We know that Wandtke knows better than anybody how to outdo himself when he faces legendary judoka. He was, to everyone's surprise, the victor over the double Olympic champion, Shohei Ono (JPN), during the mixed team tournament of the Tokyo 2020 Games, throwing him twice for waza-ari. Today, it was Tsend-Ochir who paid the price for facing the Wandtke tornado and it was therefore the German who qualified for the final.
In the second half of the draw, Canadian Arthur Margelidon was expected but in the end it was Nils Stump (SUI) who made the most of his seeding, to join Wandkte in the final, after a victory against Magdiel Estrada (CUB) in the semi-final.
After one minute, each finalist had one shido. It is not that Wandtke was very precise and efficient but he was definitely more active so with 1:25 to go, a second penalty was given to Stump for passivity. Unfortunately, as mentioned, Wandtke's attacks lacked precision and were often close to being designated as false attacks, leading the referee to award the German judoka with a second penalty.
Stump rises to the top using the same technique he used to win his first Grand Slam gold, to win his second!
— Judo (@Judo) February 17, 2023
A gold medal is amazing and his flag is a big plus too! 😆🇨🇭⁰⁰#Judo #JudoTelAviv #Israel #WJT #Judokids #RoadToParis2024 #OlympicQualifier pic.twitter.com/rbpISZWXMF
When moving into golden score there were a few acrobatic escapes from both judoka but it was finally Nils Stump who scored a waza-ari with a sasae-tsuri-komi-ashi. Patience always pays off!
The first match for a bronze medal was contested by Mark Hristov (BUL) and Magdiel Estrada (CUB). Despite having two shido to his name when the golden score started, Mark Hristov won by throwing his opponent with a counterattack for waza-ari, concluded with an immobilisation for ippon. This is the first bronze medal in a grand slam for Mark Hristov.
Daniel Cargnin (BRA) and Tsend-Ochir Tsogtbaatar (MGL) battled for the second bronze medal. The least to be said is that there were a lot of medals on stage at that point. With Daniel Cargnin being world and Olympic medallist and World Judo Master, and Tsend-Ochir Tsogtbaatar being the current world champion, for sure no-one wanted to lose. However, with three penalties to his name, the Mongolian champion had to bow out and the medal went to Daniel Cargnin.