On this boulevard, liberated by the elimination of the world champion, it was the Austrian Aaron Fara who made the strongest impression, winning against Dzhafar Kostoev (UAE) in the semi-finals but what delighted the audience and judo fans was the qualification for the final of Varlam Liparteliani (GEO). Although one of the top seeds in the category, it had been months since we had seen the world and Olympic medallist at such a party.
At 34, Liparteliani proved today that he still has the motivation and the ability to compete at the highest level. In the semi-final, against the Japanese Kotaro Ueoka, although led by a waza-ari that was scored after a only few seconds, he managed to pick up the score and hold Ueoka in an acrobatic position on the floor. Well done to the artist!
The final promised to be explosive, Fara having showed incredible throwing capabilities since the early morning, while Liparteliani could hold anyone down. Fara quickly showed that he had the physical advantage, but it's not enough to be stronger when you compete against someone of the calibre of the Georgian champion.
The gold medal for Georgia! 🥇🇬🇪
— Judo (@Judo) March 5, 2023
Bravo, Liparteliani 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼#JudoTashkent #Judo #Uzbekistan #Sport #Olympics #RoadToParis2024 #OlympicQualifiers #Tashkent pic.twitter.com/paOLvoysEe
It’s also often when Liparteliani seems to be most under pressure that he drops under an opponent as he did in Tashkent, with a brilliant drive, the head under the armpit, in a form of kata-guruma. He threw Fara for waza-ari and pinned him down for ippon. Liparteliani is stil here and well here.
The first match for a bronze medal saw Daniel Eich (SUI) and Kotaro Ueoka (JPN) face off for a place on the podium. At the beginning of the match, both athletes had their warning, since each of them showed throwing capacity that for the moment was not successful, even if they were dangerous. Ueoka showed some discomfort as Eich was getting closer but within the blink of an eye, he executed a perfect right-handed seoi-nage for ippon, with the correct kuzushi and a precise tsurite (lifting hand) before concluding in style. It was bronze for Kotaro Ueoka.
Nurlykhan Sharkhan (KAZ) and Dzhafar Kostoev (UAE) completed the athletes qualified for the final block. Kostoev was immediately to action, scoring a waza-ari with a beautiful and fast makikomi. He double the score a little later with exactly the same technique for a clear victory. The second bronze medal was for Dzhafar Kostoev.