“…Besides, the prohibition of technical actions with the capture of the enemy below the belt, the imposition of immediate punishment for a fake attack (tightening an opponent on the ground), the practical ban on holding unilateral seizures without conducting an immediate attack, the increase in the time allocated for an active struggle in the ground fighting would undoubtedly have had a significant impact on the level of tactical, technical and physical preparedness of judoists (Miyake, et al, 2016). Unfortunately, some experts note that a significant part of Russian athletes and coaches have not been fully prepared for such changes in the rules of wrestling as a result of which the competitive results of the majority of the Russian judoists (men and women) showed deterioration (Osipov, et al, 2014;Tel'uk, 2014). If in 2009 the national team of the Russian Federation was one of the teams-leaders of the world championship then in 2010 the indicators of the Russian national team deteriorated noticeably (Adam, et al, 2011).…”