The 2007 World Judo Championships are the 25th edition of the Judo World Championships, and were held at the Rio Olympic Arena, usually called Arena Multiuso, that was built for the 2007 Pan-American Games, in Jacarepaguá, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil from September 13 to September 16, 2007.

Quick Facts JudoWorld Judo Championships, Venue ...
Judo
Judo
2007 World Judo Championships
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The official logotype: Sugarloaf Mountain and Urca Mountain styled as a black belt.
VenueJeunesse Arena
LocationBrazil Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Dates13–16 September 2007
Competitors743 from 138 nations
Competition at external databases
LinksIJF  EJU  JudoInside
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The competition gathered the sport's top athletes in Rio de Janeiro, with only a few exceptions, due to injuries. Among the high-profile injured judokas that were unable to participate were Brazil's Flávio Canto, bronze medallist in the -81 kg category at the 2004 Summer Olympic Games, who tore a ligament in his right elbow during the 2007 Pan American Games (during the event, Canto participated as a commentator for the Brazilian paid sports channel, SporTV); and Japan's Tadahiro Nomura, the three-time Olympic champion and heavy favorite in the -60 kg category was forced to withdraw only a few weeks before the event due to injury (his replacement was able to place 7th in the competition).

In the leadup to the event, Rio de Janeiro also hosted the IJF's International Congress, congregating the heads of all the national confederations affiliated to the IJF. The meeting took place on September 12, eve of the first day of competition, and in it, some important decisions were made. The first was the election of the new IJF president. Marius Vizer was elected by the attending representatives to replace Yung Sang Park, the current president. In addition, the Congress voted and approved unanimously, the extension of the IJF's president term from 2 years to 6 years. Another decision made in the meeting was the selection of the city that would host the 2011 World Championship. The contenders were the cities of Paris, France and Hamburg, Germany, and the French capital was selected as the host city for the 2011 event. Finally, the Congress also voted on the new presidency of the European Judo Union, with Russia's Sergei Soloveychik being elected president and Jean-Luc Rougé and Vladimír Bárta being elected as first vice president and vice president respectively. Newly appointed IJF president, Marius Vizer, was made honorary president of the European Judo Federation as well.

After the conclusion of competition in the last day of the event, the IJF members voted on the best athletes of the World Championship. In the men's side, Brazil's Tiago Camilo, who won in the -81 kg category by defeating all opponents by ippon (the perfect score, which ends the match automatically), was selected; and in the women's side, North Korea's Kye Sun-hui, who won in the -57 kg category, was chosen as best female athlete in the competition. Both athletes were presented with an obelisk-shaped, acrylic trophy for the achievement.

Medal overview

Men

More information Event, Gold ...
Event Gold Silver Bronze
Extra-lightweight (60 kg)
details
 Ruben Houkes (NED)  Nestor Khergiani (GEO)  Ludwig Paischer (AUT)
 Choi Min-Ho (KOR)
Half-lightweight (66 kg)
details
 João Derly (BRA)  Yordanis Arencibia (CUB)  Arash Miresmaeili (IRI)
 Miklós Ungvári (HUN)
Lightweight (73 kg)
details
 Wang Ki-chun (KOR)  Elnur Mammadli (AZE)  Yusuke Kanamaru (JPN)
 Rasul Bokiev (TJK)
Half-middleweight (81 kg)
details
 Tiago Camilo (BRA)  Anthony Rodriguez (FRA)  Guillaume Elmont (NED)
 Euan Burton (GBR)
Middleweight (90 kg)
details
 Irakli Tsirekidze (GEO)  Ilias Iliadis (GRE)  Roberto Meloni (ITA)
 Ivan Pershin (RUS)
Half-heavyweight (100 kg)
details
 Luciano Corrêa (BRA)  Peter Cousins (GBR)  Dániel Hadfi (HUN)
 Oreidis Despaigne (CUB)
Heavyweight (+100 kg)
details
 Teddy Riner (FRA)  Tamerlan Tmenov (RUS)  Lasha Gujejiani (GEO)
 João Gabriel Schlittler (BRA)
Openweight
details
 Yasuyuki Muneta (JPN)  Juri Rybak (BLR)  Matthieu Bataille (FRA)
 Abdullo Tangriev (UZB)
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Women

More information Event, Gold ...
Event Gold Silver Bronze
Extra-lightweight (48 kg)
details
 Ryoko Tani (JPN)  Yanet Bermoy (CUB)  Frédérique Jossinet (FRA)
 Alina Dumitru (ROU)
Half-lightweight (52 kg)
details
 Shi Junjie (CHN)  Telma Monteiro (POR)  An Kum-ae (PRK)
 Yuka Nishida (JPN)
Lightweight (57 kg)
details
 Kye Sun-hui (PRK)  Isabel Fernández (ESP)  Aiko Sato (JPN)
 Bernadett Baczkó (HUN)
Half-middleweight (63 kg)
details
 Driulis González (CUB)  Lucie Décosse (FRA)  Elisabeth Willeboordse (NED)
 Ayumi Tanimoto (JPN)
Middleweight (70 kg)
details
 Gévrise Émane (FRA)  Ronda Rousey (USA)  Ylenia Scapin (ITA)
 Anett Mészáros (HUN)
Half-heavyweight (78 kg)
details
 Yurisel Laborde (CUB)  Sae Nakazawa (JPN)  Stéphanie Possamaï (FRA)
 Jeong Gyeong-Mi (KOR)
Heavyweight (+78 kg)
details
 Tong Wen (CHN)  Maki Tsukada (JPN)  Sandra Köppen (GER)
 Carola Uilenhoed (NED)
Openweight
details
 Maki Tsukada (JPN)  Lucija Polavder (SLO)  Anne-Sophie Mondière (FRA)
 Elena Ivashchenko (RUS)
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Medal table

  *   Host nation (Brazil)

More information Rank, Nation ...
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Japan3249
2 Brazil*3014
3 France2248
4 Cuba2215
5 China2002
6 Georgia1113
7 Netherlands1034
8 South Korea1023
9 North Korea1012
10 Russia0123
11 Great Britain0112
12 Azerbaijan0101
 Belarus0101
 Greece0101
 Portugal0101
 Slovenia0101
 Spain0101
 United States0101
19 Hungary0044
20 Italy0022
21 Austria0011
 Germany0011
 Iran0011
 Romania0011
 Tajikistan0011
 Uzbekistan0011
Totals (26 entries)16163264
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Results overview

Men

60 kg

16 September – Final details

66 kg

15 September – Final

More information Position, Judoka ...
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73 kg

15 September – Final

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81 kg

14 September – Final

More information Position, Judoka ...
Position Judoka Country
1.Tiago Camilo Brazil
2.Anthony Rodriguez France
3.Guillaume Elmont Netherlands
3.Euan Burton Great Britain
5.Robert Krawczyk Poland
5.Giuseppe Maddaloni Italy
7.Kwon Young Woo South Korea
7.Tomislav Marijanović Croatia
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90 kg

14 September – Final

More information Position, Judoka ...
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100 kg

13 September – Final

More information Position, Judoka ...
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+100 kg

13 September – Final

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Open class

16 September – Final

Women

48 kg

16 September – Final

More information Position, Judoka ...
Position Judoka Country
1.Ryoko Tani Japan
2.Yanet Bermoit Cuba
3.Frédérique Jossinet France
3.Alina Dumitru Romania
5.Paula Pareto Argentina
5.Kim Yong-Ram South Korea
7.Éva Csernoviczki Hungary
7.Tatiana Moskvina Belarus
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52 kg

15 September – Final

More information Position, Judoka ...
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57 kg

15 September – Final

More information Position, Judoka ...
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63 kg

14 September – Final

More information Position, Judoka ...
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70 kg

14 September – Final

More information Position, Judoka ...
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78 kg

13 September – Final

More information Position, Judoka ...
Position Judoka Country
1.Yurisel Laborde Cuba
2.Sae Nakazawa Japan
3.Stéphanie Possamaï France
3.Kyung-Mi Jung South Korea
5.Lucia Morico Italy
5.Yang Xiuli China
7.Edinanci Silva Brazil
7.Houda Miled Tunisia
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+78 kg

13 September – Final

More information Position, Judoka ...
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Open class

16 September – Final

More information Position, Judoka ...
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