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Lucy Renshall books sixth Grand Slam victory

Lucy Renshall books sixth Grand Slam victory

25 Mar 2023 17:05
IJF Media team by Nicolas Messner and JudoInside
IJF Gabriela Sabau / International Judo Federation

Lucy Renshall of Great Britain is back on the highest podium. Former World number one Renshall defeated Laura Fazliu (KOS ) in the U63kg final of the Grand Slam in Tbilisi.

Renshall being second in the world ranking and Fazliu, 11th, Renshall seemed to have a little advantage but the match was pretty balanced. They both had a go, both trying to score and look for opportunities on the floor. It was only in the last seconds that a shido was given to each of the judoka. In golden score, Fazliu was awarded a second penalty, putting her under pressure. Once again, those penalties didn't really show the openness of this final that was really interesting to follow. A slight difference in the intention to throw offered Renshall the victory when Fazliu was penalised a third time. To make a great final, you need two judoka who are willing to win. Today there was no score, but as a matter of fact, it was a good match. It was gold for Renshall, rewarding her consistency, and a third silver for Kosovo. For Renshall it was a comeback on the podium after she won bronze in 2018 in Tbilisi but lost her two medal contests in 2019 and 2021 and finished fifth twice.

Paris winner Gili Sharir (ISR) was disqualified from the start, after applying tension to her opponent's arm while trying to throw her, which is completely prohibited. Katharina Haecker (AUS) had a faultless performance and reached the semi-final, but lost out to Fazliu.

Katharina Haecker (AUS) faced Inbal Shemesh (ISR) in the first match for a bronze medal. Both competitors were quickly penalised for passivity, even if Haecker showed more power, which pushed Shemesh to receive a second shido later on. With less than a minute to go, Haekcer transformed that dominance into a first waza-ari with a te-waza technique. A few seconds later, she concluded with an ippon-seoi-nage combined with a change of direction and a power drive to push Shemesh backwards on to her back for ippon. The Israeli judoka tried to counter-attack but it was too late and Haecker added a second grand slam bronze medal to her prize list.

Great Britain had a second medal chance with Gemma Howell (GBR), qualified for the second bronze medal contest, against Angelika Szymanska (POL). Howell was penalised with a first shido for breaking the kumi-kata. The opposition of stance, Howell being right-handed and Szymanska, left-handed, visibly bothered both competitors but Howell more than her opponent and the British athlete was penalised a second time. Then it was time for golden score. At almost thirty seconds into the extra-time, Angelika Szymanska drove Gemma Howell to the floor with a powerful te-waza for waza-ari and so the bronze medal was hers and Poland’s.

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