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Judo at the 1988 Summer Olympics – Men's 71 kg

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Men's 71 kg
at the Games of the XXIV Olympiad
VenueJangchung Gymnasium
Date27 September
Competitors42 from 42 nations
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Marc Alexandre  France
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Sven Loll  East Germany
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Mike Swain  United States
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Georgy Tenadze  Soviet Union
← 1984
1992 →

The men's 71 kg competition in judo at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul was held on 27 September at the Jangchung Gymnasium. The gold medal was won by Marc Alexandre of France.[1]

Results

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Pool A

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Round of 64 Round of 32 Round of 16 Quarterfinal Semifinal
 Wiesław Błach (POL) IPO
 Chong Siao Chin (HKG) E  Wiesław Błach (POL) E
 Luiz Onmura (BRA) YUK
 Luiz Onmura (BRA) E
 Rony Khawam (LIB) E  Kerrith Brown (GBR) SHI
 Kerrith Brown (GBR) IPO  Kerrith Brown (GBR) KOK
 Abdelhak Maach (MAR) E
 Kerrith Brown (GBR) YUS
 James Sibenge (ZIM) E  Anders Dahlin (SWE) E
 Hugo d'Assunção (POR) IPO  Hugo d'Assunção (POR) YUS
 Eugene McManus (IRL) E
 Hugo d'Assunção (POR) E
 Anders Dahlin (SWE) KOK
 Henry Núñez (CRC) E
 Anders Dahlin (SWE) KOK
 Kerrith Brown (GBR) R
 Lotuala N'Dombassy (ANG) R  Sven Loll (GDR) IPO
 Sven Loll (GDR) IPO  Sven Loll (GDR) IPO
 Johannes Wohlwend (LIE) R
 Sven Loll (GDR) KOK
 Steffen Stranz (FRG) R
 Steffen Stranz (FRG) IPO
 Daniel Dohou Dossou (BEN) E
 Sven Loll (GDR) YUK
 Adel Al-Najadah (KUW) E  Mike Swain (USA) R
 Glenn Beauchamp (CAN) IPO  Glenn Beauchamp (CAN) IPO
 Mohamed Moslih (YAR) E
 Glenn Beauchamp (CAN) E
 Mike Swain (USA) YUS
 Mike Swain (USA) WIP
 Nelson Ombito (KEN) E

Pool B

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Round of 64 Round of 32 Round of 16 Quarterfinal Semifinal
 Babacar Dione (SEN) E
 Bertalan Hajtós (HUN) IPO  Bertalan Hajtós (HUN) IPO
 Ju Hsiang-hung (TPE) E
 Bertalan Hajtós (HUN) R
 Marc Alexandre (FRA) YUS
 Marc Alexandre (FRA) IPO
 Ousmane Camara (MLI) R
 Marc Alexandre (FRA) YUK
 Jambalyn Ganbold (MGL) E  Joaquín Ruiz (ESP) R
 Alpaslan Ayan (TUR) IPO  Alpaslan Ayan (TUR) E
 Ezio Gamba (ITA) YUS
 Ezio Gamba (ITA) E
 Joaquín Ruiz (ESP) SHI
 Joaquín Ruiz (ESP) YUK
 Mohamed Meridja (ALG) E
 Marc Alexandre (FRA) KOK
 Fredy Torres (ESA) E  Georgy Tenadze (URS) R
 Georgy Tenadze (URS) IPO  Georgy Tenadze (URS) SOG
 Ganga Bahadur Dangol (NEP) E
 Georgy Tenadze (URS) YUK
 Toshihiko Koga (JPN) E
 Toshihiko Koga (JPN) KOK
 Park Jeong-hui (KOR) E
 Georgy Tenadze (URS) IPO
 Xiong Fengshan (CHN) IPO  Stewart Brain (AUS) E
 Jason Trevisan (MLT) E  Xiong Fengshan (CHN) E
 Stewart Brain (AUS) WAZ
 Stewart Brain (AUS) YUK
 Federico Vizcarra (MEX) E
 Federico Vizcarra (MEX) SHI
 Angelo Ruiz (PUR) E

Repechages

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Brown won the Pool A repechage, but was later stripped of his medal after testing positive for furosemide.[2]

Repechage Repechage quarterfinal Repechage semifinal Repechage final
 Lotuala N'Dombassy (ANG) E
 Johannes Wohlwend (LIE) YUK  Johannes Wohlwend (LIE) E
 Steffen Stranz (FRG) IPO
 Steffen Stranz (FRG) E
 Mike Swain (USA) YUS 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)
 Mike Swain (USA) E
 Kerrith Brown (GBR) KOK DSQ
Repechage Repechage quarterfinal Repechage semifinal Repechage final
 Ousmane Camara (MLI) E
 Bertalan Hajtós (HUN) IPO
 Bertalan Hajtós (HUN) YUS
 Joaquín Ruiz (ESP) E
 Bertalan Hajtós (HUN) E
 Georgy Tenadze (URS) IPO 3rd place, bronze medalist(s)

Final

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Final
 
  
 
 
 
 
 Sven Loll (GDR) 2nd place, silver medalist(s)
 
 
 Marc Alexandre (FRA) KOK 1st place, gold medalist(s)
 

Final classification

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Rank Name Country
1 Marc Alexandre  France
2 Sven Loll  East Germany
3T Mike Swain  United States
3T Georgy Tenadze  Soviet Union
5T Bertalan Hajtós  Hungary
5T Steffen Stranz  West Germany
7T Joaquín Ruiz  Spain
7T Johannes Wohlwend  Liechtenstein
9T Lotuala N'Dombassy  Angola
9T Ousmane Camara  Mali
11T Anders Dahlin  Sweden
11T Stewart Brain  Australia
13T Luiz Onmura  Brazil
13T Hugo d'Assunção  Portugal
13T Federico Vizcarra  Mexico
13T Glenn Beauchamp  Canada
13T Toshihiko Koga  Japan
13T Ezio Gamba  Italy
19T Wiesław Błach  Poland
19T Abdelhak Maach  Morocco
19T Eugene McManus  Ireland
19T Henry Núñez  Costa Rica
19T Angelo Ruiz  Puerto Rico
19T Daniel Dohou Dossou  Benin
19T Mohamed Moslih  North Yemen
19T Nelson Ombito  Kenya
19T Ju Hsiang-hung  Chinese Taipei
19T Xiong Fengshan  China
19T Alpaslan Ayan  Turkey
19T Mohamed Meridja  Algeria
19T Ganga Bahadur Dangol  Nepal
19T Park Jeong-hui  South Korea
33T Chong Siao Chin  Hong Kong
33T Babacar Dione  Senegal
33T James Sibenge  Zimbabwe
33T Jambalyn Ganbold  Mongolia
33T Rony Khawam  Lebanon
33T Adel Al-Najadah  Kuwait
33T Fredy Torres  El Salvador
33T Jason Trevisan  Malta
DQ Kerrith Brown  Great Britain

References

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  1. ^ "Judo at the 1988 Seoul Summer Games: Men's Lightweight". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 25 May 2018.
  2. ^ Brown steps down as British Judo Association chairman to become President of UFC partner IMMAF