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Austrian Judo Federation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Österreichischer Judoverband
SportJudo
JurisdictionAustria
AbbreviationÖJV
Founded30 September 1947
AffiliationIJF
Regional affiliationEJU
HeadquartersVienna, Austria
PresidentPoiger Martin
SecretaryMag. Korner Corina
CoachYvonne Snir-Bönisch
Official website
judoaustria.at
Austria

The Austrian Judo Federation (German: Österreichischer Judoverband - ÖJV) is the national organisation for judo in Austria. The president is POIGER Martin.[1] The Austrian Judo Federation is affiliated with the International Judo Federation.[2] Its headquarters are in Vienna.[2]

History

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In 2010, the Austrian Judo Federation played host to the European Championships in Vienna, which were attended by Vladimir Putin.[3][4]

Board

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  • President: Martin Poiger[5]
  • Vice Presidents: Sabrina Filzmoser, Gerald Eidenberger, Albert Gmeiner, Jochen Haidvogel, Hans Peter Zopf
  • Athlete Spokesperson: Magdalena Krssakova
  • Finance Officer: Silvia Ehrengruber
  • Legal Secretary: Andreas Weinzierl
  • Technical Director: Thomas Stückler
  • Deputy: Karin Dorfinger, Veronika Jakl, Horst Felzl, Martin Stump

Austrian judokas

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Medal record
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place Peter Seisenbacher 1988
Gold medal – first place Peter Seisenbacher 1984
Silver medal – second place Michaela Polleres 2020
Silver medal – second place Ludwig Paischer 2008
Silver medal – second place Claudia Heill 2004
Bronze medal – third place Michaela Polleres 2024
Bronze medal – third place Shamil Borchashvili 2020
Bronze medal – third place Josef Reiter 1984
World Judo Championships
Gold medal – first place Peter Seisenbacher 1985
Gold medal – first place Edith Hrovat 1980
Gold medal – first place Gerda Winklbauer 1980
Gold medal – first place Edith Simon 1980
Silver medal – second place Ludwig Paischer 2005
Silver medal – second place Edith Hrovat 1984
Bronze medal – third place Michaela Polleres 2023
Bronze medal – third place Shamil Borchashvili 2022
Bronze medal – third place Michaela Polleres 2021
Bronze medal – third place Sabrina Filzmoser 2010
Bronze medal – third place Ludwig Paischer 2007
Bronze medal – third place Sabrina Filzmoser 2005
Bronze medal – third place Patrick Reiter 1997
Bronze medal – third place Patrick Reiter 1995
Bronze medal – third place Roswitha Hartl 1987
Bronze medal – third place Gerda Winklbauer 1984
Bronze medal – third place Karin Posch 1982
Medal record
Paralympic Games
Gold medal – first place Walter Hanl 2000
Gold medal – first place Walter Hanl 1996

National League

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Volksbank Galaxy Tigers - winner of the Austrian Judo Bundeslia 2016
Volksbank Galaxy Tigers - winner of the Austrian Judo Bundeslia 2016

The Austrian Judo Federation organizes the Judo-Bundesliga. This is the national league.[6] It is divided into the Erste Judo Bundesliga and the Zweite Judo Bundesliga for men and the Frauen Judo Bundesliga for women. The league exists since 1948.[7]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Judo Austria, Vorstand, Judo Austria, 3 Sept 2022 (in German)
  2. ^ a b IJF, Austria, International Judo Federation, 3 Sept 2022
  3. ^ APA, "EM-Turnier findet statt", Der Standard, 19 April 2010 (in German)
  4. ^ APA, "Putin kommt am Samstag zu Privatbesuch nach Wien", WirtschaftsBlatt, 20 April 2010, archived at the Wayback Machine 27 April 2010 (in German)
  5. ^ Markus Knaup. "Vorstand". Judoaustria.at (in Austrian German). Retrieved 2022-09-03.
  6. ^ "Bundesliga".
  7. ^ "Übersicht | Österreichischer Judoverband" (in German). Archived from the original on 2021-05-08. Retrieved 2021-02-02.
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