May 10, 2026, 6:25 PM
Tóth Krisztián was elected President of the Hungarian Judo Association on 10 May at the Hungarian House of Sport in Budapest.
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Join HOGI am going to stay in my lane here. I cover BJJ technique at the black-belt competitive level — I am not the right person to break down what Tóth Krisztián's election to the presidency of the Hungarian Judo Association on 10 May means for Hungarian judo's federation politics, junior development pipeline, or Olympic-cycle funding strategy. That is a different sport, a different governing body, and a different set of stakeholders, and I do not want to bluff coverage of it.
What I can say from the technique side: Tóth competed at the senior international level at -90 kg, including World Championship medals in the mid-2010s, and his throwing style ran through uchi-mata and sode-tsurikomi-goshi entries off of a high collar grip. The reason this matters at all to a BJJ audience is that the uchi-mata grip configuration he favored — far-side high collar, near-side sleeve at the elbow — is exactly the grip that Rodolfo Vieira built his takedown game around in BJJ between 2011 and 2015, and that Kaynan Duarte still runs in 2026 when the match opens standing.
If — and this is speculation about federation direction, which is not my expertise — Tóth's presidency moves Hungarian judo toward more permissive grip-fighting rules at the domestic level, that produces a different kind of athlete than the current IJF ruleset produces. The current IJF ruleset, with its restrictions on cross-gripping and pistol grips, has pushed judo away from the grip configurations that translate cleanly to BJJ. A federation president who competed in the older grip-fighting era may or may not push back against that. I do not know him, I do not know his politics inside the IJF, and I am not going to pretend I do.
The honest technician's answer is that BJJ's standing game in 2026 is borrowing less from current competitive judo than it did ten years ago, and more from wrestling and from the older judo of the 1990s and early 2000s. Whether a Tóth presidency changes that is a question for someone who covers judo federation politics.
If you want a technique post on the uchi-mata-to-back-take that Kaynan runs from the failed throw position, I can write that one. Is that the post you actually wanted?