In the second part of the draw, Vazha Margvelashvili (GEO), did not worry about minor details and won through to find Safarov in the final.
With two explosive judoka on the tatami, the final promised to be a firework of techniques and this was actually the case. Safarov was the first to score with a combination of o-soto-gari and tani-otoshi but Margvelashvili scored as well to keep the flame alive. It was time for golden score. 1 minute and 15 seconds into extra time, Margvelashvili doubled his score with a second waza-ari from a superb yoko-tomoe-nage. We said that it would be explosive and it was.
Vazha Margvelashvili sends love and a gold medal to Georgia in #JudoTelAviv! 🥇🇬🇪⁰⁰#Judo #JudoTelAviv #Israel #WJT #RoadToParis2024 #OlympicQualifier pic.twitter.com/FHRd0exhLx
— Judo (@Judo) February 16, 2023
Baruch Shmailov (ISR) still had a chance to get on the podium as he faced Alberto Gaitero Martin (ESP) for the bronze medal. Unfortunately for Shmailov, as he applied a kansetsu-waza technique in a standing position, combined with a throwing technique, he was disqualified.
Israel could still take a bronze medal, with Tal Flicker (ISR) opposing Lasha Nadiradze (GEO) for the second medal. After more than 5 minutes of golden score both athletes were still looking for the slightest opportunity to score. On one side Tal Flicker was looking to end the match with left o-soto-gari on the rear leg and right-seoi-nage, Lasha Nadiradze was looking for the counterattack and it was the Georgian who won with a very low yoko-guruma for waza-ari. It was bronze for newcomer Lasha Nadiradze.