WHO TO LOOK AT TOMORROW ON THE THIRD DAY OF COMPETITION
The season-launching Tunis Grand Prix will reach its conclusion on Sunday with five titles up for grabs as Olympic and world medallists compete for the first time in Tunisia.

One to watch: Robert FLORENTINO (DOM) -90kg

Junior World Championships silver medallist Robert FLORENTINO (DOM) opens his season on the final day of Grand Prix action in Tunis. The 20-year-old is based in Valencia, Spain, in order to compete regularly throughout Europe and to develop his judo as he steps up full-time to the senior level this year. "I started judo when I was seven years old after trying out boxing and baseball," said FLORENTINO, his country's first ever male medallist at a World Championships.

"At the age of 17 I felt that judo would become my full-time career, this was when I really felt that I could capture medals at top events for my country.

"My dream is to win the Olympic Games. I am committed to this and will do everything I can to be there in Japan at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games."

FLORENTINO faces Jamal PETGRAVE (GBR) in the -90kg first round on Sunday morning.

WOMEN
-78kg: World number nine Karen STEVENSON (NED) is the number one seed in the women's -78kg category. STEVENSON captured a brace of Grand Prix medals last year with silver in Hohhot and bronze in Cancun and ended her year on a high by winning bronze at the invite-only World Judo Masters. Anastasiya TURCHYN (UKR) won on the Grand Prix stage twice in 2017 with victories in Tashkent and Tbilisi and the rangy world number 14 can trouble anyone with her uchi-mata. Junior European champion Klara APOTEKAR Klara (SLO) will also aim to be in medal contention as Slovenia unleash their top judoka at the season opener in Africa.

+78kg: European champion Maryna SLUTSKAYA (BLR) opened her Grand Prix gold medal account by triumphing in Tbilisi last year and the world number eight will start as the favourite in Tunis. Ekaterinburg Grand Slam bronze medallist SLUTSKAYA has Rio 2016 Olympic bronze medallist Anamari VELENSEK (SLO) for company in the women's heavyweight category as the Slovenian is stepping onto the mat at +78kg for only the third time having won in Tashkent and scooped bronze in Cancun since moving up from -78kg after the Games. Openweight Worlds bronze medallist and home hero Nihel CHEIKH ROUHOU Nihel (TUN) will be one of her country's top medal hopes and will take to the tatami on Sunday.

MEN
-90kg: Former world silver medallist and Zagreb Grand Prix winner TOTH Krisztian (HUN) will be the man to watch in the -90kg category. The world number five finished fifth at the World Judo Masters in December and jumps right back into action as he aims for a highly-successful road to Baku 2018 and Tokyo 2020. Baku Grand Slam winner Islam BOZBAYEV (KAZ) has shown that he has the quality to win a major IJF event and now has the challenge of repeating that on a regular basis. Junior world silver medallist Robert FLORENTINO (DOM) is a young judoka with high hopes and the 20-year-old could make an impression in his third Grand Prix start.

-100kg: Tashkent Grand Prix winner Ramadan DARWISH (EGY) has medalled at every level on the IJF World Judo Tour and will be bidding for his fifth Grand Prix title when he dons his judogi on Sunday. The 29-year-old, who is ranked 13th in the world, has 11 Grand Prix medals among his collection and will be the favourite to capture gold on day three. Hong Kong Asian Open winner Benjamin FLETCHER (IRL) has followed his sister Megan in switching allegiance from Great Britain to Ireland and British Judo's Male Senior Player of the Year for 2017 will be guaranteed more competitions this year and more opportunities for honours and vital World Ranking List points.

+100kg: In the absence of Teddy Riner (FRA - Rio Olympic Champion in +100kg) and Lukas KRPALEK (CZE - Rio 2016 Olympic champion in -100kg) the favorite of the tournament will be former world bronze medallist Faicel JABALLAH (TUN), who is one of the most experienced judoka in the competition and could be lifted by home advantage.

See also
Kata Paris 2025
A Day of Precision

08. Nov. 2025 / After five days of rare intensity during the Paris ...

Islamic Games 2025
Judo Energises at the 2025 Islamic Solidarity Games

08. Nov. 2025 / The 2025 Islamic Solidarity Games are in full swing ...

Kata Paris 2025
Where Movement Becomes Memory

08. Nov. 2025 / Where Movement Becomes Memory

IBSA Judo
IBSA Judo Asian Championships, Day 2

08. Nov. 2025 / Day 2 in Astana was as explosive as expected, the heavyweights ...

Kata Paris 2025
A Three-Tier Vision for a Broader Judo Experience

08. Nov. 2025 / Ahead of the 2025 World Kata Championships in Paris, ...

Kata
Koshiki-no-kata: The Echo of Armour

08. Nov. 2025 / It is an historic first for the Koshiki-no-kata; for ...

History
The Man Who Opened the Way

08. Nov. 2025 / On 23rd October 1975, in Vienna, a young French judoka ...

Athlete Stories
Arthur Melo (BRA): Character Wins Over Adversity

08. Nov. 2025 / Natural disasters affect millions of us the world over ...

Veterans Paris 2025
A Glorious Finale for Women in Paris

07. Nov. 2025 / The final day of the Paris World Judo Championships ...

IBSA Judo
IBSA Judo Asian Championships Results, Day One

07. Nov. 2025 / Ippon judo was the name of the game on day one in Astana, ...

Veterans Paris 2025
Paris Shines as a Global Benchmark

07. Nov. 2025 / As the final medals were awarded and the last ippons ...

Islamic Games 2025
Judo at Riyadh 2025 Starts to Take Shape

07. Nov. 2025 / In the heart of Riyadh, the judo community witnessed ...

IBSA Judo
Judo Conversations Guide the Ethos in Astana

07. Nov. 2025 / Ahead of the IBSA Judo Asian Championships, 7th to ...

INTERVIEW EXPRESS
Shishime Ai (JPN)

08. Jun. 2018 / The next reigning world champion to be invited to answer ...

News
5 Key Takeaways from judo’s first Tokyo 2020 qualifier

06. Jun. 2018 / Highlights from Hohhot Grand Prix 2018

VIDEO
Judo for the World in Iran

07. Jun. 2018 / In April 2018, the International Judo Federation and ...

Meeting
JUDO: A Beneficial Cause

07. Jun. 2018 / 'Society should believe in sport as a beneficial cause ...