Adam Okruashvili
Georgian judoka (born 1989)
Adam Okruashvili (Georgian: ადამ ოქრუაშვილი; born 1 January 1989 in Tbilisi, Georgian SSR, Soviet Union) is a Georgian judoka.[1]
He competed at the 2012 Summer Olympics and the 2016 Olympics in the +100 kg event.[2] Okruashvili won silver in 2013 European Judo Championships and 2014 European Judo Championships.[3]
He won the gold medal in the 2015 European Games, defeating Israeli Or Sasson in the +100 kg category final.[4]
References
- ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Adam Okruashvili". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 3 December 2016.
- ^ "Medal Count - Olympic Results & Medalists". London2012.com. London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games. Archived from the original on 30 July 2012. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
- ^ "Adam Okruashvili". JudoInside.com.
- ^ "Golden Adam Okruashvili proud best of the rest". JudoInside.com. 27 June 2015.
External links
- Adam Okruashvili at the International Judo Federation
- Adam Okruashvili at JudoInside.com
- Adam Okruashvili at AllJudo.net (in French)
- Adam Okruashvili at Olympics.com
- Adam Okruashvili at Olympedia
- Adam Okruashvili at The-Sports.org
- Adam Okruashvili on Instagram
- v
- t
- e
European Judo Championships — Men's Heavyweight
1957–64: +80 kg • 1965–76: +93 kg • 1977–97: +95 kg • 1998–present: +100 kg
- 1957: Nicola Tempesta
- 1958: Henri Courtine
- 1959: Anton Geesink
- 1960: Anton Geesink
- 1961: Anton Geesink
- 1962: Anton Geesink
- 1963: Anton Geesink
- 1964: Anton Geesink
- 1965: Parnaoz Chikviladze
- 1966: Wim Ruska
- 1967: Wim Ruska
- 1968: Klaus Glahn
- 1969: Wim Ruska
- 1970: Klaus Glahn
- 1971: Wim Ruska
- 1972: Wim Ruska
- 1973: Santiago Ojeda
- 1974: Givi Onashvili
- 1975: Dzhibilo Nizharadze
- 1976: Serhiy Novikov
- 1977: Jean-Luc Rougé
- 1978: Peter Adelaar
- 1979: Jean-Luc Rougé
- 1980: Alexey Tyurin
- 1981: Grigory Verichev
- 1982: Henry Stöhr
- 1983: Khabil Biktashev
- 1984: Alexander von der Groeben
- 1985: Grigory Verichev
- 1986: Willy Wilhelm
- 1987: Mihai Cioc
- 1988: Grigory Verichev
- 1989: Rafał Kubacki
- 1990: Sergei Kosorotov
- 1991: Henry Stöhr
- 1992: Frank Möller
- 1993: David Khakhaleishvili
- 1994: David Douillet
- 1995: Sergei Kosorotov
- 1996: David Khakhaleishvili
- 1997: Selim Tataroğlu
- 1998: Tamerlan Tmenov
- 1999: Tamerlan Tmenov
- 2000: Dennis van der Geest
- 2001: Tamerlan Tmenov
- 2002: Tamerlan Tmenov
- 2003: Tamerlan Tmenov
- 2004: Selim Tataroğlu
- 2005: Alexander Mikhaylin
- 2006: Andreas Tölzer
- 2007: Teddy Riner
- 2008: Tamerlan Tmenov
- 2009: Martin Padar
- 2010: Ihar Makarau
- 2011: Teddy Riner
- 2012: Alexander Mikhaylin
- 2013: Teddy Riner
- 2014: Teddy Riner
- 2015: Adam Okruashvili
- 2016: Teddy Riner
- 2017: Guram Tushishvili
- 2018: Lukáš Krpálek
- 2019: Guram Tushishvili
- 2020: Tamerlan Bashaev
- 2021: Inal Tasoev
- 2022: Jur Spijkers
- 2023: Martti Puumalainen
- 2024: Inal Tasoev
This biographical article related to Georgian judo is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e