Karate at the 1981 World Games

The karate events of World Games I were held on July 25–27, 1981, at the Toso Pavilion on the campus of Santa Clara University in California, United States. These were the first World Games, an international quadrennial multi-sport event, and were hosted by the city of city of Santa Clara. It was anticipated that Japanese athletes would perform well at karate. They did so by winning 12 medals among the nine events, including five gold medals.

Medalists

Sources: [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12]

Event Gold Silver Bronze
Women
Kata  Susuko Okamura (JPN)  Mie Nakayama (JPN)  María Moreno (ESP)
Men
Kata  Keji Okada (JPN)  Masashi Koyama (JPN)  Domingo Llanos (USA)
Kumite 60kg  Masayuki Naito (JPN)  Fernando Roseuero (ESP)  Joe Tierney (GBR)
 Giuseppe Tinnirello (ITA)
Kumite 60-65kg  Yoshikazu Ono (JPN)  Toshiaki Maeda (JPN)  Robert De Luca (ITA)
 Kesayoshi Yokouchi (JPN)
Kumite 65-70kg  Cecil Hackett (GBR)  Bernard Bilicki (FRA)  Yukiyoshi Marutani (JPN)
 Seiji Nishimura (JPN)
Kumite 70-75kg  Lin Chi-min (TPE)  Fred Royers (NED)  Christian Gouze (FRA)
 Ángel López (ESP)
Kumite 75-80kg  Osamu Kamikodo (JPN)  Hisao Murase (JPN)  Tokey Hill (USA)
 Otti Roethof (NED)
Kumite +80kg  Ludwig Kotzebue (NED)  Chen Chien (TPE)  Claudio Guazzaroni (ITA)
 Francisco Torres (ESP)
Heavyweight  Vic Charles (GBR)  Marc Pyrée (FRA)  Billy Blanks (USA)
 Claude Petinella (FRA)

Details

Women

Kata

Final – 1. Susuko Okamura, Japan, 65.4 points 2. Mie Nakayama, Japan, 65.3 3. Maria V. Moreno, Spain, 64.3.

Men

Considering that the losing athletes in both semifinals received bronze medals, it is unclear why there was a "bronze medal match" contested between them in each kumite classification.

Kata

Final – 1. K. Okada, Japan, 46.8 points 2. M. Kayama, Japan, 46.6 3. Domingo Llanos, USA, 46.2

Kumite 60kg

EliminationsPool A: M. Aikawa, Japan d. Tony Gunawan, Indonesia; G. D’Amico, Italy d. Giovanni Aguelo, Venezuela; Fernando Rosuero, Spain, bye; J. Tierney, England d. R. Situmeang, Indonesia.

Pool B: Jorge Castelli, Spain d. Gino McCulley, USA; M. Naito, Japan d. M. Gusti, Indonesia; Ivan Perez, Guatemala d. Rafael Franco, Dominican Republic; G. Tinniriello, Italy d. Chui Ching-Yen, Chinese Taipei

Final – Mayayuki Naito, Japan, d. Fernando Rosuero, Spain for gold medal; Joseph Tierney, Britain, d. Giuseppe Tinnirello, Italy, for bronze.

Kumite 60-65kg

EliminationsPool A: Tsai Ming-Shien, Chinese Taipei d. Cleveland Baxter, USA; Roberto DeLuca, Italy d. A. Pichardo, Dominican Republic; Z. Ono, Japan d. Ramon Malave, Sweden; Norbert Ayssi, France, bye

Pool B: Ricardo Abad, Spain d. Joseph Goffin, France; B.T. Maeda, Japan, bye; K. Yokouchi, Japan d. Ed DiNardo, USA; Eligio Martina, Curacao d. Rustan Umbas, Indonesia

Final – Zenichi Ono, Japan, d. Toshiahi Maeda, Japan, for gold; Roberto De Luca, Italy, d. Kasayoshi Yokouchi, Japan, for bronze.

Kumite 65-70kg

Final – Cecil Hackett, Britain, d. Bernard Bilicky, France, for gold; Yukiyoshi Marutani, Japan, d. Seiji Nishimura, Japan, for bronze.

Kumite 70-75kg

Final – Lin Chin, Taiwan, d. Fred Royers, Netherlands, for gold; Angel Lopez, Spain, d. Christian Gouze, France, for bronze.

Kumite 75-80kg

Final – Osamu Kamikado, Japan d. Hisao Murase, Japan, for gold; Tokey Hill, USA d. John Roethoff, Netherlands, for bronze.

Kumite +80kg

Final – Ludwig Katzebue, Netherlands d. Chien Chen, Chinese Taipei, for gold; Claudio Guazzaroni, Italy d. Francisco Torres, Spain, for bronze.

Heavyweight

Final – Victor Charles, England d. Marc Pyree, France, for gold; Billy Banks, USA d. Claude Petinella, France, for bronze.

gollark: It saddens me that apparently sin²(x) does NOT mean sin(sin(x)) but (sin(x))².
gollark: Yes, making computers do all repetitive maths good???
gollark: Trigonometric ones, I mean.
gollark: Over here in the UK™ we seem to only be required to know something like 2 identities for maths.
gollark: > theres like 20 of them and you just have to learn them alljust derive every single trigonometric identity as required.

References

  1. SARGIS, JOE (July 27, 1981). "Jurgen Kolenda, a 20-year-old physics major from the University..." United Press International.
  2. "World Games I Results". United Press International. July 27, 1981.
  3. SARGIS, JOE (July 28, 1981). "The Netherlands, with Ria Roos scoring four goals, buried..." United Press International.
  4. SARGIS, JOE (July 28, 1981). "Of course, these are only the first World Games..." United Press International.
  5. "Santa Clara, USA 1981 Calendar & Results". International World Games Association. Retrieved 2015-10-25.
  6. "Results of the World Games". International World Games Association. Retrieved 2015-10-25.
  7. "World Games". San Jose Mercury-News. San Jose, California. July 26, 1981. p. 14E.
  8. "World Games". San Jose Mercury-News. San Jose, California. July 28, 1981. p. 7D.
  9. Payne, Dave (July 25, 1981). "'World' opener attracts 3,000". San Jose Mercury-News. San Jose, California. p. 6D.
  10. Finch, Peter (July 27, 1981). "Karate champ gets no kick from toe injury". San Jose Mercury-News. San Jose, California. p. 1D.
  11. Finch, Peter (July 27, 1981). "Karate king with broken toe hopes he won't have to step aside tonight". San Jose Mercury-News. San Jose, California. p. 5D.
  12. "German fin swimmer wins fourth gold medal". San Jose Mercury-News. San Jose, California. July 28, 1981. p. 3D.
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