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Austria's luxury problem with the Borchashvili brothers

Austria's luxury problem with the Borchashvili brothers

25 Mar 2023 17:00
IJF Media team by Nicolas Messner and JudoInside
IJF Gabriela Sabau / International Judo Federation

Askerbii Gerbekov (BRN) was one of the surprises of the day. With his own momentum, Gerbekov reached the semi-finals, where he failed against Borchashvili (AUT), but not the Borchashvili we are used to. It seems that Austria now has a luxury problem.

The Borchashvili brother are gaining ground and this time Wachid Borchashvili caught the gold medal at the Grand Slam of Tbilisi. His brother Shamil, 6th in the world and a world and Olympic medallist, did not make the trip after his silver medal in Tashkent a few weeks ago. To face Wachid Borchashvili, Abylaikhan Zhubanazar (KAZ) had fought hard in his half of the draw, enduring two golden scores in the process.

After a long competition day, both competitors looked tired and that is when that little extra bit of energy can make the difference. During normal time, that little extra power was clearly on Borchashvili's side and it continued in golden score, when the Austrian judoka threw his opponent with a low seoi-otoshi for waza-ari, to win a first medal for Austria in Tbilisi and the first one for himself in a grand slam.

Orphaned from the final, Georgia still had a chance of an additional medal, thanks to Dimitri Goshilaidze, opposed by Timo Cavelius (GER) for the gain of the first bronze medal. Goshilaidze was immediately off-pace, not capable of following the rhythm imposed by Cavelius, who scored a first waza-ari with sumi-gaeshi. The German concluded a little later with a pin for ippon, after a perfectly executed turnover, following his missed yoko-tomoe-nage attempt.

Victor Sterpu (MDA) and Askerbii Gerbekov (BRN) battled for the second bronze medal of the category. The first waza-ari came from Sterpu with a massive ko-soto-gari in which Gerbekov walked on to get thrown. Gerbekov then scored a waza-ari too, with a power-driven te-waza after a sequence of attacks and counter-attacks. This match looked like it would reach the end and it did not, Victor Sterpu scoring a second advantage with another fast-moving te-waza, bronze for Victor Sterpu.

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