|  ScoringAll scoring and refereeing terms are in Japanese. During
                          a contest, for either men or women, a judoka (a person
                          who practices the art of judo) may record an ippon
                          (full-point), a waza-ari (“almost” ippon,
                          a half of a point), a yuko (“almost” waza-ari,
                          a quarter of a point), and a koka (“almost” yuko,
                          an eighth of a point). There are negative scores too,
                          resulting from hansoku-make (very grave infringements),
                          keikoku (grave infringements), chui (serious infringements),
                          and shido (slight infringements). The negative scores
                          are recorded in favor of the contestant who did not
                          commit the violation.
 CompetitionA judo match is won by the first to score an ippon or its
                        equivalent, which is the sum of two waza-ari, known as
                        an awaste ippon. A judoka earns an ippon by throwing
                        his opponent to the mat (or tatame) with considerable
                        force or speed, maintaining a hold for 30 seconds, applying
                        armbar (elbow-joint-locking) techniques, or choking the
                        rival while avoiding any action that might injure the
                        neck or spine. (It is not allowed to put a lock on any
                        bodily joint other than the elbow, as this could seriously
                        injure the opponent.) An awaste ippon is earned by successfully
                        executing one of the throwing techniques, which is given
                        a waza-ari, followed by a 25-second hold-down, or vice
                        versa, or by winning a waza-ari at the same time the
                        opponent received a keikoku. If neither contestant is
                        able to do this within the time limit, then a decision
                        is rendered by the referee and two judges based on who
                        demonstrated the better judo technique. Any lesser scores
                        earned are counted toward the decision. Judo is divided
                        into weight categories much like boxing. For the Sydney
                        Olympic Summer Games they were extra lightweight, half
                        lightweight, lightweight, half middleweight, middleweight,
                        half heavyweight, and heavyweight.
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