Judoka Kapil Parmar In the competition held at the paralympics, India bagged its first judo medal and on that day, he made strides of history. Ever since the start of the Olympic Games, no Indian judoka has progressed to any other Olympic competition. He thrashed Brazil’s Elilton de Oliveira in the men’s J1 60kg bronze medal playoff that took place on Thursday.
Athletes with minimal or extremely limited visual functioning are classified under judo level J1.
Kapil Parmar met my opponents with a 10 over a score of 0-One. In the earlier match, the 24_ year aged lost to the Iranian Banitaba Khorram Abadi by a ten_zero margin in the semi finals. The quarter finals was for Indian who floored the Venezuelan Marco Denis Blanco 10_0.
Palma, silver medalist at the Hangzhou Paralympic Games Asian GamesHe suffered a life-changing accident as a child. In the village field, he was playing when he reached out to a water pump and was electrocuted pretty badly. Villagers who found him unconscious rushed him to a Bhopal hospital where he lay in a coma for six months.
The shock put him in total darkness. Case in point judo was never out of Palma’s sight. He played this sport in his school. When he came back his doctors told him that he needed to put on weight. That was the time when he came across judo for the blind. His teachers and coaches Bhagwan Das, Manoj encouraged him to take up the sport competitively session.
Parmar ’s father was a taxi driver and due to this fact he suffered many struggles. He along with brother Lalit a tea center to earn their living. Lalit helped X times as well as financial aspects in supporting Kapil’s pertain to Judo.
Another Indian player, Kokila, could not make the podium after collapsing to Kazakhstan’s Akmalal Notetyk 0-10 in the quarter-final of the women’s 48kg J2 category. In the J2 Resurrection A final, she succumbed to Yuliia Ivanytska; exactly. Death by a thousand paper cuts. Even no card was awarded to her opponent that had twice the number of yellow cards.
In judo, the fouls described above may range from reasonably minor to serious and include even repeated infringement of passive or techniques that can injure opponent or handicap – the yellow card would be given. In J2 judo, participants can see with some limitations.