2014 World Judo Juniors Championships
Judo competition
2014 World Judo Juniors Championships | |
---|---|
Venue | Fort Lauderdale |
Location | Fort Lauderdale, United States |
Dates | 22–26 October 2014 |
Competitors | 518 from 72 nations |
Champions | |
Men's team | Japan (1st title) |
Women's team | Japan (2nd title) |
Competition at external databases | |
Links | IJF • EJU • JudoInside |
The 2014 World Judo Juniors Championships was held between 22 and 26 October 2014 in Fort Lauderdale, United States.[1][2] The final day of competition featured men's and women's team events, both won by team Japan.[3][4]
Medal summary
Men's events
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
−55 kg | Umekita Wataru (JPN) | Kamal Fikri (FRA) | Amartuvshin Bayaraa (MGL) |
Ganbaatar Battulga (MGL) | |||
−60 kg | Francisco Garrigós (ESP) | Tsend-Ochiryn Tsogtbaatar (MGL) | Mehman Sadigov (AZE) |
Choi In-hyuk (KOR) | |||
−66 kg | Egor Mgdsyan (RUS) | Hifumi Abe (JPN) | Ricardo Santos Junior (BRA) |
Baruch Shmailov (ISR) | |||
−73 kg | An Chang-rim (KOR) | Yuji Yamamoto (JPN) | Nuno Saraiva (POR) |
Koba Mchedlishvili (GEO) | |||
−81 kg | Rafael Macedo (BRA) | Mikhail Igolnikov (RUS) | Levan Gugava (GEO) |
Pape Doudou Ndiaye (FRA) | |||
−90 kg | Krisztián Tóth (HUN) | Nikoloz Sherazadishvili (ESP) | Max de Vreeze (NED) |
Beka Gviniashvili (GEO) | |||
−100 kg | Gotō Ryūtarō (JPN) | Niyaz Ilyasov (RUS) | Ramazan Malsuigenov (RUS) |
Aaron Wolf (JPN) | |||
+100 kg | Ölziibayaryn Düürenbayar (MGL) | Guga Kibordzalidze (GEO) | Iakiv Khammo (UKR) |
Ruslan Shakhbazov (RUS) | |||
Team | Japan | Georgia | South Korea |
Russia |
Women's events
Event | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
−44 kg | Sakaguchi Hitomi (JPN) | Larissa Farias (BRA) | Melisa Çakmaklı (TUR) |
Olfa Saoudi (TUN) | |||
−48 kg | Ami Kondo (JPN) | Dilara Lokmanhekim (TUR) | Alexandra Pop (ROU) |
Patrycia Szekely (GER) | |||
−52 kg | Amandine Buchard (FRA) | Alexandra-Larisa Florian (ROU) | Astride Gneto (FRA) |
Mako Uchio (JPN) | |||
−57 kg | Momo Tamaoki (JPN) | Christa Deguchi (JPN) | Catherine Beauchemin-Pinard (CAN) |
Daria Kurbonmamadova (RUS) | |||
−63 kg | Miho Minei (JPN) | Nami Nabekura (JPN) | Katie-Jemima Yeats-Brown (GBR) |
Vivian Herrmann (GER) | |||
−70 kg | Barbara Matić (CRO) | Ebony Drysdale Daley (GBR) | Mélissa Héleine (FRA) |
Marie-Ève Gahié (FRA) | |||
−78 kg | Sarra Mzougui (TUN) | Sama Hawa Camara (FRA) | Ana Laura Portuondo-Isasi (CAN) |
Beata Pacut (POL) | |||
+78 kg | Sarah Asahina (JPN) | Anastasiia Komovych (UKR) | Marlín Viveros (ECU) |
Marine Erb (FRA) | |||
Team | Japan | France | South Korea |
Russia |
Medal table
References
- ^ a b c "2014 World Juniors Championships Fort Lauderdale". JudoInside.com. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
- ^ "2014 World Juniors Championships Fort Lauderdale". International Judo Federation. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
- ^ a b c "World Junior Team Championships Fort Lauderdale". JudoInside.com. Retrieved 11 August 2022.
- ^ a b c "2014 World Juniors Championships". The-Sports.org. Retrieved 16 January 2023.
- ^ a b "2014 World Junior Championships Fort Lauderdale — Results". International Judo Federation. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
- ^ "2014 World Juniors Championships — Medal table". JudoInside.com. Retrieved 16 January 2023.
- ^ "2014 World Juniors Championships — Medals". The-Sports.org. Retrieved 16 January 2023.
- ^ "2014 World Junior Championships Fort Lauderdale — Standings". International Judo Federation. Retrieved 1 June 2021. (Not including team events)
External links
- 2014 World Judo Juniors Championships at the International Judo Federation
- 2014 World Judo Juniors Championships at JudoInside.com
- 2014 World Judo Juniors Championships at the European Judo Union
- v
- t
- e
Gendered teams |
|
---|---|
Mixed teams |
|
- Rio de Janeiro 1974
- Madrid 1976
- Mayaguez 1983
- Rome 1986
- Dijon 1990
- Buenos Aires 1992
- Cairo 1994
- Porto 1996
- Cali 1998
- Nabeul 2000
- Jeju Island 2002
- Budapest 2004
- Santo Domingo 2006
- Bangkok 2008
- Paris 2009
- Agadir 2010
- Cape Town 2011
- Ljubljana 2013
- Fort Lauderdale 2014
- Abu Dhabi 2015
- Zagreb 2017
- Nassau 2018
- Marrakesh 2019
- Olbia 2021
- Guayaquil 2022
- Coimbra 2023
- Dushanbe 2024