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1999
World Judo Championships:
Day 3 & Day 4
A SPECIAL TWO PART
TWOJ REPORT
By: Barnaby Chesterman
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Day
3: Saturday, 9th October
An ebullient sell-out crowd packed the NIA to the rafters, eagerly
anticipating fireworks to match the previous day's euphoria. Unfortunately
the Long Good Friday could not last forever and Saturday Night Fever
never quite materialised.
The
day promised much with Danny Kingston (-73kg), David Somerville (-66kg),
Nicola Fairbrother (-57kg) and Debbie Allan (-52kg) all boasting strong
medal hopes but it all went a little flat. Hothead Danny stole the
headlines with a display of petulance more akin to footballers than
Judokas. Danny comfortably beat Danny Fagan (AUS) in the first round,
throwing him for ippon with ashi-guruma. Next up for Britain's errant
wild-boy was the World and Olympic champion Kenzo Nakamura (JPN).
Danny put up a spirited fight in a thrilling contest, but Nakamura's
class was evident and he rightfully won the judges decision. After
fighting so well Danny was clearly upset and stalked off the mat without
bowing at the side. Despite repeated calls to bring him back Danny
seemed oblivious to this and now started to storm off. This failure
earned Danny a disqualification which, had Nakamura progressed any
further, would have prevented him from competing for bronze through
the repechage. As it happened the weight category did not follow the
formbook and, following a series of upsets, Jimmy Pedro faced Vitali
Makarov in the final. Pedro had been impressive all day and his all
round fighting ability deservedly won him a gold medal.
David Somerville's combative ne-waza brought him good victories over
Andre Korb (GER) and Anis Lounifi (TUN) holding both with yoko-shiho-gatame.
In his next contest, however, the Brazilian Henri Guimaraes defeated
him scoring yuko with harai-goshi. Guimaraes did not progress any
further though, so David's tournament was over. The category was won
by the exciting Frenchman Larbi Benboudaoud who threw Huseyin Ozkan
with o-uchi-gari in the final.
Nicola Fairbrother tried hard to re-claim past glories but found the
going very tough. Nicola was forced to battle throughout and only
overcame Fillipa Cavalleri (POR) by virtue of shido. In her next fight
she came dangerously close to being knocked out by Patricia Nagy (HUN).
With time almost out Nicola trailed by chui to shido as she desperately
tried to find a way to throw her opponent. Howls of derision could
be heard from the crowd as in unison they screamed for Nagy to be
awarded chui. In the last seconds their prayers were answered and,
somewhat controversially, Nicola also then won the decision. Still
Nicola struggled, though, and Roxana Garcia (PUR) was just beaten
with yuko from uchi-mata.
Next up was the favourite Isabel Fernandez (ESP) and in truth Nicola
could not get into the fight. Yet again, however, in an almost re-run
of her Nagy fight, Nicola trailed by yuko to shido with seconds running
out. Almost on the final bell Fernandez was penalised and again a
decision was needed to separate the two fighters. It seemed too much
to hope for a replica of the last outcome as Fernandez had clearly
dominated. Even so one judge managed to allow the crowd to influence
him enough to award the fight to Nicola but the other two were not
quite so patriotic and the Spaniard deservedly progressed. Nicola
still had the repechage to look forward to, but she did not do herself
justice and was beaten by the lively Orit Bar-on (ISR). Fernandez
went on to reach the final but was completely outclassed by the Cuban
Driuli Gonzalez who claimed her nations second gold of the tournament
to leapfrog Britain in the medals table.
New European champion Debbie Allan was hoping to add to her gold medal
and she began in dominant form. In her opening two fights she strangled
both Ivona Machalek (POL) and Fabiane Hukuda (BRA) as her power in
ne-waza proved too much for her opponents. In her quarter final, however,
she injured her shoulder and could do nothing against the tenacious
Legna Verdecia (CUB). Verdecia scored waza-ari with seoi-nage and
the injured Debbie could find no way back. Still she bravely fought
on and beat Yakelin Diaz (VEN) with mune-gatame in the repechage to
qualify for the Olympics before sensibly withdrawing from the rest
of the competition. Verdecia appeared to be the class competitor of
the category and was fully expected to beat Noriko Narasaki (JPN)
in the final. Yet again, however, controversy reared its head. Verdecia
had dominated throughout and produced the majority of the attacks.
With 12 seconds remaining, though, the scores were level and Verdecia
was penalised for dropping when attempting a drop seoi-nage. The Cubans
were stunned and Verdecia even ended the contest with her hands on
her hips refusing to fight on.
Day 4: Sunday, 10th
October
Political
squabbles threatened to mar this great tournament as, backstage, the
warring factions turned to the media to champion their cause, but
fortunately a pocket dynamo focused attention back on the mat. This
day was always going to be dominated by the diminutive Ryoko Tamura
(JPN) and she delivered in emphatic fashion. Tamura was electric all
day.
A constant bundle of energy she stormed to her fourth consecutive
world title at one weight category (-48kg), thus equalling a record
set by the great Ingrid Bergmanns. When Tamura clinched her gold medal
with a unanimous decision in the final, the clamour of Japanese photographers
eager to snap their national darling threatened to delay the remaining
finals.
Britain's Vicky Dunn was fortunate to avoid the same half of the draw
as Tamura and made steady progress to the quarter finals, beating
Leposa Markovic (YUG) and Erden Gereltuya (MGL) en route, both with
drop kata-guruma. Vicky then came up against the experienced Spaniard
Vanesa Arenas who proved just a little too wily and beat the Brit
with a yuko. Vicky qualified for the repechage though where she faced
Maarit Kallio (FIN). She struggled at first and was trailing by two
kokas before a brilliant turnover on the ground into san-gaku-gatame
saw her hold on to secure a Sydney 2000 berth. Already guaranteed
7th spot, Vicky faced Anna Gradante (GER) but she could not make any
headway and lost on penalties. Still Olympic qualification was a fine
performance and we can look forward to more from the youngster next
year.
Simone Callender started brightly in the Open beating Shu-Tu Chueh
(TPE) with a big te-guruma for ippon. She seemed a little nervous
and inexperienced after that, however, and lost on penalties to both
Priscila Marques (BRA) and Qingli Zhang (CHN). At just 20 years of
age Simone is a bright prospect and I'm sure there is more to come
from her. Simone seems to have slipped a little behind Karina Bryant
recently but it would be great to see the two competing to the same
level again, as was the custom in their junior days in the early 1990s
when they shared the top level of the podium. Daima Beltran secured
a third gold medal for the plucky Cubans when she beat Miha Ninomiya
(JPN) with tai-otoshi in the final. A delighted Beltran leapt into
the arms of her giant animated coach Ronaldo Veitia as he stepped
forward to embrace her. This heavyweight collision amused the crowd
as Veitia was probably the only person in the stadium capable of holding
her up!
With no-one in the men's Open British hopes lay at the hands of John
Buchanan and his unusual Bull-locking-horns style. John had a tremendous
start to the day forcing submissions from his first three opponents.
This was particularly impressive as his scalps included the gold and
silver medallists from this year's Asian Championship. In the quarter
finals John met the live wire Manuolo Poulot (CUB). After a titanic
battle the scores were even at the end of the contest but Poulot deservedly
won the judges decision.
This put John into the repechage where he faced Nurbol Suleymenov
(KAZ) in a breath-taking encounter. At times the two fighters appeared
to be locking horns in an attempt to drive each other from the mat
in some kind of animal ritual. John gave away a penalty and then Suleymenov
led by waza-ari with time running out on the clock. There was barely
a second to go when John lunged forward with a last gasp desperate
sumi-gaeshi. Time ran out as Suleymenov flew through the air. He arched
his back and landed on his feet but the referee thrust his arm straight
up into the air. No one was sure as to whether he had called ippon
or soremade and there was an anxious wait for the murmuring crowd
as the Kazakstani gingerly rose to his feet. He already seemed to
be protesting but it was several seconds before the outcome was confirmed.
The referee called rei and swung his left arm out towards the Brit.
The arena burst into ecstatic celebration as John sank to his knees
and blew kisses to his adoring public. He had secured Olympic qualification
but he was not finished yet. Next up was Vardan Voskanyan (ARM) and
although John could not reproduce the drama of the last contest, ippon
with kata-guruma once again sent the crowd into rapturous applause.
John now only had to beat Natsik Bahirau (BLR) to claim a fourth bronze
medal for the host nation. Bahirau had the upper hand, however, and
scored yuko with tomoenage. The crowd began to get excited as John
started going for the big throws. But try as he might, he could not
repeat the heroics of his Suleymenov fight and the Belarussian held
on for the bronze. Even so John seemed very happy with his days work
and milked the applause of an appreciative crowd to whom he had brought
much excitement throughout the day. Poulot went on to win the final
when his flashing tai-otoshi stunned Kazuhiko Tokundo (JPN) in the
final.
Shinichi
Shinohara (JPN) won the men's Open, claiming his second gold of the
tournament. On the way to the final he faced Dennis Van der Geest
(NED) and threw him for ippon with his trademark uchi-mata. The ippon
score, however, was debatable and an irate Cor Van der Geest, DennisE
coach and father, took two steps onto the mat to protest against the
decision. This encroachment by the coach, who was wearing shoes, was
severely frowned upon by the authorities and he has since been banned
until the end of the year with a further period of probation for a
year as well. This punishment further infuriated Cor Van der Geest
as the Cuban coach Veitia received nothing for stepping onto the mat
in shoes to celebrate with Beltran. Dennis Van der Geest, incidentally,
fought on to take a bronze.
Shinohara went on to face Harry Van Barneveld (BEL) in the semi-finals.
Van Barneveld was clearly wary of Shinohara's awesome uchi-mata and
the Japanese took full advantage to catch his opponent with de-ashi-barai
for ippon. This set up the dream grand finale between Shinohara and
giant Chechen turned Turk Selim Tataroglu. Many expected a titanic
duel to end the tournament but Shinohara made short work of his adversary
throwing him for ippon with his unstoppable uchi-mata in just 36 seconds.
This also earned him awards for both Judoka of the year and the Ippon
Trophy for most ippons in the tournament. Keiko Maeda took the women's
Ippon Trophy and Ryoko Tamura won the women's Judoka of the year prize
in recognition of her record equalling feat.
Japan dominated the medal table with 8 golds 2 silvers and a bronze
while Cuba were comfortably in second with 4 gold, 2 silver and 2
bronze. Britain finished an excellent joint third with a tally of
1 gold and 3 bronze, equalling the French, which is no mean feat.
Although the top two countries seemed a class apart, no fewer than
26 countries won a medal of some sort, which just demonstrates the
strength in depth of world judo. One of the reasons for this has been
the break down of the former Soviet Union: six former Soviet states
won medals. It was a wonderfully successful championship with outstanding
Judo. Maybe a little carpet rolling practice and careful choice of
music could see the BJA staging even more successful tournaments in
the future. The British fans were tremendous and it would be a shame
if they did not get another opportunity to watch world class judo
on home soil again.
Barnaby Chesterman |
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| World
Championships 1999 |
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WOMEN
-48kg
Ryoko Tamura (JPN)
-52kg
Noriko Narasaki (JPN)
-57kg
Driuli Gonzalez (CUB)
-63kg
Keiko Maeda (JPN)
-70kg
Sibelis Verenes (CUB)
-78kg
Noriko Anno (JPN)
+78kg
Beata Maksymow (POL)
OPEN
Daima Beltran (CUB)
MEN
-60kg
Manolo Poulot (CUB)
-66kg
Lardi Benboudaoud (FRA)
-73kg
Jimmy Pedro (USA)
-81kg
Graeme Randall (GBR)
-90kg
Hidehiko Yoshida (JPN)
-100kg
Kosei Inoue (JPN)
+100kg
Shinichi Shinohara (JPN)
OPEN
Shinichi Shinohara (JPN)
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