Roger Vachon
French judoka
![]() Roger Vachon (r) | |
Personal information | |
---|---|
Nationality | French |
Born | (1957-08-29) 29 August 1957 (age 66) Paris, France |
Sport | |
Sport | Judo |
Roger Vachon (born 29 August 1957) is a French judoka. He competed at the 1984 Summer Olympics and the 1988 Summer Olympics.[1]
References
- ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Roger Vachon Olympic Results". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 23 May 2018.
External links
- Roger Vachon at JudoInside.com
- Roger Vachon at Olympedia
- v
- t
- e
European Judo Championships — Men's Half Heavyweight
1965–76: −93 kg • 1977–97: −95 kg • 1998–present: −100 kg
- 1965:
Anatoly Yudin
- 1966:
Joop Gouweleeuw
- 1967:
Peter Herrmann
- 1968:
Peter Herrmann
- 1969:
Peter Snijders
- 1970:
Vladimir Pokataev
- 1971:
Helmut Howiller
- 1972:
Angelo Parisi
- 1973:
Jean-Luc Rougé
- 1974:
Goran Žuvela
- 1975:
Dietmar Lorenz
- 1976:
Tengiz Khubuluri
- 1977:
Dietmar Lorenz
- 1978:
Dietmar Lorenz
- 1979:
Tengiz Khubuluri
- 1980:
Jean-Luc Rougé
- 1981:
Roger Vachon
- 1982:
Robert Köstenberger
- 1983:
Valery Divisenko
- 1984:
Günther Neureuther
- 1985:
Robert Van de Walle
- 1986:
Robert Van de Walle
- 1987:
Koba Kurtanidze
- 1988:
Jiří Sosna
- 1989:
Koba Kurtanidze
- 1990:
Stéphane Traineau
- 1991:
Theo Meijer
- 1992:
Stéphane Traineau
- 1993:
Stéphane Traineau
- 1994:
Paweł Nastula
- 1995:
Paweł Nastula
- 1996:
Paweł Nastula
- 1997:
Ben Sonnemans
- 1998:
Daniel Gürschner
- 1999:
Stéphane Traineau
- 2000:
Yury Styopkin
- 2001:
Ariel Ze'evi
- 2002:
Elco van der Geest
- 2003:
Ariel Ze'evi
- 2004:
Ariel Ze'evi
- 2005:
Christophe Humbert
- 2006:
Ruslan Gasimov
- 2007:
Henk Grol
- 2008:
Henk Grol
- 2009:
Tagir Khaybulaev
- 2010:
Elco van der Geest
- 2011:
Amel Mekić
- 2012:
Ariel Ze'evi
- 2013:
Lukáš Krpálek
- 2014:
Lukáš Krpálek
- 2015:
Henk Grol
- 2016:
Henk Grol
- 2017:
Elkhan Mammadov
- 2018:
Toma Nikiforov
- 2019:
Arman Adamian
- 2020:
Peter Paltchik
- 2021:
Toma Nikiforov
- 2022:
Michael Korrel
- 2023:
Zelym Kotsoiev
- 2024:
Matvey Kanikovskiy
![]() | This biographical article related to French judo is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e