Kamal Khan-Magomedov

Kamal Khan-Magomedov
Personal information
Full nameKamal Haji-Kurbanovich Khan-Magomedov
Born17 June 1986 (1986-06-17) (age 39)
Derbent, Dagestan, USSR
OccupationJudoka
Sport
Country Russia
SportJudo
Weight class–66 kg
Coached bySadiq Abdulov
Achievements and titles
World Champ. (2014)
European Champ. (2015)
Medal record
Men's judo
Representing  Russia
World Championships
2014 Chelyabinsk Men's team
2014 Chelyabinsk ‍–‍66 kg
European Games
2015 Baku ‍–‍66 kg
2015 Baku Men's team
European Championships
2013 Budapest ‍–‍66 kg
2014 Montpellier Men's team
IJF Grand Slam
2014 Baku ‍–‍66 kg
2012 Moscow ‍–‍66 kg
IJF Grand Prix
2016 Havana ‍–‍66 kg
2010 Qingdao ‍–‍66 kg
2012 Qingdao ‍–‍66 kg
2013 Samsun ‍–‍66 kg
2013 Qingdao ‍–‍66 kg
2017 Düsseldorf ‍–‍66 kg
European U23 Championships
2008 Zagreb ‍–‍66 kg
Profile at external databases
IJF1940
JudoInside.com49480
Updated on 4 July 2023

Kamal Haji-Kurbanovich Khan-Magomedov (Russian: Камал Гаджи-Курба́нович Хан-Магомедов, Azerbaijani: Камал Һаҹы-Гурбанович Хан-Магомедов); born 17 June 1986 in Derbent, Dagestan, Russia) is a Russian judoka[1] of Tabasaran and Azerbaijani descents.

Career

During his early career, he trained at Derbent Sports School No.3 under Sadiq Abdulov. Khan-Magomedov's introduction to the sport of judo was indirect, thinking it was karate: "In our city we did not know what judo was, we were thinking that it was karate, so we went to karate, but it was judo."[2]

Khan-Magomedov won silver in -66 kg at the 2013 European Judo Championships after being defeated by 2012 Olympics Champion Lasha Shavdatuashvili of Georgia. He then won bronze in the -66 kg final category at the 2014 World Judo Championships.

Khan-Magomedov won gold in -66 kg at the inaugural 2015 European Games defeating Frenchman Loïc Korval in the finals held in Baku, Azerbaijan.[3]

He plans to set up a business after completing his career.

References

  1. ^ "Kamal Khan-Magomedov, Judoka". judoinside.com.
  2. ^ "Kamal Khan-Magomedov takes the European title". Judoinside.
  3. ^ "Result: Russia's Kamal Khan-Magomedov races to judo gold". Sports Mole.