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The age of all dreams

At 12 years and 264 days old, the majority of athletes are barely starting training and competing in the sport they love. Today, in Durres (ALB), Ivy Marie Buzinhani Brustello, from Canada, became the youngest-ever world champion in the history of the IWF, sweeping the three gold medals at stake in the women’s 40kg. In the snatch, the Canadian lifted 53kg, in the clean & jerk she was also the best with 67kg, getting a third total victory of 120kg. Showing a notable maturity given her young age, it was a happy but very calm Ivy Marie who professionally spoke with the media after the medal ceremony. She recalled her debut in the sport, her aspirations coming to Albania and, most importantly, she revealed her future secrets. At almost 13 (on July 4), things are clear in her mind.   “I’ve always thought of competing at the Olympics. This is my most cherished dream. 2028 or 2032, I still don’t know, let’s see how things evolve. Coming to Albania and living this experience, it’s already something fantastic,” Ivy Marie reveals. Debuting in the sport at 7, after doing some gymnastics, she rapidly understands that behind an apparently fragile body, there is a lot of strength and determination. “A couple of years later, I realised I wanted to be a professional in weightlifting. The road is still very long, but I want to continue evolving,” she admits.   Training five times a week (for a daily average of two hours, based on the school schedule), the Canadian concedes that “a lot of sacrifices are needed to succeed”. Especially at her age: “My schoolmates can do whatever they want after school. I don’t. But weightlifting is something I always wanted to do, so it’s worth all the sacrifices!” 1-2 for the Philippines The Philippines started in the best possible way with its participation at these Championships, with the gold and silver in the men’s 49kg. The archipelago heroes were Prince Keil Delos Santos, world youth champion with a total of 205kg, and Eron Borres, silver medallist with 201kg. Both still aged 15 (Santos will be 16 on April 9, while Borres will celebrate his birthday on September 1), the two teammates were naturally happy and proud of their performances after the medal ceremony.   “I started the sport through a friend’s influence, at the age of 9. After that, I fell in love with weightlifting and I never stopped. When I was recruited to the national team, I understood that I had potential and that I could be successful in the sport,” recalled Delos Santos. On his second international major event – after taking part in the 2022 Asian Youth Championships in Tashkent (UZB) – the raising star was also the best in the snatch event, with 92kg. He was then second to his compatriot in the clean & jerk, lifting 113kg (Borres did slightly better, with 114kg).   Training an average of three hours a day, Delos Santos confesses that they were quite optimistic about getting these successful results – both competitors made personal bests on this inaugural day in Albania.   At 15, all dreams are allowed and when asked about their prospects for the future, the same four words were simultaneously pronounced by the two athletes: “To be Olympic champions!” And the place for glory is also chosen: “The 2028 Games in Los Angeles”. By Pedro Adrega, IWF

Durres, Day 1: 12-year-old Ivy takes gold for Canada to become weightlifting’s youngest ever world champion

Ivy Buzinhani Brustello made weightlifting history on the opening day of the 2023 IWF World Youth Championships in Durres, Albania when she won a world title at the age of 12 years 264 days. Nobody under 13 had ever won a medal in international competition before Ivy’s victory in the women’s 40kg today, according to the OlyFanatics database that has results of 34,000 lifters dating back to 1898. “It was an amazing experience – I wasn’t expecting this,” said Ivy, who was born in Canada after her Brazilian parents moved there. “I train five days a week, two hours a day, and I have always been competitive, and good at controlling the mental stress. “I know weightlifting is not the most popular sport, but my friends at school think it’s pretty cool that I get to go to lots of places to compete.” Until this trip, Ivy had competed only in Canada and the United States. She lifted in 12 competitions last year, taking her best total from 86kg to 112kg. Ivy practised gymnastics with her team-mate and close friend Emily Ibanez Guerrero, who lifts in the 55kg category on Monday, and switched across to weightlifting four years ago. Emily is even younger, as her 13th birthday is not until December. She could displace Ivy as weightlifting’s youngest international medallist within two days, and Ivy will be happy to see it as she will be cheering on Emily at the Ramazan Njala Sport Complex. Both girls will be back again on Wednesday to support Brayan Ibanez, Emily’s 16-year-old brother who became Canada’s first world youth medallist last year. All three of these outstanding young athletes train at the same club in Montreal, run by Ivy’s coach Abigail Guerrero and her husband Ciro Ibanez, who was an international lifter for Cuba and a coach in France and Spain before he moved to Canada. Guerrero said, “Ivy is such a talent and she would be good at any sport she tried because of her mental strength.” Canada’s team of eight includes another strong medal contender in Etta Mae Love in the women’s +81kg super-heavyweights. Ivy speaks English, French and Portuguese, can clearly cope with doing media interviews, and showed excellent technique on the platform as she calmly made personal bests across the board. She made five from six to take a sweep of gold medals with 53-67-120. Melek Sahin (TUR), who was third in the snatch, would have beaten Ivy by 1kg had she made her final clean and jerk but she failed and finished second on 53-66-119. Third-placed Sabar Jyoshna (IND) was second in the snatch but only sixth in clean and jerk, ending on 53-62-115, and Basma Gunaidy (EGY) took bronze in clean and jerk on 66kg after failing with all three snatch attempts. The Philippines had a one-two finish in the opening event of the Championships, the men’s 49kg. Keil Delos Santos made all six lifts to finish 92-113-205, ahead of his team-mate Eron Borres, who took the clean and jerk gold in making 87-114-201. Third place went to another six-from-six lifter, Dhanush Loganathan from India, who was second in the snatch behind Delos Santos and made 88-112-200. Both the 15-year-old Philippines medallists went straight into weightlifting without taking up another sport, Delos Santos aged nine and Borres aged eight – and both said their ultimate ambition is “to be Olympic champion”. They have been inspired, they both said, by Hidilyn Diaz, who became the first Olympic gold medallist in any sport for the Philippines in Tokyo in 2021. Bui Minh Dao, the 13-year-old Asian youth champion, missed two of his clean and jerks and had a sweep of fourth-place finishes on 86-109-195, which was 1kg lower than his continental total last July. By Brian Oliver, Inside the

Youth global showcase is officially open in Albania!

The IWF highest authorities and many local governmental and municipal representatives were today in Tirana for the official Opening Ceremony of the IWF World Youth Championships, taking place from March 25- April 1 in Durres, a seaside resort in the coast of Albania. In the Olympic Park of the Albanian capital, the welcome to the athletes started with the parade of the 57 flags of the participating nations in the Championships. On the stage of the event, local artists and dancers offered then a pleasant show to the spectators, mostly the young competitors in the global showcase. In his opening speech, the IWF President Mohammed Jalood considered that “Albania organised in the last couple of years four major events – two at European scale and two of world dimension, these Championships in Durres and the IWF electoral congress in 2022 in Tirana”. Mr Jalood (accompanied in the ceremony by the IWF Secretary General Antonio Urso and by many members of the IWF Executive Board) thanked the hosts for the “wonderful hospitality” and recalled the “tradition, history and good results of Albania in weightlifting”. He concluded his introductory words by wishing to the Albanian delegation “the best possible luck at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris!” Also a happy leader was Mr Elez Gjoza, President of the Albanian Weightlifting Federation and host of the Championships. “We are very proud and grateful to the IWF Executive Board for their trust in Albania for the staging of this event. Everything has been carefully and positively prepared,” considered Mr Gjoza. The Albanian official then expressed his appreciation for the support received by the city of Tirana. “The Mayor of our capital is doing an amazing job for the citizens. But he is also strongly supporting the sport and the organization of major events in our country. This is a strong legacy for our youth and children,” concluded the President of the Albanian Weightlifting Federation. Action debut in Durres The 2023 edition of the IWF World Youth Championships starts this Saturday in Durres (ALB) and will be attended by 268 athletes (135 men, 133 women), coming from 57 countries. Seven national delegations are bringing 10 or more competitors to this event: the USA (17), India (13), Chinese Taipei, Egypt and Ukraine (all with 12), and Armenia and Kazakhstan (11 each). The inaugural day of these Championships – for lifters aged from 13 to 17 years of age at the end of this year – will include two finals, the men’s 49kg and the women’s 40kg. In the male’s category, Minh Dao Bui (VIE) has the highest entry (200kg) and is followed by Eron Borres (198kg) and by Prince Keil Delos Santos (197kg), both from the Philippines. Bui is also the youngest participant of the field (nine lifters will compete in the Group A, and five in the Group B), completing 14 years of age next April 6. Among women, the top-3 in the start list are Melek Yagmur Sahin (TUR) and Maysa Khadraoui (TUN), both with an overall of 125kg, and Roimary Brito Rangel (VEN, 120kg). Ivy Buzinhani Brustello (CAN) – she will be 13 on April 7 – is the youngest competitor of the seven-athlete final. The Start Book of the Championships can be found here    By Pedro Adrega, IWF

IWF Refugee Team: two more days to send applications!

Following the announcement by the IWF on March 1 about the launch of the IWF Refugee Team, our International Federation has already received several applications for this programme. According to the established milestones, potential candidates have until March 25, 2023 to manifest their interest. As a reminder, to be eligible to this programme, athletes must be recognised as refugees or beneficiaries of international protection, in according with the criteria established by the UNHCR, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Moreover, the participation of those athletes at IWF events will be based on the assessment from the IWF Member Federation or National Olympic Committee in the athlete’s host country of residence. Once approved by the IWF, the Refugee Team will compete under the acronym WRT, will use the official IWF flag and is subject to the IWF Anti-Doping Rules. Finally, a coach/manager of the Team will also be appointed by the IWF, so that the selected athletes can be properly integrated in a training programme. Athletes and coach will have to follow and complete the WADA ADEL online course and other educational programmes deemed necessary for their preparation. All relevant info on: IWF Refugee Programme Policy Refugee Team Application Form 2023 Refugee Team Coach/Manager Job

Mattie Rogers (USA): “Nothing replaces competing at the Olympics!”

“Always a bridesmaid, never a bride”. The expression is self-explanatory and is used by US lifter Mattie Rogers to describe her past performances at the IWF World Championships: 13 medals, including nine silver and four bronze. The so-awaited gold may be reserved for 2023, at the global showcase in Riyadh (KSA), in September. “I don’t know... I have always been on silver, I would love a gold, but it’s going to be my first time in this super competitive 81kg category… It’s going to be hard!” she admits, laughing. Last December, in Bogota (COL), she was second (overall: 247kg) in the 76kg category, after three previous silver linings in 2021 (243kg), 2019 (240kg), and 2017 (235kg). Born on August 23, 1995, Rogers leaves this week for Bariloche, Argentina, where she will defend her 2022 Pan-American title in the 76kg. “I would like to say that the goal is to win, but I’m pretty much number-focused right now. This is an Olympic qualifying event, so if I have to take a lift just to secure a higher total than what I did at the World Championships that will be the goal. Make whatever is on the bar and be happy with that”, she explains. At the international level, the results achieved last year at the continental championships are her personal bests: 252kg overall (snatch: 111kg, clean & jerk: 141kg). But in 2021, she had done better on national soil: 255kg (112+143). Initially a competitive gymnast for 12 years, the young Mattie then wanted to “try other sports”. She found CrossFit and thanks to that, her first weightlifting coach. In between, she was a cheerleader for four/five years. “It was a kind of transition between gymnastics and weightlifting. My cheerleading coach used to put us on some conditioning workouts and was doing also a bit of CrossFit. He told me: ‘you should come to the gym with me’. And the gym owner was an Olympic weightlifting coach. Once I got on CrossFit – at my own rhythm – he told me: ‘I know you could be a good weightlifter!’ It was just a question of time”, the US star recalls. She competes at her first US Junior Nationals and the doubt was gone. “It was the first time I said ‘maybe, just maybe, I can really be good at this’. I have a good raw strength, a strong athletic background, but as far as being really strong, I still didn’t have that. So, it was not something I had planned; it was rather something I had to put a lot of effort into it even before I could realise this was something I could do well”. Games’ rollercoaster 2016 is the year when the first international successes emerge: silver at the Pan-Ams (69kg category) and gold at the FISU University Championships. By that time, the Olympics take place in Rio de Janeiro – Mattie Rogers travels to Brazil as an alternate lifter. She doesn’t compete; instead, she supports her teammates from the stands. “I was happy to be there, but it wasn’t a full Olympic experience…” Fast forward five years later, and we find her at the Tokyo Games (largely impacted by the Covid pandemic), this time as a member of the competing US team. “Going to Japan, I finally said: ‘I’ll have the full experience there’. And it wasn’t still that… We were there just for four days, it was very quick, hard to see any other sport. I was of course very happy to be at the Olympics, I wouldn’t trade it for anything else in the world, but it was a kind of a bummer. It wasn’t once again the full Olympic experience”, Rogers admits. Performance-wise, the Florida-based lifter, doesn’t hesitate to label the experience as both her best and worst career memory. “Nothing replaces competing at the Olympics! That’s every athlete’s ultimate goal. But it was also the worst competition of my life! It was terrible for me. It’s hard to pinpoint what was wrong – it was just not my day… I was also dealing with some mental issues at the time and that played a big part in it. I had a panic attack going into clean and jerks, and it was really difficult to recover and hold it together. It was both an embarrassing and scary moment,” she painfully considers. In the Japanese capital, she finished sixth in the 87kg, with a total of 246kg (108+138). After Rio 2016 and Tokyo 2020ne, Rogers is cautious concerning the expectations for Paris 2024: “I just want to get there, I don’t care how it will look like, if I can have fans or not there, I don’t care… Just being there and I’ll be ecstatic!” Looking still ahead, she proceeds: “I really hope weightlifting can be in Los Angeles, in 2028. Not just for me, as it could be the end point of my career, but for the younger generation. Athletes who are in their late teenage years dream to go to the Olympics. Not knowing if they will get a chance to be there, it’s upsetting. So I hope we can get it together, come back, and be fully included in the Olympic programme”. “We do a great job together”Surrounded by animals in a big farm, the US champion is training most of the time alone. “It’s a bit challenging with my coach [Aimee Anaya Everett] as she lives in Oregon and me in Florida. So, there is also a very good job in communicating as I train completely by myself. But I couldn’t ask for a better coach – I wish we could be together more often, but we do a great job together!” While on the screen (this interview was a video online call), a cat walks behind Rogers. “It’s my training partner. I have my chickens outside, doing all kinds of noises when the cat is approaching… We have quite a farm… Four cats inside and as many as we can find outside. Yeah, I go anywhere, I see a cat, and I want to bring it home!” Coming from a family with “good athletic genes” (her parents were competing at high-school/college level), the 27-year-old lifter has developed in the last couple of years a clothing line, aimed at serving the lifters. “There is a lot of fitness stuff out there, but they don’t really fit well on weightlifters… We are just larger people. So that was the main driving force behind the project. I wanted to make it size-inclusive, gender-inclusive, just as inclusive it could be, so that it could serve everyone in the sport”. Still a small five-people project (taking care of the design, production, and promotion), “the business is steadily growing”. Graduated in December 2020 (Sports & Exercise Science), Rogers necessarily thinks of a future beyond competitive weightlifting. “Coaching will always be a part of my plans. I already do it now – I have my own athletes and programmes. That’s something I love and it will always be a kind of part-time job. For weightlifting, and for the time being, it’s not something from which you can do a fruitful career. There’s no money in coaching yet, and that’s what it is. So, I’ll always do that because I love it, and then whatever I need outside of that to survive. We will see what happens when the time comes”. Honesty and authenticityAlso very active on social media (with over 658k followers on Instagram at the time of this interview), the world silver medallist admits being a role model for the younger generation. “I try to be very honest and genuine. If I feel I am not being authentic, honest, or genuine, I hate that. I portray myself the same way I would do with my close friends and family. I hope they like it. I feel grateful for having such a kind and encouraging audience. I feel that my audience also looks at me in search of motivation and inspiration, but perhaps also on technique tips... They are in general very supportive”. Considering herself a “lucky athlete on the injury front”, Mattie Rogers reflects on her passion for the sport: “I love it because I’ve always loved individual sports. It’s only you, 100% you. It can be great, or it can be terrible. But I love that and that’s how I grew up. I also love how technical it is. You can be the strongest person in the world and be terrible at Olympic weightlifting. You need both the technical aspect and the strength – one alone, is not enough. So, there is always something you can still work on”. On the competition's environment, she is clear: “They are always scary, terrifying, but exciting! It’s always an adventure!” Finally, on the place of women in the sport, the US lifter believes weightlifting is now gender-balanced: “It has become more popular, especially over the last 8/10 years. There is a ton of women realising that being strong is indeed quite cool, and fun! We are definitively heading in the right direction. Every year, I feel the women’s weightlifting classes are getting more and more packed. That’s a proof of progress,” she concludes. By Pedro Adrega, IWF Communications Photos by Isaac

Colombian Segura seeks third world title as top teenagers go for gold in Abania

The 16-year-old Colombian Ingrid Segura will be attempting to add to the six IWF World Youth Championships medals she has already won when she goes for a third straight world title in Durres, Albania next week. In the 2023 IWF World Youth Championships, which start on Saturday (March 25) and end on April 1, Segura lifts at the same 64kg body weight category in which she won five golds and two silvers in 2021 and 2022. Last year she made 94-117-211 to take all three golds. Colombia finished second in the IWF World Youth Championships medals table last year in León, Mexico and has entered a strong team again, including another of last year’s winners, Lawren Estrada, at 40kg. Athletes from Kazakhstan, whose team topped the medals table in León, have the highest entry totals in four of the male weight categories in Durres, 67kg, 73kg, 89kg and 102kg. Based on entry totals and past performance Turkey, the Philippines, Egypt and Thailand will also have strong medal contenders in Durres. Kazakhstan’s 73kg athlete Yerasyl Saulebekov, who won last year at 67kg, has posted an entry total of 310kg, which is 1kg more than the youth world record set last year by his team-mate Yedige Yemberdi. Yemberdi is too old to lift in Albania as his 18th birthday is in May. To be eligible for the youth competitions, an athlete must be aged 13 to 17 at any point during the year of competition. There will be about 270 athletes competing in Durres, more than half of them born in 2006. The youngest is Emily Ibanez Guerrero from Canada, born on December 27, 2010, which means she will be aged 12 years 84 days when the competition starts on Saturday. Emily’s parents are both weightlifters, Abigail Guerrero and Ciro Ibanez, and have nurtured her remarkable progress. She is already capable of lifting 90-plus kilos in clean and jerk and has an Instagram following of 38,000. Her brother Brayan became Canada’s first medallist at the World Youths last year when he finished third in snatch and total at 73kg. He lifts at 81kg in Durres Jessica Palacios Dajome, from Ecuador, is also from an illustrious weightlifting family. The 17-year-old is the younger sister of Neisi Palacios Dajome, who won Olympic gold in Tokyo, and the IWF World Championships medallist Angie Palacios. Her brother German, aged 20, is due to compete at the Pan American Junior Championships in Colombia in May. Another famous name appears in Italy’s team. Claudio Scarantino, 16, who lifts at 61kg, is the younger brother of the 11-times European champion Mirco Scarantino, a double Olympian. Their father Giovanni competed at the Olympic Games in 1988, 1992 and 1996. By Brian Oliver, Inside the Games [caption id="attachment_37546" align="alignnone" width="300"] Yerassyl Saulebekov