Valeriy Dvoynikov
Personal information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Born | (1950-05-04) 4 May 1950 (age 74) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Occupation | Judoka | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sport | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Country | Soviet Union | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sport | Judo | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Weight class | –70 kg, –80 kg | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Achievements and titles | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Olympic Games | ![]() | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
World Champ. | ![]() | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
European Champ. | ![]() | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Profile at external databases | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
IJF | 27273 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
JudoInside.com | 5784 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Updated on 21 June 2023 |
Valeriy Vasylovych Dvoynikov (Ukrainian: Валерій Васильович Двойников, born 4 May 1950 in Ozersk) is a Ukrainian judoka who competed for the Soviet Union at the 1976 Summer Olympics, winning the silver medal in the middleweight division.[1]
Dvoynikov was also vice world champion in Vienna 1975 and European champion in Kyiv 1976.
Isao Inokuma said that "Among the foreign judoists with brilliant shin-gi-tai (spirit, skill, and power) are the Soviet Union's Vladimir Nevzorov, the victor in the light-middleweight class in the Montreal Olympics, Dvoinikov of the Soviet Union, who was runner-up in the middleweight division at the same Olympics, and Dietmar Lorenz of East Germany, who won the 95-kilograms-and-under class in the Jigoro Kano Cup International Judo Tournament held in Tokyo in 1978".[2]
Dvoynikov is also a co-founder in 2016 with his son, a politologue and poet Valery Dvoinikov, of the Peter the Great's International Foundation working for the cultural reconciliation between Europe and Russia.[3]
References
External links
- Valeriy Dvoynikov at the International Judo Federation
- Valeriy Dvoynikov at JudoInside.com
- Valeriy Dvoynikov at AllJudo.net (in French)
- Valeriy Dvoynikov at Olympics.com
- Valeriy Dvoynikov at Olympedia
- Valeriy Dvoynikov at Olympics at Sports-Reference.com (archived)
- Valeriy Dvoynikov at The-Sports.org
- Valeriy Dvoynikov at databaseOlympics.com (archived)
- https://web.archive.org/web/20110819041105/http://judo-ozersk.ru/dvoynikov.html
- http://www.musatovs.ru/dvoinikov.html
- http://www.dvoinikov.info/
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- 1965:
Vladimir Kuspish
- 1966:
Oleg Stepanov
- 1967:
Armand Desmet
- 1968:
Roin Magaltadze
- 1969:
David Rudman
- 1970:
Rudolf Hendel
- 1971:
Rudolf Hendel
- 1972:
Dietmar Hötger
- 1973:
Dietmar Hötger
- 1974:
Günter Krüger
- 1975:
Vladimir Nevzorov
- 1976:
Valeriy Dvoynikov
- 1977:
Adam Adamczyk
- 1978:
Harald Heinke
- 1979:
Harald Heinke
- 1980:
Neil Adams
- 1981:
Georghi Petrov
- 1982:
Mircea Frățică
- 1983:
Neil Adams
- 1984:
Neil Adams
- 1985:
Neil Adams
- 1986:
Frank Wieneke
- 1987:
Bashir Varaev
- 1988:
Bashir Varaev
- 1989:
Bashir Varaev
- 1990:
Bashir Varaev
- 1991:
Anthonie Wurth
- 1992:
Marko Spittka
- 1993:
Darcel Yandzi
- 1994:
Ryan Birch
- 1995:
Patrick Reiter
- 1996:
Djamel Bouras
- 1997:
Johan Laats
- 1998:
Bertalan Hajtós
- 1999:
Nuno Delgado
- 2000:
Sergei Aschwanden
- 2001:
Aleksei Budõlin
- 2002:
Iraklı Uznadze
- 2003:
Sergei Aschwanden
- 2004:
Ilias Iliadis
- 2005:
Ole Bischof
- 2006:
Siarhei Shundzikau
- 2007:
Robert Krawczyk
- 2008:
João Neto
- 2009:
Ivan Nifontov
- 2010:
Sirazhudin Magomedov
- 2011:
Elnur Mammadli
- 2012:
Sirazhudin Magomedov
- 2013:
Avtandili Tchrikishvili
- 2014:
Avtandili Tchrikishvili
- 2015:
Avtandili Tchrikishvili
- 2016:
Khasan Khalmurzaev
- 2017:
Alan Khubetsov
- 2018:
Sagi Muki
- 2019:
Matthias Casse
- 2020:
Tato Grigalashvili
- 2021:
Vedat Albayrak
- 2022:
Tato Grigalashvili
- 2023:
Vedat Albayrak
- 2024:
Tato Grigalashvili
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