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Young British judo stars in scare as tornado hits Belgium camp

On Wednesday 14 July a tornado hit Belgium and hospitalised a number of young British judo stars after ripping the roof off the sports hall where they were training in Jodoigne.

The Belgium camp was taken by the country’s 2001 World Championships silver medallist Cédric Taymans who presided over 150 players including seniors and juniors from his home country, France, Luxembourg and Britain’s finest youngsters.

The sun-soaked venue descended into frantic scenes when the wind suddenly picked up and the tornado hit while the players were doing uch-komi, an attacking move to control or throw an opponent.

Kent’s Tonbridge Judo Club arranged the trip for the young Brit’s, which featured 14-year-old George Goldsmith from JSC Judo Club in Essex, who recalls the terrifying experience.

“All of a sudden the doors flew open while we were in the middle of training,” he said.

“There was a huge gust of wind and I looked around and I saw about six people trying to shut the door. All I heard was a massive crash and the roof came off and I tried to grab my teammate Kieran Davin’s sleeve but the wind picked him up and threw him to the floor.

“One of the coaches, Colin Eldridge from Tonbridge, grabbed Kieran but I was still in there, a piece of debris hit me in the arm and knocked me to the ground and one of the beams from the roof hit me in the leg, I pushed it off and managed to run down the corridor.

George added: “When the storm went over us it left trees across the road but we managed to get to the hospital. I badly bruised my leg and my judo suit was covered in blood from a player of a different country who’d been hit when the roof come off. “

The highly-regarded youngster was forced out of competing at the National Team Championships in Wolverhampton on Saturday 17 July, with a bruised leg and was seen limping around the Walsall Sports Campus as he supported his club and county colleagues.

His pocket-sized international colleague, 14-year-old Kieran Davin, of Moberly Judo Club in London, was lucky to escape serious injury.

“It was pretty scary; I heard a bang and then saw a coach trying to close the door and he got pulled outside,” he said.

“Then the roof come off and smashed and everything was falling, the wall fell down next to me and our coach Colin grabbed me and pinned me to the wall to protect me.

“As he picked me up a Belgian player got hit by a block from the wall and had to have 32 stitches, his blood was all over me. We sprinted towards the corridor and saw George who’d had his leg hit by a beam.”

The heroic Colin Eldridge, 50, rescued several youngsters as the venue collapsed around him.

“I grabbed Kieran as he come flying past me and rounded up the whole squad but I didn’t do anything more than anyone else would have done,” said the 1 st Dan.

“As it started it was quite scary when I was trying to get everyone together so you can’t imagine the relief when I knew I had everyone safe, which was the main thing for me, I calmed down then.”

Eldridge added: “I’ve never seen anything like it in all my life; the wind erupted and destroyed the building in just a couple of minutes.”

Despite the ordeal Kieran competed on Saturday and was part of the gold medal-winning London team who triumphed in the cadet boys’ category at the National Teams event.

Kieran’s fellow Londoner, British senior star Ashley McKenzie, who won his third consecutive British Open in May, was among the London teams coaching setup and reserved high praise for one of the city’s top prospects.

“He’s a very good player technically and his tactics were spot on,” said the 60kg standout.

“To do that after what happened in Belgium is even more impressive.”

The tornado was described as a ‘natural phenomenon’ by mayor Jean-Paul Wahl.

“A tornado hit Jodoigne but we’ve not had rain, the very strong winds took away many roofs,” he said.

"It is a natural phenomenon that has made this kind of damage."

British Judo Association’s Performance Operations Manager, Karen Roberts, was relieved to see the young squad return from Belgium without any serious injuries.

“It was quite an ordeal but fortunately all the squad returned back safely on Thursday night via Eurostar,” she said.


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