Peter Paltchik
Peter Paltchik (Hebrew: פיטר פלצ׳יק, romanized: Piter Palchik; Ukrainian: Петер Пальтчик, romanized: Peter Palchyk; born 4 January 1992) is a Ukrainian-born Israeli former European champion and Olympic judoka,[3] competing in the under 100 kg weight category, of which he is the current number 1 ranked Judoka in the world.[4][5] Paltchik won the bronze medal at the 2018 European Judo Championships in Tel Aviv. In 2019 he won the Israeli championship in the 100+ Kg category. He then won the gold medal at the 2020 European Judo Championships in Prague. Paltchik also won a bronze medal in the mixed team judo competition in the 2021 Olympics. At the 2023 World Judo Championships he won a bronze medal. Paltchik represented Israel at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris in judo in the men's 100 kg event and in the mixed team event, and was the flag bearer for his country, alongside the swimmer Andrea Murez.[6]
Early and personal life
[edit]Paltchik was born in 1992 in Yalta, Crimea (Ukraine).[7] As a 9-month-old baby, he immigrated to Israel with his 24-year-old mother Larisa and resided in the city of Rishon LeZion, Israel.[8] About a year later, his maternal grandparents immigrated to Israel as well. He was born in a difficult 53–54 hour birth, as he was not in the correct position, as a sick baby at a weight of 5.1 kilograms (11 lb) with crooked and fractured bones and various health problems, and the doctor recommended his family let Paltchik practice sports.[8][9] His grandfather sent him to practice judo when he was four years old at the "Samurai Club" in Rishon LeZion under the guidance of Pavel Musin.[9]
By the time he was seven years old, Paltchik's mother lived in the United States for work purposes, and Paltchik grew up in Israel with his grandparents. His mother works as a nurse in Sheba Medical Center in Ramat Gan, Israel.[10] He attended the Yigal Alon High School, majoring in communication. He served as a logistics soldier at the Tzrifin base of the Israeli Air Force.[11]
Paltchik married his Israeli girlfriend Daniel Youlzary in April 2016, and they have twin boys.[9]
Judo career
[edit]At the age of 16, he joined the Israeli Judo Cadet Team. At the age of 17, he won the Israel cadet championship, Junior championship, and the U23 championship that season. At the age of 18 he joined the national senior judo team under the Israel national coach and former Olympic medalist Oren Samadja.[11] He trains at the Wingate Institute, and trains every day, twice a day.[9] He said: "I train as if I don’t have a medal. It’s never about the physical award. Instead, it is about what you can achieve and the challenge you can overcome."[9]
2011–14; Israeli champion
[edit]In September 2011, Paltchik competed in the European Championship U20 in Lumel, Belgium, and won a silver medal in the −90 kg weight category.[12] In June 2012, Paltchik underwent a complicated surgery in the right knee following a rupture of the posterior cruciate ligament during routine training. Because of the surgery and the rehabilitation, his shift to the senior level was interrupted until 2014.
In January 2014, Peter returned to practice as part of the senior Israeli judo team. In February 2014 he won a bronze medal in the European Open in Oberwart, Austria.[13][14] In September, he again won a bronze medal at the European Open in Tallinn, Estonia.[15][16] He competed in the U100 kg category in the Israeli championship that year, and won the gold medal.[17]
2015–17
[edit]In 2015, Paltchik decided, together with the national team coach, to raise the weight category U100 kg in order to improve his performance on the mat. In June 2015, he participated in the European Games held in Baku, and was eliminated in the second round.[18][19] In November 2015, in the midst of the race to the Olympic games in Rio de Janeiro, Peter took part in the Qingdao Grand Prix in China,[20][21] and ripped the ligaments in his shoulder during a fight against the Mongolian Olympic champion, Naidan. He had to undergo shoulder surgery and a long rehabilitation of 9 months, which resulted in him missing the 2016 Rio Olympics.[8]
In his return to judo in February 2017, he won a bronze medal at the European Cup competition in Rome, Italy.[9][22][23] In March, he participated in the Baku Grand Slam and reached fifth place.[24][25] At the 2017 European Championship held in Warsaw, Poland, in April, Paltchik reached seventh place.[26][27] On June, a competition was held at the European Tour in Bucharest, Romania, where Paltchik won a bronze medal.[28][29] Later that month, he won a gold medal in the Cancún Grand Prix in Mexico,[30][31] after winning in the semifinals against the Brazilian former world champion, Luciano Correra, and beating Irish Benjamin Fletcher in the waza-ari. In the 2017 World Championships held in September in Budapest, Paltchik lost in the round-of-16 to Michael Korrel from Netherlands,World Championships[32][33] who was ranked first in the world. In October, Paltchik won a bronze medal at the Abu Dhabi Grand Slam,[34][35] after defeating Miklós Cirjenics from Hungary.
2018–19; European championships bronze medal
[edit]In April 2018, Paltchik won the gold medal in the Tbilisi Grand Prix in Georgia,[36][37] when he defeated Merab Margiev of Russia in the final, after two minutes and a half. In the 2018 European Championship held in April in Tel Aviv, Paltchik won a bronze medal in the category U100 kg.[38][39][40] In the first round, he met Latvia's Jevgenijs Borodavko. Two minutes from the start of the fight, Peter won a wazari, that eventually make him pass the first round. In the top-16, he met the Serbian Bojan Dosen, and after four minutes without scoring, the battle went into a golden score, in which the Serbian took the third penalty and Paltchik went up to the quarterfinal. At that stage, Paltchik overcame Zelym Kotsoiev from Azerbaijan, when a minute and 13 seconds to the end of the fight, he managed to get a wazari. In the semifinal, Paltchik competed against French Cyrille Maret. After 2 minutes and 16 seconds from the start of the fight, Maret entered a choking exercise, and Peter fainted. Afterwards, Paltchik competed for the bronze medal, facing the Russian Niiaz Bilalov, and won the fight after 39 seconds, after scoring an ippon.
In August 2018, Paltchik competed in the Budapest Grand Prix in Hungary and won a bronze medal,[41][42] after defeating Martin Pacek of Sweden with an Ippon. In October 2018, he won the gold medal in the Abu Dhabi Grand Slam,[43][44] after defeating German Karl-Richard Frey in the semifinal, and the Olympic silver medalist Elmar Gasimov in the final. That time in Abu Dhabi was the first time that Israelis were allowed to wear formal Israeli judo suits, and the Israeli national anthem, 'HaTikva', was played while Paltchik was standing on the podium. In November, he won the gold medal in The Hague Grand Prix[45][46] when he defeated the Belarusian Mikita Sviryd in the final after the fight entered the golden score time.
In February 2019, he won a bronze medal at the prestigious Paris Grand Slam.[47][48] He reached the semifinals in which he faced Aaron Wolf from Japan. Ten seconds after the opening of the match, Paltchik scored a wazari, but lost in ippon a minute and 9 seconds before the end of the fight, after the Japanese managed to win. Paltchik went down to fight for the bronze medal, which he won by beating Croatia's Zlatko Kumeric by ippon.
On 17 March, he competed in the 2019 Ekaterinburg Grand Slam in Russia, and began the second round where he met Mikhail Minchin from Armenia, and won by ippon, obtained 58 seconds from the opening and went up to the quarterfinals. In the next stage, he defeated Jevgenijs Borodavko from Latvia. In the semifinals he lost by ippon to Arman Admanin of Russia. In the fight for the bronze medal, Paltchik defeated Dutchman Michael Korrel with a wazari in the golden score, and won the medal.[49][50] In July 2019 Paltchik won the bronze medal in Zagreb Grand Prix[51][52][53] by defeating Miklós Cirjenics (Hungary). Also in 2019, he won the Israeli championship in the 100+ Kg category.[54]
2020–21; European Champion
[edit]In January 2020 Paltchik won the gold medal in Tel Aviv Grand Prix by defeating the Brazilian Goncalves Leonardo.[55][56] In February 2020 Paltchik won the gold medal in Paris Grand Slam by defeating the Georgian Varlam Liparteliani.[57][58]
At the 2020 European Judo Championships in November 2020, Paltchik became the European Champion, taking the gold medal by defeating the Russian Arman Adamian in the final.[59][60][61]
In 2021, he won one of the bronze medals in his event at the 2021 Judo World Masters held in Doha, Qatar.[62][63][64] He also won a silver medal in the 2021 Tel Aviv Grand Slam in Israel.[65]
2020 Tokyo Olympics
[edit]Paltchik represented Israel at the 2020 Summer Olympics, competing at the men's 100 kg weight category.
In his first match, Paltchik beat the 2019 Asian-Pacific champion, Mongolian Lkhagvasürengiin Otgonbaatar, to qualify for the quarter finals. There he met the 2017 world champion, Japanese Aaron Wolf, to whom he lost and turned to face Canadian two-time Pan American Champion Shady El Nahas in the repechage. Wolf went on to win the gold medal, while Paltchik, losing to El Nahas, ended the individual competition in 7th place.[66][67][68][69]
2022–present; World championship bronze medals
[edit]He won a silver medal at the 2022 Judo Grand Slam Paris in France.[65] He won one of the bronze medals in his event at the 2022 Judo Grand Slam Tel Aviv held in Israel, as well as at the 2022 Judo Grand Slam Ulaanbaatar in Mongolia and the 2022 Judo World Masters in Jerusalem, Israel.[70]
At the 2023 World Judo Championships in Doha, Qatar, he won a bronze medal.[65] At the 2023 Judo World Masters in Budapest, Hungary, he won a silver medal, and at the 2023 Judo Grand Slam Paris he won a bronze medal.[65]
At the 2024 Judo Grand Slam Astana in Kazakhstan, he won a bronze medal.[65]
2024 Paris Olympics
[edit]Paltchik represented Israel at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris in judo in the men's 100 kg event on 1 August 2024, and in the mixed team event.[71] He was also chosen as Olympic flagbearer jointly with Andrea Murez; the decision attracted scrutiny on social media amid the Israel–Hamas war, after a tweet he had posted, containing a picture of munitions he had signed accompanied by the text "from me to you with pleasure", resurfaced.[72][73]
Medals
[edit]Source:[74]
Year | Tournament | Place | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
2017 | Grand Prix Cancún | [30][31] | |
Grand Slam Abu Dhabi | [34][35] | ||
2018 | Grand Prix Tbilisi | [36][37] | |
European Championships | [38][39][40] | ||
Grand Prix Budapest | [41][42] | ||
Grand Slam Abu Dhabi | [43][44] | ||
Grand Prix The Hague | [45][46] | ||
2019 | Grand Slam Paris | [47][48] | |
Grand Slam Ekaterinburg | [49][50] | ||
Grand Prix Zagreb | [51][52][53] | ||
2020 | Grand Prix Tel Aviv | [55][56] | |
Grand Slam Paris | [57][58] | ||
European Championships | [59][60] | ||
2021 | World Masters | [62][63] | |
Grand Slam Tel Aviv | [75][76] | ||
2022 | Grand Slam Paris | [77][78][79] | |
Grand Slam Tel Aviv | [80][81][82] | ||
Grand Slam Ulaanbaatar | [83][84][85] | ||
World Masters | [86][87][88] | ||
2023 | Grand Slam Paris | [89][90][91] | |
World Championships | [92][93][94] | ||
World Masters | [95][96][97] | ||
2024 | Grand Slam Astana | [98][99][100] |
Israeli Championships
[edit]Partial list:
- +100 kg Category (2019)[54]
References
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External links
[edit]- Official website
- Peter Paltchik at the European Judo Union
- Peter Paltchik at the International Judo Federation
- Peter Paltchik at JudoInside.com
- Peter Paltchik at AllJudo.net (in French)
- Peter Paltchik at Olympics.com
- Peter Paltchik at Olympedia
- Peter Paltchik at The-Sports.org
- A "podcast," with Peter Paltchik by Wharton University of Pennsylvania
- Peter Paltchik on Instagram
- 1992 births
- Living people
- European Games competitors for Israel
- Israeli Air Force personnel
- Israeli male judoka
- Israeli people of Soviet descent
- Israeli people of Ukrainian descent
- Jewish Ukrainian sportspeople
- Judoka at the 2015 European Games
- Judoka at the 2020 Summer Olympics
- Judoka at the 2024 Summer Olympics
- Medalists at the 2020 Summer Olympics
- Olympic judoka for Israel
- Olympic medalists in judo
- Olympic bronze medalists for Israel
- People from Yalta
- Sportspeople from Crimea
- Sportspeople from Rishon LeZion
- Ukrainian emigrants to Israel
- Ukrainian male judoka
- Wingate Institute alumni
- 21st-century Israeli sportsmen