Judo at the 2003 Summer Universiade

The Judo competition at the 2003 Summer Universiade were held in Daegu, South Korea from 25 August to 27 August 2003.

Medal overview

Men's event

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Extra-lightweight (60 kg)  Takeshi Ogawa (JPN)  Jérémy Le Bris (FRA)  Cho Nam-Suk (KOR)
 Khashbaataryn Tsagaanbaatar (MGL)
Half-lightweight (66 kg)  Takashi Terai (JPN)  Yordanis Arencibia (CUB)  Jozef Krnáč (SVK)
 Gábor Neu (HUN)
Lightweight (73 kg)  Lee Won-Hee (KOR)  Masahiro Takamatsu (JPN)  Miguel Romero (ESP)
 Varuzhan Israyelyan (ARM)
Half-middleweight (81 kg)  Kwon Young-Woo (KOR)  Oscar Fernández (ESP)  Ole Bischof (GER)
 Denis Ogienko (RUS)
Middleweight (90 kg)  Hiroshi Izumi (JPN)  Diego Barreto (BRA)  Gergö Rajcsányi (HUN)
 Park Sun-Woo (KOR)
Half-heavyweight (100 kg)  György Kosztolánczy (HUN)  Gianluca Giaccaglia (ITA)  Amel Mekić (BIH)
 Luciano Corrêa (BRA)
Heavyweight (+100 kg)  Abdullo Tangriev (UZB)  Frédéric LeCanu (FRA)  Obren Božović (SCG)
 Kim Sung-Bum (KOR)
Openweight  Abdullo Tangriev (UZB)  Frédéric Paupert (FRA)  Luciano Corrêa (BRA)
 Shinya Katabuchi (JPN)
Team  South Korea  Japan  Hungary
 Ukraine

Women's event

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Extra-lightweight (48 kg)  Mayumi Takara (JPN)  Pak Myong-Hui (PRK)  Francesca Congia (ITA)
 Choi Ok-Ja (KOR)
Half-lightweight (52 kg)  Audrey La Rizza (FRA)  An Kum-Ae (PRK)  Hisae Takara (JPN)
 Ren Minjing (CHN)
Lightweight (57 kg)  Hong Ok-Song (PRK)  Fanny Euranie (FRA)  Yurisleidys Lupetey (CUB)
 Yang Mi-Yung (KOR)
Half-middleweight (63 kg)  Marie Pasquet (FRA)  Ji Gyong-Sun (PRK)  Africa Gutiérrez (ESP)
 Hidemi Soda (JPN)
Middleweight (70 kg)  Gévrise Emane (FRA)  Cathérine Roberge (CAN)  Leire Iglesias (ESP)
 Bae Eun-Hye (KOR)
Half-heavyweight (78 kg)  Cho Soo-Hee (KOR)  Pan Yuqing (CHN)  Stéphanie Possamaï (FRA)
 Megumi Nagase (JPN)
Heavyweight (+78 kg)  Liu Xia (CHN)  Kei Eguchi (JPN)  Jessica van der Spil (NED)
 Elena Shleyzye (RUS)
Openweight  Xue Fuyan (CHN)  Mika Sugimoto (JPN)  Lee Hsiao-hung (TPE)
 Mariya Semenyuk (UKR)
Team  Japan  China  France
 South Korea

Medals table

 Rank  Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  Japan 4 3 4 11
2  France 3 4 1 8
3  South Korea 3 0 6 9
4  China 2 1 1 4
5  Uzbekistan 2 0 0 2
6  North Korea 1 3 0 4
7  Hungary 1 0 2 3
8  Spain 0 1 3 4
9  Brazil 0 1 2 3
10  Cuba 0 1 1 2
 Italy 0 1 1 2
12  Canada 0 1 0 1
13  Russia 0 0 2 2
14  Armenia 0 0 1 1
 Bosnia and Herzegovina 0 0 1 1
 Germany 0 0 1 1
 Mongolia 0 0 1 1
 Netherlands 0 0 1 1
 Serbia and Montenegro 0 0 1 1
 Slovakia 0 0 1 1
 Chinese Taipei 0 0 1 1
 Ukraine 0 0 1 1

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/11/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.