Tüvshinbayar Naidan

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Tüvshinbayar Naidan

N. Tüvshinbayar
Түвшинбаяр Найдан
Naidangiin Tüvshinbayar -> Tüvshinbayar son of Naidan
Найдангийн Түвшинбаяр (traditional variant)

22px-Flag of Mongolia.svg.png 01.06.1984

Bio

He was born in small city 500km west from capital city Ulaanbaatar.

He used to wrestling and riding horses as typical Mongolian child. Wrestling in Mongolia is called Bökh.

Everyday he had to ride bicycle 30km to school that's why he had such strong legs.

Career and Style

Tüvshinbayar can be described like true fighter. He has never owned good judo skills but he had toughness, determination, strengh and he had the ability to tolerate grievous pain.

In 2008 he won gold medal at Olympiade in Beijing and give IJF reason to think what to do with wrestlingjudostyle what he presented there. His style could be called in every possible way but not like judo. Later IJF applied rule about leg grabbing.

Tüvshinbayar had other problems after Olympic Games in 2008. It was found that he was fighting at OG with injury of right knee. Injury was so serious that in U.S. hospital where he underwent operation just shake one's head how he could walk not fight.

After recovery he had to learn new style of fighting because of the rule. He showed his talent very soon. His judostyle became better especially in groundwork and he always had strong grips.

In 2012 London Olympic games he was defeating his gold medal from previous games and he got into semifinal. There he met Korean Hwang and won over him. But in this match happend something what almost nobody noticed. He was little bit hobbling that's all. In final match against Khaybulayev he was just standing and easily lost his match. He took silver medal.

In olympic semifinal match he torned anterior cruciate ligament in not operated left knee.<ref>http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2012/aug/06/olympic-judo-mongolian-final-injury</ref> This very hard injury means that this was his last match in his very succesful career. After recovery (more than year) he will just hardly searching motivation... but who knows.

Resuts

Olympic Games

Year Age Cathegory 1/32 1/16 Quarter-Finals Semi-Finals Final Match
2008 24.1 Half-Heavyweight W
22px-Flag of Japan.svg.png Keiji Suzuki
W
22px-Flag of Germany.svg.png Benjamin Behrla
W
22px-Flag of South Korea.svg.png Seong-Ho Jang
W
22px-Flag of Azerbaijan.svg.png Mövlud Mirəliyev
W
22px-Flag of Kazakhstan.svg.png Askhat Zhitkeyev
2012 28.1 Half-Heavyweight W
22px-Flag of Thailand.svg.png Teerawat Homklin
W
22px-Flag of France.svg.png Thierry Fabre
W
22px-Flag of Uzbekistan.svg.png Ramziddin Sayidov
W
22px-Flag of South Korea.svg.png Hui-Tae Hwang
L
22px-Flag of Russia.svg.png Tagir Khaybulayev

World Championships

Year Age Cathegory 1/64 1/32 1/16 Quarter-Finals Semi-Finals Bronze Match
2007 23.2 Half-Heavyweight W
22px-Flag of Italy.svg.png Francesco Lepre
L
22px-Flag of Ukraine.svg.png Vitaliy Bubon
- - - -
2009 - - - - - - - -
2010 26.2 Half-Heavyweight W
22px-Flag of Serbia.svg.png Predrag Budić
W
22px-Flag of Japan.svg.png Kaihan Takagi
W
22px-Flag of Russia.svg.png Tagir Khaybulayev
W
22px-Flag of Uzbekistan.svg.png Utkur Kurbanov
L
22px-Flag of the Netherlands.svg.png Henk Grol
L
22px-Flag of France.svg.png Thierry Fabre
2011 27.2 Half-Heavyweight L
22px-Flag of Latvia.svg.png Yevgeny Borodavko
- - - - -

World Championships - Open

Year Age 1/64 1/32 1/16 Quarter-Finals Semi-Finals Repechage Repechage Bronze Match
2007 23.2 BYE W
22px-Flag of Georgia.svg.png Zviad Khanjaliashvili
W
22px-Flag of Iran.svg.png Sayid Miran Fashandi
L
22px-Flag of Belarus.svg.png Yury Rybak
- W
22px-Flag of South Korea.svg.png Gwang-Seon Yu
W
22px-Flag of Azerbaijan.svg.png Mövlud Mirəliyev
L
22px-Flag of Uzbekistan.svg.png Abdulla Tangriyev

References

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Links