Judo at the 2010 Asian Games – Men's 81 kg
Appearance
Men's 81 kg at the 2010 Asian Games | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Venue | Huagong Gymnasium | |||||||||
Date | 14 November 2010 | |||||||||
Competitors | 18 from 18 nations | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
Judo at the 2010 Asian Games | ||
---|---|---|
Men | Women | |
60 kg | 48 kg | |
66 kg | 52 kg | |
73 kg | 57 kg | |
81 kg | 63 kg | |
90 kg | 70 kg | |
100 kg | 78 kg | |
+100 kg | +78 kg | |
open | open | |
The men's 81 kilograms (half middleweight) competition at the 2010 Asian Games in Guangzhou was held on 14 November at the Huagong Gymnasium.
Schedule
[edit]All times are China Standard Time (UTC+08:00)
Date | Time | Event |
---|---|---|
Sunday, 14 November 2010 | 10:00 | Preliminary 1 |
10:00 | Preliminary 2 | |
10:00 | Quarterfinals | |
15:00 | Final of repechage | |
15:00 | Final of table | |
15:00 | Finals |
Results
[edit]Main bracket
[edit]Final
[edit]Gold medal | |||
Kim Jae-bum (KOR) | 110 | ||
Shokir Muminov (UZB) | 000 |
Top half
[edit]Preliminary 1 | Preliminary 2 | Quarterfinals | Final of table | ||||||||||||
Kim Jae-bum (KOR) | 100 | ||||||||||||||
John Baylon (PHI) | 000 | ||||||||||||||
Kim Jae-bum (KOR) | 100 | ||||||||||||||
Waleed Hanafi (QAT) | 000 | ||||||||||||||
Waleed Hanafi (QAT) | 001 | ||||||||||||||
Naif Ammar (KSA) | 000 | ||||||||||||||
Kim Jae-bum (KOR) | 001 | ||||||||||||||
Otgonbaataryn Uuganbaatar (MGL) | 000 | ||||||||||||||
Si Rijigawa (CHN) | 111 | ||||||||||||||
Watcharin Jampawong (THA) | 000 | Meshal Sheaibi (IOC) | 000 | ||||||||||||
Meshal Sheaibi (IOC) | 002 | Si Rijigawa (CHN) | 000 | ||||||||||||
Otgonbaataryn Uuganbaatar (MGL) | 001 | ||||||||||||||
Otgonbaataryn Uuganbaatar (MGL) | 101 | ||||||||||||||
Alimbek Dzhusupov (KGZ) | 001 |
Bottom half
[edit]Preliminary 1 | Preliminary 2 | Quarterfinals | Final of table | ||||||||||||
Shokir Muminov (UZB) | 110 | ||||||||||||||
Röwşen Amandurdyýew (TKM) | 100 | Röwşen Amandurdyýew (TKM) | 000 | ||||||||||||
Hussein Ali (IRQ) | 000 | Shokir Muminov (UZB) | 010 | ||||||||||||
Mohammad Jamali (IRI) | 000 | ||||||||||||||
Mohammad Jamali (IRI) | 100 | ||||||||||||||
Farhod Rahimov (TJK) | 010 | ||||||||||||||
Shokir Muminov (UZB) | 000 | ||||||||||||||
Islam Bozbayev (KAZ) | 000 | ||||||||||||||
Masahiro Takamatsu (JPN) | 100 | ||||||||||||||
Lê Khắc Nhân (VIE) | 000 | ||||||||||||||
Masahiro Takamatsu (JPN) | 000 | ||||||||||||||
Islam Bozbayev (KAZ) | 100 | ||||||||||||||
Islam Bozbayev (KAZ) | 100 | ||||||||||||||
Georges Merheb (LIB) | 000 |
Repechage
[edit]Final of repechage | Bronze medals | |||||
Waleed Hanafi (QAT) | 000 | Si Rijigawa (CHN) | 010 | |||
Si Rijigawa (CHN) | 101 | Islam Bozbayev (KAZ) | 100 | |||
Mohammad Jamali (IRI) | 000 | Masahiro Takamatsu (JPN) | 100 | |||
Masahiro Takamatsu (JPN) | 100 | Otgonbaataryn Uuganbaatar (MGL) | 001 | |||
- Shokir Muminov of Uzbekistan originally won the silver medal, but was disqualified after he tested positive for Methylhexanamine. Masahiro Takamatsu and Islam Bozbayev were raised to joint second and took silver medals.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ "Uzbek stripped of silver medal for doping". Reuters India. 19 November 2010. Archived from the original on July 11, 2012. Retrieved 29 May 2014.