The Other Olympic Sports
Sprinters, swimmers and tumblers in sequined leotards may drive T.V. ratings in the U.S., but here are five lesser-known Olympic disciplines that draw rabid fans around the world
by Hannah Beech

Japan's Ryoko Tani, left, fights France's Frederique Jossinet at the 2004 Athens Olympic Games
Added as an Olympic sport at Tokyo 1964, judo is a bountiful medal generator for the Japanese. The Asian nation has won a record 31 judo golds, triple the number of runner-up France. That's not surprising given that the Japanese invented the martial art, whose name literally translates as "the gentle way." But there's nothing soft about the sport, which employs moves like throws, grapples and strikes. Height often confers no advantage: in 1976, a 5'6" Japanese judoka as the sports' athletes are called handily defeated a 7' North Korean. This time around, the Japanese are again pinning their hopes on 4'11" Ryoko Tani, a two-time Olympic champion in the women's 48-kg division.
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