The 2021 Judo Grand Prix Zagreb was held in Zagreb, Croatia, from 24 to 26 September 2021.[2][3][4][5]
2021 Judo Grand Prix Zagreb | |
---|---|
Venue | Arena Zagreb |
Location | Zagreb, Croatia |
Dates | 24–26 September 2021 |
Competitors | 243, 35 from 35 nations |
Total prize money | 98,000€.[1] |
Competition at external databases | |
Links | IJF • EJU • JudoInside |
Event videos
editThe event will air freely on the IJF YouTube channel.
Weight classes | Preliminaries | Final Block | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Day 1 | Men: -60, -66 Women: -48, -52, -57 |
Commentated | Commentated | ||
Tatami 1 | Tatami 2 | Tatami 3 | |||
Day 2 | Men: -73, -81 Women: -63, -70 |
Commentated | Commentated | ||
Tatami 1 | Tatami 2 | Tatami 3 | |||
Day 3 | Men: -90, -100, +100 Women: -78, +78 |
Commentated | Commentated | ||
Tatami 1 | Tatami 2 | Tatami 3 |
Medal summary
editMen's events
editEvent | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Extra-lightweight (−60 kg) | Samuel Hall (GBR) | Angelo Pantano (ITA) | Jolan Florimont (FRA) |
Vincent Limare (FRA) | |||
Half-lightweight (−66 kg) | Denis Vieru (MDA) | Abdula Abdulzhalilov (RUS) | Aram Grigoryan (RUS) |
Karo Marandian (UKR) | |||
Lightweight (−73 kg) | Hidayat Heydarov (AZE) | Victor Sterpu (MDA) | Makhmadbek Makhmadbekov (RUS) |
Mark Hristov (BUL) | |||
Half-middleweight (−81 kg) | Tato Grigalashvili (GEO) | Guilherme Schimidt (BRA) | Róbert Rajkai (HUN) |
Dorin Gotonoaga (MDA) | |||
Middleweight (−90 kg) | Mammadali Mehdiyev (AZE) | Luka Maisuradze (GEO) | Wachid Borchashvili (AUT) |
Khusen Khalmurzaev (RUS) | |||
Half-heavyweight (−100 kg) | Arman Adamian (RUS) | Dario Kurbjeweit Garcia (GER) | Simeon Catharina (NED) |
Marko Kumrić (CRO) | |||
Heavyweight (+100 kg) | Jur Spijkers (NED) | Vlăduț Simionescu (ROU) | Yevheniy Balyevskyy (UKR) |
Martti Puumalainen (FIN) |
Women's events
editEvent | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|
Extra-lightweight (−48 kg) | Blandine Pont (FRA) | Mélanie Vieu (FRA) | Amber Gersjes (NED) |
Milica Nikolić (SRB) | |||
Half-lightweight (−52 kg) | Amber Ryheul (BEL) | Astride Gneto (FRA) | Annika Würfel (GER) |
Ana Viktorija Puljiz (CRO) | |||
Lightweight (−57 kg) | Priscilla Gneto (FRA) | Pleuni Cornelisse (NED) | Kaja Kajzer (SLO) |
Caroline Fritze (GER) | |||
Half-middleweight (−63 kg) | Andreja Leški (SLO) | Geke van den Berg (NED) | Renata Zachová (CZE) |
Laura Fazliu (KOS) | |||
Middleweight (−70 kg) | Anka Pogačnik (SLO) | Kelly Petersen Pollard (GBR) | Alina Lengweiler (SUI) |
Katarzyna Sobierajska (POL) | |||
Half-heavyweight (−78 kg) | Karen Stevenson (NED) | Patricija Brolih (SLO) | Teresa Zenker (GER) |
Emma Reid (GBR) | |||
Heavyweight (+78 kg) | Julia Tolofua (FRA) | Mercédesz Szigetvári (HUN) | Laura Fuseau (FRA) |
Renée Lucht (GER) |
Source Results [3]
Medal table
edit* Host nation (Croatia)
Rank | Nation | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | France (FRA) | 3 | 2 | 3 | 8 |
2 | Netherlands (NED) | 2 | 2 | 2 | 6 |
3 | Slovenia (SLO) | 2 | 1 | 1 | 4 |
4 |