Paralympic judo
Paralympic judo is an adaptation of the Japanese martial art of judo for visually impaired competitors. The rules of the sport are only slightly different from regular judo competitions. It has been part of the Summer Paralympics program since 1988 for men and 2004 for women.
Rules
Paralympic judo competition is governed by the International Judo Federation (IJF) rules with some modifications specified by the International Blind Sports Association (IBSA). The major rule difference is that contests always start with the 2 competitors in a loose grip on each other's Judo suits (grip called "Kumikata") and if contact is broken, "matte"(Wait), or stop, is called and the competitors return to center and regrip.[1]
gollark: Or other coolâ„¢ P2P networks!
gollark: They're typically a few hundred KB.
gollark: Yes, you could.
gollark: Well, yours needs the system to expose 1453, SPUDNET doesn't.
gollark: SPUDNET-py works fine, but is somewhat resource-intensive. Which means people might notice it. Which means it's bad.
References
- edweb6.educ.msu.edu/kin866/spjudo.htm Archived 2004-09-28 at the Wayback Machine Rule differences for blind Archived 2004-08-05 at the Wayback Machine
External links
- International Paralympic Committee page on judo
- Judo for blind including details of paralympics
- Judo for blind athletes
- Info from the British Paralympic Association
- Beijing 2008 Paralympic Judo Information with an Australian slant from accessibility.com.au - includes nomination criteria for the 2008 Australian Paralympic Judo squad.
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