1965 European Judo Championships

The 1965 European Judo Championships were the 14th edition of the European Judo Championships, and were held in Madrid, Spain, on 18 May 1965. The Championships were held in two separate categories: amateur (7 events,) professional (6 events.) Amateur contests were subdivided into 6 individual competitions, and a separate team competition. As the Soviet and other Socialist judokas were competing on a strictly non-profit basis, they were allowed to compete both professionally, and as amateurs. As before, more than one representative of a single national team were allowed to qualify for participation in each event.

1965 European Judo Championships
VenuePalacio de Deportes
Location Madrid
DatesApril 23-24

Medal overview

Amateurs

Event Gold Silver Bronze
63 kg  Oleg Stepanov  Alexey Ilyushin  Serge Feist
 Karl Reisinger
70 kg  André Bourreau  Günther Wiesner  Manfred Penz
 Joachim Schröder
80 kg  Wolfgang Hofmann  Lionel Grossain  Anatoli Bondarenko
 Otto Smirat
93 kg  Ansor Kibrokachvili  Yves Reymond  Jacques Le Berre
 Jan Snijders
93+ kg  Herbert Niemann  Parnaos Zhikviladze  Horst Lieder
 Wim Ruska
Open class  Anzor Kiknadze  Wim Ruska  Jean-Pierre Dessailly
 Anatoli Saunin

Amateur medal table

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Soviet Union (URS)3227
2 France (FRA)1236
3 East Germany (GDR)1124
4 West Germany (FRG)1012
5 Netherlands (NED)0123
6 Austria (AUT)0022
Totals (6 nations)661224

Professionals

Event Gold Silver Bronze
63 kg  Alexey Ilyushin  Sergey Suslin  Kazimierz Jaremczak
 Anton Linskens
70 kg  Vladimir Kuspish  Brian Jacks  Salvador Álvarez
 Michal Vachun
80 kg  Martin Poglajen  Patrick Clement  Ray Ross
 Gérard Buc
93 kg  Anatoly Yudin  Joop Gouweleeuw  Anthony Sweeney
 Karl Nitz
93+ kg  Parnaoz Chikviladze  Guenther Monczyk  Anton Geesink
 Alphonse Lemoine
Open class  Alfred Meier  Syd Hoare  Anton Geesink
 Jacques Noris

Professional medal table

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Soviet Union (URS)4105
2 Netherlands (NED)1135
3 West Germany (FRG)1102
4 Great Britain (GBR)0224
5 France (FRA)0134
6 Czechoslovakia (TCH)0011
 East Germany (GDR)0011
 Poland (POL)0011
 Spain (ESP)0011
Totals (9 nations)661224

Teams

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Team  Soviet team:

Aron Bogolyubov
Anatoli Bondarenko
Anzor Kiknadze
Anzor Kibrotsashvili
Oleg Stepanov

 Dutch team:

Anton Geesink
Joop Gouweleeuw
Martin Poglajen
Willem Ruska
Peter Snijders

 French team:

André Bourreau
Serge Feist
Georges Gress
Lionel Grossain
Jacques Le Berre


 East German team:
Paul Barth
Helmut Howiller
Herbert Niemann
Otto Smirat
Günther Wiesner

Overall medal table

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Soviet Union (URS)73212
2 West Germany (FRG)2114
3 France (FRA)13610
4 Netherlands (NED)1258
5 East Germany (GDR)1135
6 Great Britain (GBR)0224
7 Austria (AUT)0022
8 Czechoslovakia (TCH)0011
 Poland (POL)0011
 Spain (ESP)0011
Totals (10 nations)12122448

References


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