The Sports Almanac

Summer Olympics
Judo - Middleweight

MEDAL TOTAL LEADERS

JAPAN - 14 Medals

NETHERLANDS - 9 Medals

SOUTH KOREA - 8 Medals

Medal Table
Heavyweight
Half-Heavyweight
Middleweight
Half-Middleweight
Lightweight
Half-Lightweight
Extra Lightweight
Mixed Team
Open

Men's  Women's  Medal Total
Through 2024 Paris Games

YEAR
GOLD
SILVER
BRONZE
1964
Isao Okano - Japan
Wolfgang Hofmann - United Team of Germany
James Bregman - United States
Kim Eui-tae - South Korea
1972
Shinobu Sekine - Japan
Oh Seung-lip - South Korea
Jean-Paul Coche - France
Brian Jacks - Great Britain
1976
Isamu Sonoda - Japan
Valeriy Dvoynikov - Soviet Union
Slavko Obadov - Yugoslavia
Park Young-chul - South Korea
1980
Jürg Röthlisberger - Switzerland
Isaac Azcuy - Cuba
Detlef Heinke - East Germany
Aleksandrs Jackevičs - Soviet Union
1984
Peter Seisenbacher - Austria
Robert Berland - United States
Walter Carmona - Brazil
Seiki Nose - Japan
1988
Peter Seisenbacher - Austria Vladimir Shestakov - Soviet Union
Akinobu Osako - Japan
Ben Spijkers - Netherlands
1992
Waldemar Legień - Poland
Pascal Tayot - France
Nicolas Gill - Canada
Hirotaka Okada - Japan
1996
Jeon Ki-young - South Korea
Armen Bagdasarov - Uzbekistan
Mark Huizinga - Netherlands
Marko Spittka - Germany
2000
Mark Huizinga - Netherlands
Carlos Honorato - Brazil
Frédéric Demontfaucon - France
Ruslan Mashurenko - Ukraine
2004
Zurab Zviadauri - Georgia
Hiroshi Izumi - Japan
Mark Huizinga - Netherlands
Khasanbi Taov - Russia
2008
Irakli Tsirekidze - Georgia
Amar Benikkhlef - Algeria
Hesham Mesbah - Egypt
Sergei Aschwanden - Switzerland
2012
Song Dae-nam - South Korea
Asley Gonzalez - Cuba
Ilias Iliadis - Greece
Masashi Nishiyama - Japan
2016
Mashu Baker - Japan
Varlam Liparteliani - Georgia
Gwak Dong-han - South Korea
Cheng Xunzhao - China
2020
Lasha Bekauri - Georgia Eduard Trippel - Germany Davlat Bobonov - Uzbekistan
Krisztián Tóth - Hungary
2024
Lasha Bekauri - Georgia Sanshiro Murao - Japan
Maxime-Gaël Ngayap Hambou - France
Theodoros Tselidis - Greece

Women's  Men's  Medal Total
Through 2024 Paris Games

YEAR
GOLD
SILVER
BRONZE
1992
Odalis Revé - Cuba
Emanuela Pierantozzi - Italy
Kate Howey - Great Britain
Heidi Rakels - Belgium
1996
Cho Min-sun - South Korea
Aneta Szczepańska - Poland
Wang Xianbo - China
Claudia Zwiers - Netherlands
2000
Sibelis Veranes - Cuba
Kate Howey - Great Britain
Cho Min-sun - South Korea
Ylenia Scapin - Italy
2004
Masae Ueno - Japan
Edith Bosch - Netherlands
Qin Dongya - China
Annett Böhm - Germany
2008
Masae Ueno - Japan Anaysi Hernández - Cuba
Ronda Rousey - United States
Edith Bosch - Netherlands
2012
Lucie Décosse - France
Kerstin Thiele - Germany
Yuri Alvear - Colombia
Edith Bosch - Netherlands
2016
Haruka Tachimoto - Japan
Yuri Alvear - Colombia Sally Conway - Great Britain
Laura Vargas Koch - Germany
2020
Chizuru Arai - Japan Michaela Polleres - Austria Madina Taimazova - Russian Olympic Committee
Sanne van Dijke - Netherlands
2024
Barbara Matić - Croatia
Miriam Butkereit - Germany
Michaela Polleres - Austria
Gabriella Willems - Belgium

Medal Total  Women's  Men's
RANK
COUNTRY
GOLD
SILVER
BRONZE
TOTAL
1
Japan
8
2
4
14
2
Netherlands 1
1
7
9
3
South Korea
3
1
4
8
4
Germany 0
3
3
6
5
Georgia 4
1
0
5
6
Cuba
2
3
0
5
7
France 1
1
3
5
8
Austria 2
1
1
4
9
Great Britain
0
1
3
4
10
Soviet Union
0
2
1
3
11
United States
0
1
2
3
12
China
0
0
3
3
13
Poland
1
1
0
2
14
Switzerland
1
0
1
2
15
Brazil
0
1
1
2
16
Italy
0
1
1
2
17
Colombia
0
1
1
2
18
Uzbekistan
0
1
1
2
19
Greece 0
0
2
2
20
Belgium 0
0
2
2
21
Croatia
1
0
0
1
22
Algeria
0
1
0
1
23
United Team of Germany
0
1
0
1
24
Canada
0
0
1
1
25
Ukraine
0
0
1
1
26
Russia
0
0
1
1
27
Egypt
0
0
1
1
28
Hungary
0
0
1
1
29
Yugoslavia
0
0
1
1
30
East Germany
0
0
1
1
31
Russian Olympic Committee
0
0
1
1