Rafael Macedo (judoka)

Brazilian judoka (born 1994) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rafael Macedo (judoka)

Rafael Godoy de Macedo (born 15 September 1994 in São José dos Campos) is a Brazilian judoka.[2][3]

Quick Facts Personal information, Born ...
Rafael Macedo
Macedo in 2018
Personal information
Born (1994-09-15) 15 September 1994 (age 30)
São José dos Campos, Brazil
OccupationJudoka
Height180 cm (5 ft 11 in) [1]
Sport
CountryBrazil
SportJudo
Weight class90 kg
Achievements and titles
Olympic Games5th (2024)
World Champ.R16 (2021, 2022, 2023,
2024)
Pan American Champ. (2023)
Medal record
Men's judo
Representing  Brazil
Olympic Games
2024 ParisMixed team
World Championships
2019 TokyoMixed team
2021 BudapestMixed team
Pan American Games
2023 Santiago90 kg
2023 SantiagoMixed team
Pan American Championships
2019 LimaMixed team
2020 GuadalajaraMixed team
2023 Calgary90 kg
2023 CalgaryMixed team
2019 Lima90 kg
2020 Guadalajara90 kg
2021 Guadalajara90 kg
2017 Panama City90 kg
2024 Rio de Janeiro90 kg
World Masters
2022 Jerusalem90 kg
IJF Grand Slam
2019 Ekaterinburg90 kg
2022 Antalya90 kg
2025 Tbilisi90 kg
IJF Grand Prix
2018 Tbilisi90 kg
2017 Zagreb90 kg
2019 Perth90 kg
2022 Zagreb90 kg
2018 Cancún90 kg
2019 Montreal90 kg
2020 Tel Aviv90 kg
2023 Zagreb90 kg
World Juniors Championships
2014 Fort Lauderdale81 kg
Pan American Junior Championships
2014 San Salvador81 kg
Profile at external databases
IJF17101
JudoInside.com76969
Updated on 23 March 2025
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Career

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Perspective

He moved to Porto Alegre in 2013 and started training at Sogipa, alongside some of the best judokas in the country.[4]

In 2014, he won the gold medal at the World Judo Juniors Championships.[5]

At the 2017 Pan American Judo Championships Macedo won a bronze medal in Middleweight (90 kg) category. [6]

At the 2019 Judo Grand Slam Ekaterinburg (Grand Slam is the tournament that gives the most points in the judo rankings after the Olympics, the World Championships and the World Masters), Macedo obtained the bronze medal.[7]

At the 2019 Pan American Judo Championships, Macedo won a silver medal in the Middleweight (90 kg) category, and a gold medal at the Mixed team.[8]

At the 2019 World Judo Championships, Macedo won the first fight but was eliminated in the 2nd round. Representing Brazil in the mixed team, he obtained a bronze medal.[9][10][11]

At the 2020 Pan American Judo Championships, Macedo won a silver medal in the Middleweight (90 kg) category, and a gold medal at the Mixed team.[12]

Macedo represented Brazil at the 2020 Summer Olympics.[13][14]

At the 2021 Pan American Judo Championships, Macedo won a silver medal in the Middleweight (90 kg) category.[15]

Ranking 18th in the world, he participated in the 2021 World Judo Championships, where he won two fights and was eliminated in the round of 16 by Mongolian Gantulgyn Altanbagana.[16] In the mixed team competition, Macedo won a bronze representing Brazil.[17]

At the 2022 Judo Grand Slam Antalya, Macedo obtained the bronze medal.[18]

At the 2022 World Judo Championships held in Tashkent, Macedo debuted with victory, but was eliminated by Olympic champion Lasha Bekauri in the round of 16.[19]

At the 2022 Judo World Masters (second most important competition on the judo circuit, after the World Championship), Macedo won the bronze medal. [20]

Ranking 11th in the world rankings in the 90kg judo category, Macedo competed in the 2023 World Judo Championships in Doha, Qatar. He won two fights, one of them against Krisztián Tóth, a Hungarian bronze medalist at the Olympics, but was eliminated in the round of 16 by Russian Mansur Lorsanov.[21]

At the 2023 Pan American-Oceania Judo Championships held in Calgary, Canada, he won three fights by ippon and won, for the first time, the gold medal in the continental competition after obtaining silver in three previous finals.[22]

At the 2023 Pan American Games, Macedo reached the final against Cuban Ivan Felipe Silva Morales and even forced two punishments on his opponent. Macedo was better in the fight, but, in an attempt to enter, he placed his head on the ground in a movement interpreted by the referee as irregular (hansoku-make, which is using the head as a defense of an entrance) and was disqualified, obtaining the silver medal.[23][24] He also obtained silver in the Brazilian mixed team.[25]

At the 2024 Pan American-Oceania Judo Championships, he won a bronze medal.[26]

At the 2024 World Judo Championships, Macedo reached the round of 16 of the competition for the fourth time in a row, where he was eliminated by the Japanese Goki Tajima, who ended up being the tournament champion.[27]

At the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris, Macedo reached the fight to compete for the bronze medal. In the bout, he suffered three shido (penalties). The referee's decision to give a third shido, which disqualified him as per judo rules, has been subject to criticism in his home country. Macedo finished in 5th place in the men's 90 kg event.[28] A few days later, the Brazilian team won one of the two bronze medals in the mixed team event, thus earning Macedo his first olympic medal.[29]

References

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