Agbegnenou secures tearful world judo hat-trick

Published August 29, 2019
TOKYO: France’s Clarisse Agbegnenou (L) and Taipei’s Liao Yu-jung compete during their women’s under 63kg match at the World Judo Championships on Wednesday.—Reuters
TOKYO: France’s Clarisse Agbegnenou (L) and Taipei’s Liao Yu-jung compete during their women’s under 63kg match at the World Judo Championships on Wednesday.—Reuters

TOKYO: France’s Clarisse Agbegnenou survived a huge scare against Japan’s Miku Tashiro to capture an emotional fourth world judo title on Wednesday and fourth overall after a ferocious women’s 63-kilogram final.

Israel’s Sagi Muki powered to a surprise victory in the men’s 81-kilo class at Tokyo’s iconic Budokan, venue for next summer’s Olympic Games.

However, it was the women’s half-middleweights who stole the show on day four of the Tokyo 2020 test event.

Agbegnenou, the 2016 Rio Olympic silver medallist, took an 8-1 record over Tashiro into the final, a repeat of last year’s championship match in Baku, but had to dig deep to bag her third successive world title.

Feeding off the deafening noise of the home crowd, the plucky Tashiro took Agbegnenou out of her comfort zone with a flurry of attacks in a marathon 11-minute match.

Tashiro looked on the cusp of victory when she hooked her opponent’s leg, only to hesitate — and with lightning speed Agbegnenou flipped the Japanese fighter onto her back as both women flopped onto the mat exhausted and in tears.

Agbegnenou gave Tashiro the thumbs up to acknowledge her bravery in a barnstorming final before the two rivals shared a warm embrace.

“That was very, very tough,” said Agbegnenou. “I’m just happy to have pulled it out. It was guts that got me through in the end.

“When I started out in judo, I could never have imagined I would be a four-time world champion,” added the 26-year-old.

“If you had told me ‘Clarisse, you will be world champion once’ then maybe. But four times, I would have said you were crazy.”

Tashiro, who had beaten Slovenia’s Olympic champion Tina Trstenjak in the semi-finals, looked inconsolable after failing to improve on her 2018 silver medal.

Germany’s Martyna Trajdos and Dutchwoman Juul Franssen took bronze medals.

World No.2 Muki pummelled Belgium’s European champion Matthias Casse in the men’s 81-kilo final, rolling him onto his back with a blistering power move for an ippon victory.

Casse had upset Iran’s defending champion Saeid Mollaei in the semi-finals but was no match for Muki, who was overcome with emotion at winning gold.

Canada’s Antoine Valois-Fortier and Luka Maisuradze of Georgia picked up bronze medals.

Japan tops the medals table after Joshiro Maruyama, Uta Abe and Shohei Ono bagged golds earlier in the week.

The 2020 Olympic hosts also dominated the 2018 world championships in Baku, capturing eight of the 15 gold medals available.

Published in Dawn, August 29th, 2019

Opinion

Editorial

Paying the price
Updated 18 Apr, 2025

Paying the price

Pakistan is trapped in a relentless cycle of climate volatility.
Political solution
18 Apr, 2025

Political solution

THOUGH the BNP-M may have ended its 20-day protest sit-in outside Quetta on Wednesday, the core issues affecting...
Grave desecration
18 Apr, 2025

Grave desecration

THE desecration of 85 Muslim graves at a cemetery in Hertfordshire in the UK is a distressing act that deserves the...
Double-edged sword
Updated 17 Apr, 2025

Double-edged sword

While remittances have provided critical support to current account, they have also been a double-edged sword.
Besieged people
17 Apr, 2025

Besieged people

DESPITE all the talk about becoming a ‘hard’ state, Pakistan is still looking incredibly soft when it comes to...
Deadly zealotry
Updated 17 Apr, 2025

Deadly zealotry

Murdering people and attacking firms is indefensible and only besmirches the Palestinian cause.