David Rudman (April 13, 1943 â February 8, 2022) was a Russian-American wrestler, Sambo world champion, and judo European champion.
Rudman was born in Kuybyshev (now Samara, Russia). He emigrated to the United States in 1994, and lived in New York City, where was involved in sports administration. Rudman died on February 8, 2022, at the age of 78.
He was a member of the sport association "Dynamo".
In 1965âÂÂ69 and 1973, he was the USSR Wrestling Champion at 70 kg. He was second in the USSR championship at 70 kg in 1970âÂÂ72, and third in 1974.
In 1967, he was the Champion of the first International Sambo Tournament, at 70 kg. Rudman described sambo as "is a combination of many forms of martial arts, designed to give Soviet soldiers the edge in combat fighting". In 1973, he was the first World Champion in the weight category up to 68 kg. He was a six-time USSR sambo champion.
In 1969, he was the European Judo Champion in individual competition as a light-middleweight (U70), winning all of his matches in Ostend, Belgium, ahead of Antoni Zajkowski and Czeslaw Kur of Poland, and Patrick Vial of France. He won a bronze medal in the 1969 World Judo Championships in Mexico City in the U70 weight class. In 1970, he was part of the European Team Judo Champion at the championships in Berlin, fighting in the U70 weight class.
Rudman founded and served as director of the "Sambo-70" sports school in the Cheremushki District of Moscow.
He was the President of the American Amateur Sambo Federation since 2004, and President of the Federation International Amateur Sambo from 2005 on.
Rudman was an Honored Master of Sports of the USSR, and an Honored Coach of the USSR.