Ippon! Teddy Riner thrills home crowd to grab Olympic gold in judo.

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+100kg JUDO

Credit...James Hill for The New York Times
  • Aug. 2, 2024Updated 3:26 p.m. ET

Ben ShpigelJames Hill

The French judoka Teddy Riner is 6-foot-8, weighs 300(ish) pounds and once went a very, very, very, very, very, very, very (very) long time without losing, a stretch of supremacy that launched him into a realm of renown in France generally occupied by soccer stars, fashion doyennes and philosophers.

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Credit...James Hill for The New York Times

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Credit...James Hill for The New York Times

His visage adorns front pages and magazine covers. He has modeled outfits by Balenciaga and Dolce & Gabbana for GQ France. At the opening ceremony, Riner was one of two athletes conferred with the ultimate honor of lighting the cauldron.

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Credit...James Hill for The New York Times

On Friday, Riner competed in the final match of his fifth Games, the first staged in his hometown, and from the second he was introduced until the second he walked off the tatami mat, the crowd at Champs De Mars Arena did not cheer for him so much as drench him in love.

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Credit...James Hill for The New York Times

Facing the No. 1-seeded judoka in the +100kg weight class, Kim Minjong of South Korea, Riner waited and waited, as if lingering for a precise moment. Then it came. He kicked out his right leg, turning Kim parallel to the mat and in one fluid motion yanked him onto his back for an ippon, the highest score a fighter can achieve and an automatic victory.

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Credit...James Hill for The New York Times

His gold medal secured, Riner windmilled his fist. He fell to his knees. He held up three fingers — one for each individual Olympic gold medal.

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Credit...James Hill for The New York Times

In all, Riner, 35, now has six Olympic medals, in addition to the, say it with me, ee-LEH-ven individual world championship titles. No one in the sport can claim his résumé — which includes that 154-match winning streak, spanning nearly a decade — or his popularity, and it is going to be quite a while before someone even comes close.

Ben Shpigel is a senior editor on The Times’s Live team, coordinating with desks across the newsroom to provide editing and reporting support on fast-paced breaking news in real time. More about Ben Shpigel

James Hill is a photographer working on a regular basis for The Times since 1993. He is currently based in Paris. More about James Hill

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