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Hifumi Abe superior in Antalya as useful practise for Olympics

Hifumi Abe superior in Antalya as useful practise for Olympics

29 Mar 2024 19:30
IJF Media team by Nicolas Messner and JudoInside
Tamara Kulumbegashvili - IJF

Olympic Champion Hifumi Abe appeared more than ever as the favourite to succeed himself this summer in Paris. At the Grand Slam in Antalya there was no doubt that the overwhelming favourite would be Hifumi Abe (JPN). The question that all judo fans were asking themselves was how he would manage to qualify for the final and therefore whether anyone would be able to challenge him for supremacy in the category.

Hifumi Abe appeared in great shape and in full possession of his means, taking advantage of the slightest error from his opponents to throw them hard, quickly and broadly onto their backs with control. Perhaps the most dangerous and challenging contest for him was the semi-final against the Frenchman Walide Khyar, whose determination and fighting spirit we know. The first minutes of the match were what we expected from Khyar: offensive, always moving forward, pushing and seeking to destabilise. That plan did not last and it was mid-fight that the magician Abe fully committed to his first strong attack. A sode-tsuri-komi-goshi combined with a two-step o-soto-gari catapulted Walide Khyar into the air for a far-from-smooth landing on his back. The boss was indeed Abe.

Nurali Emomali (TJK) continued with his momentum being the posterboy for the final against Hifumi Abe. Imitating his sister once again, who had just won before him, Hifumi Abe did not give a chance to his valiant opponent. After being penalised with a shido, Abe closed the gap with Emomali, engaging his leg for a tremendous spinning o-uchi-gari that landed the Tajik judoka flat on his back for ippon. Today Hifumi was in incredible form and when he’s like that, nothing and no-one can stop him.

Tajikistan, a country preparing to host the first grand slam in its history in just a few weeks from now, did well by placing a second judoka in the final block. Obid Dzhebov (TJK) qualified to fight against Muhammed Demiral (TUR) in the first match for a bronze medal. It went quite fast. After a couple of attacks that proved to be dangerous, Muhammed Demiral was just coming out of an uchi-mata attempt and got caught with a counter-attack for a clear ippon. The bronze medal was for Obid Dzhebov.

The second contest for a bronze medal pitted two European judoka, David Garcia Torne (ESP) and Walide Khyar (FRA), against each other. What an explosive contest it was! The first waza-ari went to Garcia Torne with an acrobatic combination of o-uchi-gari and ko-soto-gari on the other side but the Spaniard did not get too much time to enjoy it as he was thrown for ippon a few seconds later. The bronze medal was for Walide Khyar.