
Japan has been left without a seat on the International Judo Federation's Executive Committee for the first time, after Olympic judo gold medalist Yasuhiro Yamashita [align=left] lost out in his bid to be reelected education and coaching director. Yamashita was defeated by Algerian Mohamed Meridja by 123 votes to 61, at a general assembly meeting held Monday. Japan joined the IJF in 1952. Observers say Japan's international influence on the sport could be diminished as a result. Yamashita was elected to the executive committee for the first time in 2003 and focused on spreading judo and instruction on how to correctly wear the judogi or uniform. However, in the IJF presidential election in 2005, Yamashita backed South Korean Park Yong Sung, who recently stepped down from the position. Supporters of current IJF President Marius Vizer, a former European federation president and critic of Park, decided to field Meridja against Yamashita. Following the result, Yamashita said: "The size of the loss was greater than I expected. Without an executive committee member, Japan will find it difficult to obtain information on the federation. I'm genuinely concerned about whether Japan can keep up with global trends in the sport."