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Ilia Sulamanidze once more pleases the homecrowd

Ilia Sulamanidze once more pleases the homecrowd

26 Mar 2023 20:15
IJF Media team by Nicolas Messner and JudoInside
JudoHeroes & IJF Media / Copyright: www.ijf.org

Ilia Sulamanidze is a name that people are talking about more and more in the judo world. The last day of the Tbilisi Grand Slam was not an exception. Since Sulamanidze has already been an Olympic medallist and won the title at the World Judo Masters and the Portugal Grand Prix at the start of the season, we cannot get around him.

There should be no doubt that his transition to the seniors is now absorbed and that tournament after tournament he shows that he is becoming the strongman of the category. He has a good role model to follow, in the shape of Varlam Liparteliani, winner in the same category in Tashkent three weeks ago, but the latter did not compete in Tbilisi. Ultimately Sulamanidze didn't seem to need a role model today. Powerful, precise and tremendously efficient, he qualified for the final with flying colours.

For his last fight, he was opposed by Gonchigsuren Batkhuyag (MGL) who surprised the Canadian Shady Elnahas in the semi-final. Frankly speaking, nothing seemed to want to stop Ilia Sulamanidze today, but before brandishing the gold medal, it was still necessary to win it, so everything had to be done against Batkhuyag.

With what Sulamanidze had shown during the first rounds and with the support of the crowd, nothing seemed capable of stopping him winning gold number two for Georgia. The start of the final seemed to confirm that, as Sulamanidze scored a first waza-ari with an o-uchi-gari. The ippon was close but Batkhuyag landed in a disjointed way; first the lower part of the back and then the upper part. Then the physiognomy of the contest changed. It was Batkhuyag's turn to put incredible pressure on his opponent, being close to scoring as well. The last seconds were tensed and stressful for the public and of course even more for the athletes but in the end, as it was foreseen, Sulamanidze kept his waza-ari alive to win the second gold of the day for Georgia. For sure, we have to keep this name in mind; Sulamanidze will again warrant his name being mentioned in the years to come.

Nurlykhan Sharkhan (KAZ) and Shady Elnahas (CAN) battled for the first bronze medal. With a solid performance, Shady Elnahas won the bronze, after his opponent was penalised three times.

Brazil secured a medal no matter what happened next as Leonardo Goncalves (BRA) and Rafael Buzacarini (BRA) faced each other in the second match for a bronze medal. Buzacarini has been on the circuit already for several years, having participated in the last two editions of the Olympic Games, while Goncalves is trying to push him out to take the spot. Well, today the 'old' Buzacarini won with a superb morose-seoi-nage in golden score.

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