice, added another European title to the two before and won national titles number seven and eight. She retires after the European Championships of 1996 and now coaches the British women’s team

NEWS Sydney Olympic 81 kgs judo gold medallist Makoto Takimoto (left) of Japan has been lined up to take part in a professional multi-martial arts fighting program known as PRIDE FIGHTING'S SHOCKWAVE. 

Takimoto has joined other former Olympic champions, including 1992 judo gold  medallist at 78 kgs, Hidehiko Yoshida (right),  in seeking to make money from videos or 'pay-per-view' television fighting perfomances. Takimoto's opponent has yet to be named.

TIME LINE 8th December. Today in 1990 the British Trials were held in London. Billy Cusack, Kerrith Brown and Nick Kokotaylo add more titles to their impressive list. In the women’s categories, Elise Summers and Josephine Horton are well known winners, but these trials of 1990 are filled with unpredictable incidents. 

At the Fukuoka Tournament in Japan, in the same year, Ryoko Tamura beat Kayo Kitada in the U48 final. Kie Kusakabe beat Noriko Mogi U57kg. Noriko Anno (right) is superior at U78kg. Maki Tsukada (left) is defeated by Chinese Xueying Jia.

TIME LINE 7th December. At the British Championships of 1996 in BathJoyce Heron surprises with a nice comeback U48kg defeating Fiona Robertson who had won the past two championships. 

 At the British Trials of 1997 Simone Callender beat Karina Bryant.    In 1985 Kerrith Brown won his 8th of 10 national titles at U71kg. Densign White won the U86gs beating Lloyd Alexander. Dennis Stewart beat Nick Kokotaylo. Later he went on to win the only British men's medal at the 1988 Seoul Olympics, a bronze at under 95 kgs. Stewart is shown in these three pictures.       

In 1951 the British Team is defeated by France in the European team championships in Paris. In 1957, 1958 and 1959 the British take revenge and win the European title three time in a row. At the individual championships in 1951, Geoff Gleeson finished second. Gleeson was beaten by Jean De Herdt (FRA).              

Debbie Allan won the US Open U52kg in 1994, Kirstie Weir won U61kg beating Michelle Buckingham. Karen Powell finished third.      .

TIME LINE Dember 6th. Today in 1992 Nigel Donohue won his only British title.  In 1995, however, he won his only European title. Billy Cusack was another famous winner of the British title that day. Nicola Fairbrother won her first British title in 1992, beating Nathalie Evans.    

In Lisbon, the Portugese Championships of 1998 are held. Well known winners are Pedro Caravana, Nuno Delgado (bottom left) and Pedro Soares.  At the Swiss Open of 1986, Neil Eckersley (U60) won the title defeating the German, Helmut Dietz. Carl Finney (top left) finished third and Paul Shields won the U78kgs. 

In London 2003 the European team championships are held. Georgia won by beating Spain in the final. Georgia appears with strong names like Nestor Khergiani (top right), Margoshvili, Revazishvili, Davit Nadaraia, Zviadauri, Jikurauli and Davitashvili. Zurab Zviadauri (bottom left) later spectacularly won the 90 kgs class at Athens  

 

Kaori Yamaguchi JPN

Diane Bell GBR

TIME LINE 5th December. At the 1982 world championships in Paris, Karen Briggs GBR won the title U48 kgs beating Marie-France Collignon, of where else but France. Loretta Doyle GBR won U52 kgs beating Kaori Yamaguchi from Japan. At u56 kgs Diane Bell GBR finishes third, Béatrice Rodríguez from France won this weight class. 

David Starbrook won the British Open of 1970 in London. Not only did he win the u80 kgs he was superior in the open weight class too. Later he won a silver medal at the 1972 Munich Olympics. Roy Inman won the U93kgs. After retiring from competition Inman became one of the world’s best coaches but halfway through his coaching career fell out with the British Judo Association to the Association’s ever lasting detriment.

 

David Starbrook GBR

Roy Inman GBR

Geoff Gleeson GBR

Charles Palmer GBR

TIME LINE 4th December.   

At the British Trials of 1993 Danny Kingston beat Ian Freeman U71kg. Billy Cusack won his sixth and last title. Cusack, as coach, helped Graeme Randall  take the -81kg World title in Birmingham in 1999. He represented Britain at -71kg at the 1992 Barcelona Games. He is married to Loretta Doyle, world champion of 1982. 

At the British Trials in London in 1993 Debbie Allan beat double world champion and Olympic (test) champion Sharon Rendle, winning her first British title. 

The British men’s team was second at the European team Championships of 1955 in Paris. France was too strong for the team of Geof Gleeson, Tony Mack, Charles Palmer, Warwick Stepto (Stevens) and Douglas Young. 

At the Tournament of Fukuoka in Japan Karen Briggs won the women’s title U48kg today in 1983. Loretta Doyle won the gold U52.

Karen Briggs GBR

Sharon Rendle GBR

Fairbrother & Blasco

Anton Geesink NED

TIME LINE 3rd December. Julian Davis wins his first ever A-tournament in 1995. In Basel he beats Finnish Pasi Lauren in the final of the Swiss Open. Does he marry Cheryle Peel as a reward for that? Nicola Fairbrother wins the Swiss open U56kg and doesn’t compete at the British Trials.                 At those British Trials of 1995 in Bangor Castle, Nick wins his last of 9 national titles that he starts in 1982. Debbie Allan beat Georgina Singleton in the final U52kg. Cheryle Peel beat Rosemary Felton, Peel and Davis win that day. In 2000 James Warren finally wins his first British title beating Danny Luxford.         Donna Robertson beat sister Fiona. Sarah Clark beat Karen Roberts in Wolverhampton.    At the British Trials in Edinburgh in 1994 Debbie Allan beat double world champion and Olympic (test) champion Sharon Rendle for the second time in a row.                 György Kosztolánczy won the Hungarian U17 title. Kosztolánczy will become National senior champion three times.                 At the world championships in Paris of 1961 Anton Geesink (NED) won his first world title. The tall Dutchman beat Koji Sone in the final

 

Nick Kokataylo GBR

Sharon Rendle GBR scores ippon in Tokyo 1995

 

Graeme Randall GBR

Peter Cousins GBR

TIME LINE 3rd December.  At the British Trials of 2001, Graeme Randall is still champion U81. Peter Cousins beats Winston Gordon U90. Fiona Robertson beats Donna this time. Sophie Cox beats Cheryle Peel U57 kg.              In 1999 world champion Graeme Randall wins bronze at the Olympic test event in Sydney but at the real Games, Randall is beaten at an early stage.            The first European Championships are held today in 1934 in Dresden (GER). All podium places are completely German but one, under 63 kg Alois Cigner from Czechoslovakia wins bronze.             At the British Trials of 1984, classical names are the proud winners: John Swatman, Stephen Gawthorpe, Kerrith Brown, Neil Adams, Wyndham Williams, Nick Kokotaylo and Paul Radburn.               At the Hungarian U17 championships of 1995, Miklos Ungvári won the title U45 kilogram. Ungvári will become European senior champion in 2002. He’s one of the two Hungarian participants at the Athens Olympic Games. The other is good-old Antal Kovacs, Olympic and World champion before the age of 22 in 1993 but never again.

Sophie Cox GBR

 

Antal Kovacs HUN

Edith Hrovat AUT

Florian Wanner GER

TIME LINE 1 December 2004  In 1973 in Austria Edith Hrovat wins her 1st of 16 national titles. Her last was in 1988. Unbelievable but true, all in the same weight, under 52 kgs.

British heavyweight Christine Child becomes the unofficial European champion at the ‘test’ European Championships in Genoa, one year later, she wins it officially to confirm her status. Lynn Tilley also gets first in 1974

At the British Championship in 2002, David Somerville beat James Warren in the U66 final. Donna Robertson is too strong for sister Fiona. Kate Howey beat Amanda Costello, while Karina Bryant beat Simone Callender.

The Chinese Open of 2002 is dominated by Chinese judoka’s. Only German Florian Wanner is a European exception. One year later, Wanner is the new world champion U81kg.

Romanian Adrian Croitoru wins his last Romanian Championship today in 2001. Romania’s best ever judoka was a European Champion in 2000

 

Christine Child GBR

David Somerville GBR

Jane Bridge GBR

Bridgette McCarthy GBR

TIME LINE 30 November. Today in 1980 Jane Bridge became the first female lightweight world champion. Bridge beat Anna de Novellis (ITA). Bridgette McCarthy reaches third  (U52) as well as Loretta Doyle (U56).  

Koji Sone JPN wins the world title in 1958 in Tokyo. Sone defeats Akio Kaminaga JPN. 

At the French Championships of 1997 Frédérique Jossinet beats Sarah Nichilo. Both women share two European titles but never win the world title. Nichilo becomes third in 1999 in Birmingham, Jossinet second in 2003 at Osaka and second at the Athens Olympic Games in 2004. Both times losing to Ryoko Tani (nee Tamura) rignt.

 

Loretta Cusack (nee Doyle) GBR

Frederique Jossinet FRA

 

Dawn Netherwood GBR

Avril Malley GBR

TIME LINE 30th November. Today in 1980 at the first women’s world championships in New York, the Briton Dawn Netherwood is close to her first victory. But Austrian Edith Simon won the U66 kgs title, permanently relegating Netherwood to never be more than the bridesmaid at all her major international tournaments . Avril Malley reached  third at U72kgs, Jocelyne Triadou FRA wins this first honour.

In November 2001 Tamerlan Tmenov is first at the Russian championships but through injury was unable to participate in the earlier Worlds. Too bad for him his rival Alexandr Mikhailine became double world champion in Munich in July. In both the open and plus category Mikhailine is by far the strongest. Mikhailine isn’t too keen in joining the Russian Championships though in November. 

At the world masters of 2002 in Bucharest the British fighters don’t win gold as well as serious money. Only Georgina Singleton can get some money out of Marius Vizer’s pocket. She loses the final to Raffaelle Imbriani. The German women know how to deal with prize money tournaments. They win three of seven weight categories, German efficiency! Isabel Fernández and Sara Alvarez win gold for Spain and confirm their status as best female fighters

 

Tamerlan Tmenov RUS

Raffaelle Imbriani GER

Mark Huizinga NED

Huizinga at Atlanta

TIME LINE 28th November. At the World military championships of 1997 it’s a Dutch party in the men’s category. The Dutch win two categories. U95 Ben Sonnemans defeats Austrian Thomas Etlinger, two years before becoming European champion. At under 86 kgs Mark Huizinga wins the first of six military world titles, three years before decisively winning the Olympic title at under 90 kgs! 

Oddly enough Huizinga has never been successful in regular world championships. In five world participations Huizinga fought 10 matches, and lost six. Never the less Huizinga has three Olympic medals on his career summary.

 

Sonnemans in Bundesliga

Ben Sonnemans NED

November 27th 2004 A brief note of regret following the death of Rick Perrie on the 21st November. A judo fan I never knew but wish I had. David Finch

Werbrouck at Atlanta

Dedecker & Werbrouck winning gold

 

Monique Van der Lee NED

TIME LINE 27th November At the Vienna European junior championships in 1988 Ulla Werbrouck won her weight class at under 72 kilograms. The 16-year old Belgian talent defeated Dutch Monique van der Lee. Ulla Werbrouck later became Olympic Champion at Atlanta in 1996 and won the European senior title seven times, but the world title never appears on her impressive fact file - just two silver medals. Her opponent in that match in Vienna is very talented as well, and does win the world title. In 1995 in Tokyo she became world champion at the age of 21. Van der Lee, however, retires from judo one year later because she’s been sexually abused by her trainer Peter Ooms, the biggest judo scandal in Dutch history. 

Werbrouck’s coach Jean-Marie Dedecker describes the tension and relationship of him and Werbrouck later in his biography “Me, Jean Marie Dedecker”. The couple succeeded because Werbrouck married a Belgian professional soccer player. He helped her find the psychological balance.

Read Werbrouck's story as it appears in USA Journal of Asian Martial Arts Go to bottom of page for thumbnail and click the file name for readable version.

 

Dedecker & Werbrouck at her retirement

Ulla  Werbrouck BEL

Werbrouck wins gold at Atlanta

 

NEWS 25th November 2004 TOKYO: A sore ankle will force Japan's multiple Olympic and world champion Ryoko Tani out of the prestigious women's judo championships in her home town of Fukuoka next month, organisers said yesterday. The six-time world 48kg bantamweight champion, 29, who retained her Olympic crown in Athens in August, has yet to recover fully from an injury to her left ankle suffered before the Olympics, they said.                With Olympic 63kg light middleweight gold medalist Ayumi Tanimoto also sidelined by injury, Japan's campaign at the Dec 11-12 tournament will be spearheaded by Maki Tsukada, the Olympic over-78kg heavyweight champion.                 Masae Ueno, who won the 70kg middleweight gold in Athens, will also take part in the Fukuoka Cup, one of the world's top women's judo contests.                      Frederique Jossinet of France, who lost to Tani in the Athens final, and North Korea's Kye Sun Hui, the Olympic 57kg lightweight silver medallist, will be among foreign standouts in Fukuoka.             Kye beat Tani in the 1996 Atlanta Olympic 48kg final.             Judo powerhouse Cuba will be absent from Fukuoka as the event clashes with a domestic contest, the organisers said. – AFP

Danny Kingston GBR

Karen Roberts GBR

TIME LINE 26th November. At the European junior championships in Jerusalem Ian Freeman won the gold in 1992. At under 65 kgs he beat Israeli Bronislaw Malinski. Jamie Johnson won bronze U60, just like Danny Kingston U71.  In the women’s category Karen Roberts gets third. Philipa Gemmill wins the best medal, she loses the U48 final to Russian Chirinova. Cheryle Peel copies that performance under 52 kgs. Ewa-Larysa Krause (POL) is too smart for her. 

More junior medals took place today in 1989 in Athens. Kate Howey won gold under 66 kgs defeating Beatrice Micouin (FRA). Michele MacQuarrie won silver, just like Nigel Donohue (U60). Daniel Sargent won bronze U95. In the plus 95 David Khakhaleishvili won the gold, young David Douillet came third, his first international mark. Four world titles and two Olympic medals follow.       There were interesting champions today in 2001 at the world military championships. People like Mark Huizinga (NED), Mário Sabino (BRA) and Alexandr Mikhailine (RUS) win the men’s titles. Italians women Scapin and Morico win for Italy, Dongouzashvili for Russia

 

Dongouzashvili RUS

Ylena Scapin ITA

Severine Vandenhende FRA

Neil Adams GBR

TIME LINE 25th NovemberNeil Adams reaches third at the 1978 Jigoro Kano Cup in Tokyo. Kazuro Yoshimura is the best in the U71 category.      Many national championships are held in today’s history. In 2000 Portuguese Joao Pina wins his first of multiple championships. In the women’s U52 Paula Saldanha is successful for the 8th time (of nine). She started this series in 1992, the year in which she competes as 20 year old at the Olympics and reaches 7th. This is her best achievement, despite a European Championship final in 1999.           In the 1995 Hungarian Championships, Botond Tolgyesi beats his younger brother Krisztián u78 kilogram. In 1998 Krisztián wins U81 kilogram of Botond. Later Botond decides to move up a weight category.       At the European junior championships in Jerusalem in 1992, Dutch Deborah Gravenstijn won the under 61 kgs title. She took the gold beating the Sydney Olympic Champion Séverine Vandenhende FRA. Gravenstijn however will later change to the U52 for the Sydney Games and another bronze medal. In Athens in 2004, Gravenstijn won a further bronze, again at another weight when she  lost the U57 semi-final to Olympic Champion Yvonne Bönisch GER. Gravenstijn has said she will try for the elusive gold at Beijing in 2008, but she isn't sure if it will be at under 48 or under 70 kgs!

 

Deborah Gravenstijn NED

Joao Pina POR

Kayo Kitada JPN

Yuki Yokosawa JPN

TIME LINE 24th November. David Somerville beat John Buchanan U65kg in the Scottish Open in Glasgow of 1996. 

At the women’s Grand Prix in 2001 in Spanish Seville, the Japanese women are strong. They win U48 Kayo Kitada, U57 with Yuki Yokosawa and the heavyweight with Mizuho Matsuzaki. The Spaniards win a lot of medals in their home country. But the concept of the commercial grand prix is still too poor to be a successful tournament. Kate Howey GBR wins the U70 category beating Cecilia Blanco ESP. 

Tadahiro Nomura wins the Kano Cup in Tokyo in 1996 after his first of three Olympic titles at 60 kgs at the earlier Atlanta Games. Vincenzo Carabetta is the only European winner (U86).

 

Cecilia Blanco ESP

Tadahiro Nomura JPN

Brian Jacks

Brian Jacks and his daily intake of vitamins

TIME LINE 23rd November. Brian Jacks is third at the Kano Cup in Tokyo in 1978. In the u86 weight class he must admit that Isamu Sonoda is stronger. For Brian Jacks it’s time to say goodbye to the international judo world. He’s won medals since 1964 at international level starting with a junior European title in Berlin. He won the British Open six times and became European senior champion in 1970 and 1973 and Olympic bronze medallist in 1972. After retiring from competitive judo he took up a career in show business and became a TV personality and commentator winning two European Super Star championships in 1979 and 1980 impressing all with his incredible arm-dips world record of 100 in a minute. 

Brian is a keen golf player and regularly takes time off from his party organising business to take part in ProAm matches. In 1994 Brian Jacks featured at 100th position in the Business Age Sports 100 of top ranked sports personalities with earnings of Ł100,000 each year and gross wealth of  Ł900,000 for 1993.

In 1978 Yasuhiro Yamashita wins the Kano Cup in Tokyo beating heavyweight Haruki Uemura who was world and Olympic Champion as well. But this was in the period that Yamashita remained undefeated for 203 matches in a row.

 

 

Yamashita and his wife Michida

Yamashita strangling Reszko

Monday 22nd November 2004 - Twice world champion and seven times European champion, Gella Vandecavaye of Belgium, who broke her neck on October 1998, has just won her 14th Belgium Championships at the age of 31. She retired in January 2004 but then came back for Athens and now the Belgium championships. She obviously doesn't like inactivity. Some woman!

122kgs Fenglan Gao CHN

71kgs Ingrid Berghmans BEL