Inside news
Home
News
Kyle Reyes finally has a gold medal at a Grand Slam

Kyle Reyes finally has a gold medal at a Grand Slam

23 Oct 2022 21:50
IJF Media team by Pedro Lasuen and JudoInside
IJF Gabriela Sabau / International Judo Federation

The final for men U100kg in Abu Dhabi's Grand Slam was the most tense of all, with two athletes very sure of what they were doing, very strong in their arms and legs, a clean fight in which both wanted to score because they are two pure attackers. Spaniard Nikoloz Sherazadishvili tried to impose his uchi-mata and Canadian Shady Kyle Reyes tried to counteract it but on Sherazadishvili's last attempt, the referees deemed him diving and he was disqualified. Reyes won the gold, the Spaniard the silver.

Bronze for Kukolj

Aleksandar Kukolj is a guy with no luck because he has suffered in -100kg what he suffered in -90kg. In the quarter-finals, Sherazadishvili's famous uchi-mata conceded and in the fight for the bronze he had to face González. This time the Serb played his cards well and scored an ippon, one of those which make a lot of noise, one in which Kukolj deposited all the anger accumulated after so many disappointments.

Bronze for El Nahas

Elnahas also wanted to make amends because neither in Tashkent nor in Abu Dhabi did he reach the goal within the possibilities of his talent. The bronze would be a consolation prize but he had to beat another old rocker on the circuit, the Azerbaijani Elmar Gasimov. When Gasimov has someone better in front of him, he always gets rid of shido very quickly and Elnahas knew it. This time it was no other way and the Azeri had to fight against his own impulses and openly attack. However, he did not do it, or not enough and was logically penalised. Elnahas won and that too was logical.

Prelims

Kyle Reyes and Shady El Nahas represent the best of Canadian judo. They are very good, they get excellent results and they go everywhere together. El Nahas wasn’t that far away in Tashkent and Reyes narrowly missed out because he contested the final and won silver. Since the two had crossed halfway around the world for the world championships, they decided to stop by Abu Dhabi on their way home.

El Nahas was the executioner of Sherazadishvili in Tashkent. El Nahas is also left-handed, like Reyes. Sherazadishvili wanted to settle the score in the semi-final and he did so at the end of a very close and entertaining fight that ended with two waza-ari that he could not execute in Tashkent. A Canadian out, the debt paid and also excellent training before facing the ogre of the moment, who, as we have pointed out, is also left-handed. In other words, it was the best ending possible.

Reyes had no rival worthy, not even the Uzbek Turaboev or the Kazakh Sharkhan were able to stop the onslaught of the Canadian, who over time is realising his real potential but it never hurts to face opponents with the typical tricks that experience gives, people who know all the aspects of a fight, physical and mental, people who are a headache for anyone, like Asley González. The Romanian is a former world champion racked by injuries but at his best he is a superlative judoka and experience allows him to thrive in the most adverse conditions. In Abu Dhabi he offered us his best version and since Reyes is very fit, the fight was interesting, the most tactical of the morning. There is one thing that González does not like, that thing is left-handed judoka and Reyes is, and it was there, on the left side, where the Canadian built the victory with an expertly prepared waza-ari. He made the final in Tashkent, the final in Abu Dhabi and so the man to beat is called Reyes, which means Kings in Spanish and he just had one, a Spaniard, in the final, in case he wanted to show him the crown.

More judo info than you can analyse 24/7! Share your results with your judo network. Become an insider!