1967 European Judo Championships

1967
Judo
Judo
European Judo Championships
LocationItaly Rome, Italy
Dates11–13 May 1967
Competition at external databases
LinksJudoInside
← Luxembourg 1966
Lausanne 1968 →

The 1967 European Judo Championships were the 16th edition of the European Judo Championships, and were held in Rome, Italy from 11 to 13 May 1967. Championships were subdivided into six individual competitions, and a separate team competition.[1]

Medal overview

Individual

Event Gold Silver Bronze
63 kg Soviet UnionSergey Suslin BelgiumGustaaf Lauwereins United KingdomGeorge Glass
Soviet UnionNickolay Kozitsky
70 kg FranceArmand Desmet NetherlandsEddy van der Pol East GermanyJoachim Schroeder
NetherlandsTonny Jonkman
80 kg Soviet UnionVladimir Pokataev United KingdomGeorge Kerr United KingdomBrian Jacks
FrancePatrick Clement
93 kg West GermanyPeter Herrmann FrancePierre Albertini United KingdomRay Ross
Soviet UnionBoris Mischenko
93+ kg NetherlandsWillem Ruska Soviet UnionAnzor Kibrotsashvili East GermanyKlaus Hennig
Soviet UnionVasily Usik
Open class NetherlandsAnton Geesink Soviet UnionAnzor Kiknadze NetherlandsWillem Ruska
East GermanyKlaus Hennig

Teams

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Team East Germany East German team:

Harry Utzat
Gerd Egger
Ferdinand Miebach
Peter Herrmann
Klaus Glahn

France French team:

Serge Feist
Armand Desmet
Patrick Clément
Pierre Albertini
Georges Gress

Soviet Union Soviet team:

Sergey Suslin
Oleg Stepanov
Anatoli Bondarenko
Anatoly Yudin
Anzor Kiknadze


Netherlands Dutch team:
Jan Gietelinck
Tony Jonkman
Martin Poglajen
Peter Snijders
Anton Geesink

Medal table

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Soviet Union (URS)2237
2 Netherlands (NED)2125
3 France (FRA)1113
4 West Germany (FRG)1001
5 Great Britain (GBR)0134
6 Belgium (BEL)0101
7 East Germany (DDR)0033
Totals (7 entries)661224

References

  1. ^ "1967 European Championships". Judo Inside. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Individual
Men's
Women's
  • Munich 1976
  • Vienna 1976
  • Arlon 1977
  • Cologne 1978
  • Kerkrade 1979
  • Udune 1980
  • Madrid 1981
  • Oslo 1982
  • Genoa 1983
  • Pirmasens 1984
  • Landskrona 1985
  • London 1986
Combined
Open weight
Team
Men's
Men's / Women's
Mixed