1995 European Karate Championships

The 1995 European Karate Championships, the 30th edition, was held in Helsinki, Finland from May 21 to 23, 1995.[1][2]

1995 European Karate Championships
Host cityFinland Helsinki, Finland
DatesMay 21–23, 1995.
← 1994
1996 →

Competition

edit
Event Gold Silver Bronze
Kata   Michaël Milon   Luis-María Sanz   Pasquale Acri
Kumite -60 kg   Damien Dovy   Hakan Yagli   Patrik Eriksson
  David Luque Camacho
Kumite -65 kg   Alexandre Biamonti   Dragan Leiler   Bahattin Kandaz
  Daniele Simmi
Kumite -70 kg   Massimiliano Oggianu   Reza Mohseni   Michael Braun
  Harri Pakarinen
Kumite -75 kg   Wayne Otto   Gennaro Talarico   Ricardo Cedillo
  Aleksandr Zokov
Kumite -80 kg   Davide Benetello   Pascal Peeters   Kim Waenerberg
  George Petermann
Kumite + 80 kg   Enver Idrizi   Oscar Olivares   Reto Kern[3]
  Hans Roovers
Open Kumite   Christophe Pinna   David Lanna   Andrey Anikin
  Balázs Hecker

Team

edit
Event Gold Silver Bronze
Kata   France   Spain   Italy
Kumite   France   England   Finland
  Spain

Women's competition

edit

Individual

edit
Event Gold Silver Bronze
Kata   Marcela Remiášová   Schahrzad Mansouri   Cinzia Colaiacomo
Kumite -53 kg   Michela Nanni   Jillian Toney   Milica Aljinović
  Sari Laine
Kumite -60 kg   Sonia Pallin   Julliet Toney   Carmen Garcia
  Leya Gedik
Kumite +60 kg   Taru Tuulijärvi   Rosa Ortega   Nurhan Firat
  Sophie Jean-Pierre
Kumite Open kg   Sari Laine   Rosa Ortega   Patricia Duggin
  Nurhan Firat

Team

edit
Event Gold Silver Bronze
Kata   Spain   France   Italy
Kumite   Finland   France   Italy
  Spain

Medal table

edit
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  France (FRA)72211
2  Italy (ITA)32611
3  Finland (FIN)3047
4  Spain (ESP)15511
5  England (ENG)1315
6  Croatia (CRO)1012
7  Slovakia (SVK)1001
8  Turkey (TUR)0145
9  Austria (AUT)0112
  Sweden (SWE)0112
11  Belgium (BEL)0101
  Germany (GER)0101
13  Estonia (EST)0011
  Hungary (HUN)0011
  Netherlands (NED)0011
  Russia (RUS)0011
  Switzerland (SUI)0011
Totals (17 entries)17173064

References

edit
  1. ^ "11 medallas de kárate para España". El Pais (in Spanish). 7 May 1995. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  2. ^ "DJB-Magazin" (PDF). Chronik-karat.de (in German). Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 December 2014. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
  3. ^ "Historik SKF 1971-1999" (PDF). Karate.ch. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
edit