1977 European Judo Championships

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1977
Judo
Judo
European Judo Championships
LocationWest Germany Ludwigshafen, West Germany
Dates11–15 May 1977
Competition at external databases
LinksJudoInside

The 1977 European Judo Championships were the 26th edition of the European Judo Championships, and were held in Ludwigshafen, West Germany from 11 to 15 May 1977. Championships were subdivided into eight individual competitions, and a separate team competition. The separate European Women's Judo Championships were held in Arlon, Belgium, in October of the same year.

Medal overview[edit]

Individual[edit]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
60 kg Soviet UnionEvgeny Pogorelov FranceGuy Le Baupin RomaniaArpad Szabo[1]
East GermanyReinhardt Arndt
65 kg FranceYves Delvingt HungaryFerenc Szabó East GermanyTorsten Reißmann
SwedenWolfgang Biedron
71 kg Soviet UnionVladimir Nevzorov PolandMarian Talaj United KingdomNeil Adams
East GermanyGünter Krüger
78 kg PolandAdam Adamczyk East GermanyHarald Heinke West GermanyFred Marhenke
FranceBernard Choullouyan
86 kg Soviet UnionAlexey Volosov SwitzerlandJürgen Roethlisberger PolandZbigniew Bielawski
East GermanyDetlef Ultsch
95 kg East GermanyDietmar Lorenz BelgiumRobert Van De Walle West GermanyArthur Schnabel
United KingdomPaul Radburn
95+ kg FranceJean-Luc Rougé Soviet UnionDzhibilo Nizharadze NetherlandsPeter Adelaar
East GermanyWolfgang Zueckschwerdt
Open class FranceAngelo Parisi East GermanyWolfgang Zueckschwerdt BelgiumRobert Van De Walle
Soviet UnionShota Chochishvili

Teams[edit]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Team Soviet Union Soviet team:

Evgeny Pogorelov
Amiran Obgaidze
Vladimir Nevzorov
Dilar Khabuliani
Alexey Volosov
Tengiz Khubuluri
Dzhibilo Nizharadze
Oleg Zurabiani
Valery Dvoinikov
Shota Chochishvili

France French team:

Alain Veret
Yves Delvingt
Patrick Vial
Jean-Pierre Gibert
Gérard Decherchi
Jean-Luc Rougé
Roger Hairabedian
Bernard Tchoullouyan

East Germany East German team:

Romania Romanian team:

Medal table[edit]

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 France (FRA)3115
 Soviet Union (URS)3115
3 East Germany (DDR)1258
4 Poland (POL)1113
5 Belgium (BEL)0112
6 Hungary (HUN)0101
  Switzerland (SUI)0101
8 Great Britain (GBR)0022
 West Germany (FRG)0022
10 Netherlands (NED)0011
 Romania (ROM)0011
 Sweden (SWE)0011
Totals (12 entries)881632

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Romane de Judo". Archived from the original on 29 December 2010. Retrieved 10 February 2012.

External links[edit]