The highest ranked athlete of the group, Francois Gauthier Drapeau was penalised out of contention early on, unable to match the intensity of Adrian Sulca (ROU) in Tbilisi but the Romanian also left before the medal matches, out manoeuvred by a sharp and technical Swiss opponent.
Gauthier Drapeau (CAN) lost to Sulca (ROU).

Bonferroni (SUI) hunted the scores from the beginning of the day, throwing Kladnov (KGZ) in round one with kata-guruma and then ko-uchi-gake. He threw Dvalashvili (GEO) with a similar ko-uchi technique in round two and having already scored with a seoi-otoshi against Sulca, he applied it a third time to reach the quarter-final.

Bonferroni attacking Dvalashvili.

In pool B, Tatalashvili (UAE) stuck to the plan seeing off challenges from Baisiev (AIN), Egutidze (POR) and young Azeri Rajabli to arrive at a semi-final but it wasn’t the technical Swiss opponent he would meet there as Boltaboev (UZB) put a stop to his run with a yoko-gake having already passed Perez (CHI), 8th seed Svidrak (UKR) and Kopecky (CZE) in the preliminary phase.

In the bottom half of the draw, number two seed, Somon Makhmadbekov (TJK) was out-strengthed by the wrestling style of Viktor Sterpu (MDA) but Sterpu was then thrown immediately in the next round by Arbuzov (AIN) with a stunning tsuri-goshi. Arbuzov then dealt with young Falcao (BRA), former junior world number 1 at -73 kg and therefore new to the weight category.

Arbuzov's second round win.

19 year old Arbuzov maintains his position in the top ten of the world rankings but at juniors not seniors. However we can’t say he is totally unknown because despite his lack of seeding, he won bronze at the Paris grand Slam just over a month ago, notching up surprise after surprise as the incumbents forget to do their research on him. His semi-final could have been a step too far though as 2019 world champion Sagi Muki (ISR) was on fine form all morning throwing with seoi-otoshi, among other techniques, to win every contest positively and decisively. In the semi-final the Israeli looked no different and threw early to register a waza-ari but the independent athlete had an answer and threw Muki twice for victory.

Muki's score against Arbuzov.
Arbuzov took the win in the end.

Therefore the first bronze medal contest was to be between Bonferroni and Muki. They may have been an expectation for the Swiss athlete to again bring his expert-level ko-uchi-gake but there was no way for that to happen, Muki not allowing the gripping or positioning to go in favour of his opponent at all. Muki threw with a seoi-otoshi from quite a distance, having an end-of-the-sleeve grip but a second drive ensured the ippon came. The world champion still has it!

Muki (ISR) throwing for the medal.

The second bronze medal contests was entered by Falcao and Tatalashvili after Boltaboev put a stop to the Emirati athlete’s challenge for gold in their semi-final.

Boltaboev's win over Tatalashvili in the semi-final.

20 year old Falcao wasn’t far away from the medal but 34 year old Tatalashvili grappled hard to earn himself a waza-ari and despite the Brazilian’s valiant effort to chase him down, the medal went to the UAE.

Tatalashvili (UAE) with coach Viktor Scvortov.

In the final, Boltaboev and Arbuzov, perhaps not the predicted finalists at the beginning of the day, engaged in non-traditional gripping from the beginning. The teenager, Arbuzov, favoured coming under the arm and taking the collar to pull down at back and he used it very well secure a first waza-ari with a hip technique. Shortly afterwards Boltaboev tried an ill-prepared sacrifice technique and Arbuzov capitalised on it, clamping down on top of the Uzbek to hold for ten seconds. He’s now a grand slam winner at only nineteen years old.

Arbuzov (AIN) threw for waza-ari and later held for gold.

Final (-81 kg)

Bronze Medal Fights (-81 kg)

Medals, cheques and flowers were presented by Mr Armen Bagdasarov, IJF Head Referee Director, and Mr Avtandil Tchrikishvili, world champion and 3 time European champion
See also