In Japan, men won two weight classes and women won all four weight classes. Combined with the day before, when he won all six categories for men and women, he won 12 gold medals out of a total of 14 categories this year. In the women’s event, Japanese teams dominated all seven classes.

The final day of the tournament[Women]results are as follows.

▼ 48 kg class Kano Miyaki (Shutoku), a third-year high school student, won the championship for the first time. She defeated Rina Tachikawa (Fukuoka Prefectural Police) in the final after extra time. Natsumi Tsunoda (Ryotokuji Daishi), who won the World Championships (Tashkent) in October, would have been selected to represent the World Championships (Doha) next May if she won this tournament, but she lost to Tachikawa in the semi-finals. rice field. Together with Wakana Koga (Yamanashi Gakuin University 3rd year), she grabbed the bronze medal.

▼ 52 kg class Uta Abe (Nippon Sport Science University), the gold medalist of the Tokyo Olympics (Olympics), stood at the top. He also won the world championships in October, and will be the “first” world representative next year following the All Japan Judo Federation’s early offer system. In the final, she shook off her rival, Ai Shishime (Ryotokuji Daishi), with a 3-instruction foul win.

▼ 78 kg class Naori Hamada (Self-Defense Force), the gold medalist for the Tokyo Olympics, lost in the final. She won against Rika Takayama (Mitsui Sumitomo Insurance) and she scored a worthy victory with her signature groundwork for Hamada.

▼ Over 78 kg class Another Tokyo Olympic gold medalist Teru Sone (Park 24) won the championship. The actual match for the first time in four months was not dangerous, and in the semi-finals, she defeated Wakaharu Tomita (Komatsu), the Queen of All Japan, and in the finals, she took away Wazaari from Mayu Akiba (ALSOK) with a shoulder throw and decided the match in the main match.[Jun Kinoshita]