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2023 Judo Grand Slam Tokyo

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Judo
Judo
2023 Judo Grand Slam Tokyo
VenueTokyo Metropolitan Gymnasium
LocationTokyo, Japan
Dates2–3 December 2023
Competitors506 from 84 nations
Total prize money$154,000[1]
Competition at external databases
LinksIJF • EJU • JudoInside

The 2023 Judo Grand Slam Tokyo was an installment of the Grand Slam Tokyo tournament held in Tokyo, Japan, from 2 to 3 December 2023 as part of the IJF World Tour and during the 2024 Summer Olympics qualification period.[2][3][4][5]

Medal summary

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Men's events

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Event Gold Silver Bronze
Extra-lightweight (−60 kg)  Ryuju Nagayama (JPN)  Naohisa Takato (JPN)  Taiki Nakamura (JPN)
Ayub Bliev (AIN)
Half-lightweight (−66 kg)  Hifumi Abe (JPN)  Yondonperenlein Baskhüü (MGL)  Denis Vieru (MDA)
 Hekim Agamämmedow (TKM)
Lightweight (−73 kg)  Hidayat Heydarov (AZE)  Soichi Hashimoto (JPN)  Giorgi Terashvili (GEO)
 Manuel Lombardo (ITA)
Half-middleweight (−81 kg)  Lee Joon-hwan (KOR)  Matthias Casse (BEL) David Karapetyan (AIN)
 Zelim Tckaev (AZE)
Middleweight (−90 kg)  Sanshiro Murao (JPN)  Luka Maisuradze (GEO) Mikhail Igolnikov (AIN)
 Christian Parlati (ITA)
Half-heavyweight (−100 kg) Matvey Kanikovskiy (AIN)  Dota Arai (JPN)  Michael Korrel (NED)
 Zelym Kotsoiev (AZE)
Heavyweight (+100 kg) Tamerlan Bashaev (AIN)  Kim Min-jong (KOR) Inal Tasoev (AIN)
 Lukáš Krpálek (CZE)

Women's events

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Event Gold Silver Bronze
Extra-lightweight (−48 kg)  Natsumi Tsunoda (JPN)  Julia Figueroa (ESP)  Kano Miyaki (JPN)
 Catarina Costa (POR)
Half-lightweight (−52 kg)  Uta Abe (JPN)  Astride Gneto (FRA)  Lkhagvasürengiin Sosorbaram (MGL)
 Gefen Primo (ISR)
Lightweight (−57 kg)  Christa Deguchi (CAN)  Jéssica Lima (BRA)  Jessica Klimkait (CAN)
 Lien Chen-ling (TPE)
Half-middleweight (−63 kg)  Miku Takaichi (JPN)  Kirari Yamaguchi (JPN)  Joanne van Lieshout (NED)
 Mizuki Takaki (JPN)
Middleweight (−70 kg)  Sanne van Dijke (NED)  Shiho Tanaka (JPN)  Ai Tsunoda (ESP)
 Serafima Moscalu (ROU)
Half-heavyweight (−78 kg)  Mayra Aguiar (BRA)  Inbar Lanir (ISR)  Yoon Hyun-ji (KOR)
 Rika Takayama (JPN)
Heavyweight (+78 kg)  Mao Arai (JPN)  Léa Fontaine (FRA)  Raz Hershko (ISR)
 Park Saet-byeol (KOR)

Source results: [3]

Medal table

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  *   Host nation (Japan)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Japan (JPN)*75416
 Individual Neutral Athletes (AIN)2046
2 South Korea (KOR)1124
3 Brazil (BRA)1102
4 Azerbaijan (AZE)1023
 Netherlands (NED)1023
6 Canada (CAN)1012
7 France (FRA)0202
8 Israel (ISR)0123
9 Georgia (GEO)0112
 Mongolia (MGL)0112
 Spain (ESP)0112
12 Belgium (BEL)0101
13 Italy (ITA)0022
14 Chinese Taipei (TPE)0011
 Czech Republic (CZE)0011
 Moldova (MDA)0011
 Portugal (POR)0011
 Romania (ROU)0011
 Turkmenistan (TKM)0011
Totals (19 entries)14142856
Source: [6]

Prize money

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The sums written are per medalist, bringing the total prizes awarded to $154,000.[1] (retrieved from: [2])

Medal Total Judoka Coach
 Gold $5,000 $4,000 $1,000
 Silver $3,000 $2,400 $600
 Bronze $1,500 $1,200 $300

References

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  1. ^ a b "Tokyo GS 2023 Outlines version 06 October 2023" (PDF). International Judo Federation. 7 November 2023. p. 11. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 November 2023. Retrieved 6 October 2023.
  2. ^ a b "Tokyo Grand Slam 2023". International Judo Federation. Retrieved 2 July 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Tokyo Grand Slam 2023". JudoInside.com. Retrieved 2 July 2023.
  4. ^ "Tokyo Grand Slam 2023". European Judo Union. 10 October 2022. Retrieved 2 July 2023.
  5. ^ "Judo - Tokyo - 2023". The-Sports.org. Retrieved 2 July 2023.
  6. ^ "Grand Slam Tokyo — Medal table". JudoInside.com. Retrieved 3 December 2023.
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