Marco Caudana | ||||||||||||||
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Nationality | Italy | |||||||||||||
Judo | ||||||||||||||
Category | -60 kg | |||||||||||||
Career termination | 2011 | |||||||||||||
Career | ||||||||||||||
Club teams | ||||||||||||||
Akiyama Settimo | ||||||||||||||
Blue Flames | ||||||||||||||
National | ||||||||||||||
Italy | ||||||||||||||
Awards | ||||||||||||||
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Statistics updated as of November 28, 2021 | ||||||||||||||
Edit data on Wikidata · Manual |
Marco Caudana (June 12, 1982) is an Italian judoka.
He grew up in Seventh Akiyama and then moved on to the Blue Flames.[1]
He showed himself at the youth level at the under 20 Europeans in Budapest 2001 in the 60 kg tournament.
He was part of the Italian expedition to the 2005 Mediterranean Games in Almería, where he won the bronze medal in the -60 kg category.
He was Italian champion three times: in Pesaro 2006 and Genoa 2005 in the 60 kg and in Novara 2011 in the 66 kg.
In 2016 he published the book The great little book of judo.
- Mediterranean Games
- Almería 2005: bronzo nei -60 kg;
- Italian championships
- Ostia 2001: bronze in the 60 kg;
- Genoa 2005: gold in the 60 kg;
- Pesaro 2006: gold in the 60 kg;
- Monza 2007: silver in the 60 kg;
- Genoa 2008: bronze in the 60 kg;
- Palamilone 2009: silver at 60 kg;
- Ravenna 2010: bronze in the 66 kg;
- Novara 2011: gold in the 66 kg;
- Marco Caudana, The great little book of judo, SGI, 2016, ISBN 978-88-94223-30-9, ISBN-13: 978-8894223309.
- ^ Caudana and Congia in Paris debut in the European elite | Akiyama Seventh, its www.akiyamasettimo.it. Retrieved November 28, 2021.
- (ON) Marco Caudana, its ijf.org, International Judo Federation.
- (ON) Marco Caudana, its JudoInside.com.
- (ON, IT IS, IT, FR, NL) Marco Caudana, its the-sports.org, Info Media Consulting Inc.
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