Judd Bankert (born September 9, 1949) is a former biathlete who represented Guam at the 1988 Winter Olympics.
Bankert is a Michigan native, born in Grand Rapids, raised in Lake Orion and a graduate of Michigan State University. Bankert moved to Guam in December 1981 with his wife and daughter. Bankert broke his hip in a serious rock climbing accident on Guam in 1984.
In 1986, the Guam National Olympic Committee was accepted into the International Olympic Committee. In August 1987 Bankert moved with his family from Guam to Bellingham, Washington, and trained with members of the Western Washington University cross-country skiing team. His personal coach was Richard Domey and in the fall of 1987 Bankert trained in West Yellowstone with the U.S. Olympic biathlon team. To be eligible to compete at the Winter Olympic Games Bankert needed to successfully complete two sanctioned biathlons competitions. He finished his second such competition on February 7, 1988, just three days before the Opening Ceremony, at which he carried the flag of Guam as its only athlete at the 1988 Winter Olympic Games. At 38, Bankert was one of the oldest Olympic athletes at the 1988 Winter Olympics Games. This, combined with the fact that he represented a tropical island, made his a human interest story reported extensively in the media.
In the men's 10 km sprint event, Bankert missed eight out of the ten rifle targets and as a result had to ski eight penalty laps. totalling 1200 m. Bankert finished 71st of 72 starters in 45m37.1s, between Gustavo Giro of Argentina (36m38.1s) and Elliot Archilla of Puerto Rico (47m47.4s).