We can begin by taking a look at the journey of Dena Pohl (GER). She’s developing a habit, a very good one for her but one not so happily welcomed by the others. In Tashkent a few weeks ago she knocked out number one seed Lucy Renshall (GBR) and it came as a big surprise to everyone, Dena Pohl included. In Tbilisi she has knocked out the pool leader in her quarter again, this time Andreja Leski (SLO). Leski had attacked with a big ken-ken-uchi-mata but her throwing leg came so high that it turned her hip and Pohl was able to counter cleanly for ippon.
Final, Catherine Beauchemin-Pinard (CAN) vs Angelika Szymanska (POL)

Pohl has competed at 12 grand slams and is yet to reach a podium but her ability to fight with and beat the best is already clear. Once she develops the consistency to hold that top line for a complete competition day, she will be very dangerous indeed. Today the third round was her pitfall as she was defeated by Jing Tang (CHN) and couldn't reach the final block but let's keep an eye on her.

Gold medallist, Catherine Beauchemin-Pinard (CAN)

We can then continue with the number one seed, Catherine Beauchemin-Pinard. After her silver medal in Baku in February and a disappointing Paris Grand Slam, earlier that month, the Canadian judoka has had ups and downs. World number one in the category and usually very consistent in her results, she wanted to show that Paris was just an accident and she demonstrated it in the best possible way by qualifying for the semi-final after wins against Sarai Padilla Guerrero (ESP), Gaetane Deberdt (FRA) and the veteran Ketleyn Quadros (BRA) with a superb seoi-otoshi for ippon. In the semi-final, she faced Jing Tang, who was not seeded but had a very good run through the preliminaries.

In the second half of the draw, we followed Laura Fazliu (KOS) and Katharina Haecker (AUS) closely. For the first one, everything went well and she reached the semi-final without too much difficulty. For Haecker things were a little more complicated. After a bye, she had a first win against Cristina Cabana Perez (ESP) but then lost to Jisu Kim (KOR), who herself lost against last year's European bronze medallist, Angelika Szymanska (POL). Beauchemin-Pinard vs Jing Tang and Fazliu vs Szymanska would determine the poster for the final. Eventually it was Beauchemin-Pinard and Szymanska who qualified for the final.

Bronze medal contest, Joanne Lieshout (NED) vs Laura Fazliu (KOS)

After a rather balanced first 3 minutes of the final, the last minute was fast approaching, when Beauchemin-Pinard managed to launch her seoi-otoshi for an important waza-ari. The contest was not over though as it was immediately followed, Szymanska nearly catching the Canadian judoka with a sankaku-jime combined with an armlock. Would she be able to unfold the arm with only a few seconds left? Everyone was holding their breath but Beauchemin-Pinard escaped to celebrate a new victory, comforting her world number one position.

The first bronze medal contest saw Joanne Van Lieshout (NED) and Laura Fazliu (KOS) stepping on to the tatami to determine the last judoka on the podium. Van Lieshout had looked dominant against Krssakova (AUT) and Zachova (CZE) in th preliminaries but slipped up against the Chinese athlete, foiling a potentially robust run to the final as she had planned. The bronze medal contest began badly also for Van Lieshout who was thrown for waza-ari but as the end of the contest approached the Dutch judoka took her chance to turn over Laura Fazliu and pinned her down for ippon. The bronze medal was therefore assigned to Joanne Van Lieshout.

Bronze medal contest, Jisu Kim (KOR) vs Jing Tang (CHN)

The second bronze medal contest opposed Jisu Kim (KOR) and Jing Tang (CHN). It was an interesting contest indeed with both judoka trying their best to throw or conclude on the floor. As the golden score period approached, Tang had to work carefully having been penalised twice for small infringements. This was what made the difference in the end, when she offered a false attack a third time delivering the victory to Jisu Kim. Tang was close to winning but too many small mistakes cost her the medal. If she corrects these, she will be dangerous for many judoka.

Medals, cheques and flowers were presented by Mr Michael Tamura, IJF Sport Director, and Mr Elguja Berishvili, first vice president of the Georgian National Olympic Committee

Bronze Medal Fights (-63 kg)

See also