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#ILiftClean campaign will be active in Durres

The IWF continues to strengthen its #ILiftClean campaign, this time by holding an anti-doping educational booth at the IWF World Youth Championships, taking place in Durres (ALB), from March 25-April 1, 2023. Participating delegations in the event are invited to visit the booth during the first days of the event so that they can be briefed on the important regulations related to the implementation of a clean and drug-free sport. In partnership with ITA (the International Testing Agency), this initiative aims at a better integration among the young athletes of the Anti-Doping Education and Learning (ADEL) Certificate, a project created by WADA, the World Anti-Doping Agency. In Albania, and besides the booth, the IWF will stage an Anti-Doping Education Seminar, scheduled on March 27, at 10am in the official hotel of the competition - Grand Blue Fafa Resort. It will be a privileged occasion to exchange and share good experiences on this topic, as well as to be informed on the latest recommendations and guidelines from ITA and WADA. And everyone taking part in the seminar will leave with a nice gift! Given the age group of the participating athletes at these Championships - competitors are aged between 13-17 - this important exercise of awareness aims at disseminating educational tools among our youngest talents but to their entourage (coaches and officials) as

Pan-Americans in Argentina attract 14 world medallists

Athletes from 22 nations are ready to take part in the 2023 edition of the Pan-American Weightlifting Championships, taking place from March 25-April 2 in Bariloche, Argentina. This event assumes a special importance this year, as it is part of the list of qualifying competitions for the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris (FRA). Among the delegations with the maximum possible of 20 athletes (10 men, 10 women), the host country Argentina is accompanied by Colombia and United States. Mexico (19 competitors) Canada (18), Ecuador (16) and Venezuela (14) are other nations with strong teams in Bariloche. In terms of individual personalities (around 210 athletes will compete in Argentina), no less than 14 medallists from the 2022 IWF World Championships (held in Bogota, last December) appear on the final entry list for these Pan-Americans. The host country of that IWF showcase is precisely the strongest nation on paper: with no less than eight world medallists, Colombia’s women delegation includes Rosalba Morales del Aguila (silver in the 55kg category), Yenny Alvarez Caicedo (59kg 2022 world champion), Nathalia Llamosa Mosquera (third in the 64kg) and Manuela Berrio Zuluaga (bronze in the 45kg in Bogota, but now entered in the 49kg category). Among the Colombian men’s team, we can find Francisco Mosquera (67kg world champion), Brayan Santiago Rodallegas (second, 89kg), Jhor Esneyder Moreno Torres (third, 96kg), and Rafael de Jesus Cerro (world bronze medallist, 109kg). Canada will bring its female star Maude Charron (third in Bogota, 59kg), Ecuador will count on Angie Paola Palacios Dajomes (bronze, 71kg) and Tamara Salazar Arce (also bronze in Colombia, 81kg category), the United States will bring Martha Rogers (world silver in 76kg), Mexico has entered Ana Gabriela Lopez Ferrer (third, 55kg), and Venezuela is in Bariloche with its male champion Keydomar Vallenilla Sanchez (2022 gold in the 89kg category). The list of participating countries includes: Argentina, Aruba, Barbados, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, United States, Uruguay and Venezuela. As with the Pan-American Weightlifting Championships, the remaining four continental showcases in 2023 will be qualifying events for next year’s Games in the French capital. After Bariloche, the European Championships will be held from April 15-23 in Yerevan (ARM), the Asian rendezvous will be staged from May 3-13 in Jinju (KOR), the African event is scheduled from May 11-20 in Tunis (TUN), and the Oceania showcase will be organised in Honiara (SOL), from November

IWF and EWF launch international Coaches Licence programme

Coaches will not be able to work in the sport without a licence when a new programme comes into operation after the Paris 2024 Olympic Games and will be held more responsible for doping violations. National Federations will also be required to sign up to the programme, which was launched on a pilot basis in Sweden this weekend and will be used for the first time at the European Championships in Armenia next month. Mohammed Jalood, the IWF President, told a gathering of more than 70 international coaches in Halmstad, via a video link, "Coaches must understand that in future if there is a problem with doping they will be punished too, not only the athlete. "If there is a doping problem we can withdraw certification. "The licence project is for the future, to make weightlifting better." Jalood said athletes always turned first to their "father figure" coach, a point emphasised by the IWF general secretary Antonio Urso Speaking in Halmstad, at a seminar hosted by the equipment manufacturer Eleiko, Urso said, "The coach has the responsibility of the entire process of an athlete's development, not just technically but in the human area. "In a big company - and the IWF is like a big company - if you want to invest in the future you must educate your managers, and that is what we are doing with coaches." Asked if coaches should have more of a voice in weightlifting, Urso said, "It is a good idea to have a coaching representative on the executive board and we will be discussing it in Albania (at the World Youth Championships beginning on March 25) with a view to writing it into our new constitution." The coaching licence scheme will be used by the European Weightlifting Federation (EWF) at two of its competitions in April and July, before the final policy is sent for approval to lawyers, the IWF Executive Board and then the IWF Congress in Saudi Arabia in September. Coaches would need support from their National Federation to be registered and once the scheme is operational from 2025, they would have to undergo tests to gain a licence in one of four categories from club to international standard. Federations will also be required to give full details of athletes' coaches at their national championships, and the IWF will build a database to track their progress. Under current plans, the licence will be renewable every four years, and any coach who does not have support from their National Federation would not be able to work in international weightlifting Colin Buckley, the chair of the EWF coaching and research committee who has worked on the plan for years, said, "We won’t have coaches appearing out of nowhere in future. "We will be able to see who is registered, who is accredited, who is starting out on the coaching journey. "This is a very big step for National Federations to say yes, we take responsibility, yes we play our part in taking our sport in a new direction." To make things clear, Buckley highlighted the definition of education as far as WADA is concerned: “To raise awareness, inform, communicate, to instil values, develop life learning skills and decision-making capability to prevent intentional and unintentional anti-doping rule violations.” The licence will not be all about anti-doping, said Buckley: it will ensure that all licensed coaches reach minimum standards – "just like they do in football, rugby, judo and other sports from which we have learned in drawing up the programme" – and it will provide a coaching pathway. "We can no longer just assume a coach has a certain level of knowledge and competence," he said. "It will no longer be just about what coaches need to know, it will be about what they must do. "This is a very big step for national federations to say yes, we take responsibility, yes we play our part in taking our sport in a new direction." By Brian Oliver, from Inside the Games Related articles: IWF plans tighter control measures on coaches and may give them seat on Board (insidethegames.biz) Coaches help weightlifting take another step towards goal of Olympic redemption (insidethegames.biz) Weightlifting section at Inside the Games [gallery size="full" columns="1" ids="37513,37514,37515,37516"

2024 IWF Worlds: five preliminary candidates from three continents

At the end of the first deadline (March 1, 2023) to express interest in hosting the IWF World Championships 2024, five preliminary candidates from three continents sent their application to the IWF: Albania, Armenia, Bahrain, Peru and Venezuela. After this initial step, the IWF may conduct Evaluation Visits to the Candidate Cities, while a detailed questionnaire on the organisation of the IWF showcase is to be completed by each bidder. In order to further strengthen their candidature, interested Member Federations are also invited to send letters from national authorities (Government or City), sport (NOC) and commercial (sponsors) entities. After the candidates’ formal presentation to the IWF Executive Board, a vote of its members decides on the winning city. Finally, a Host City Agreement is signed and the corresponding event fee is transferred to the IWF. The IWF World Championships 2024 are scheduled to take place in November/December, some months after the conclusion of the Paris Olympic Games. Before that, in 2023, the IWF Championships will be organised in Riyadh (KSA), from September 2-17. Complete info on: IWF Guidelines – Candidature Procedure for IWF World

Celebrating women in weightlifting: a journey of success!

Forty years ago, in Moscow (RUS), the IWF Executive Board took a decision that would change the face of weightlifting: the acknowledgment that our International Federation needed to rule also on women competing in the sport. This was naturally the consequence of the increasing activity of female athletes around the world, who were missing a formal and institutional recognition of their pioneering role. On this International Women’s Day, we recall the path of success since those early days in 1983 and the extraordinary progress since then for all women that chose weightlifting as their beloved sport. Three years after that historic meeting in the Russian capital, Budapest hosts the first international tournament for female lifters: in Hungary, 23 athletes from five nations set the tone in what was until then a male-dominated sport. In 1987, the first World Championships with women’s participation took place and around 100 athletes from 22 countries proudly showed their strength in Florida (USA). The end of a stigma Ursula Papandrea is the IWF First Vice-President, the highest-placed woman in the structure of our International Federation. Athlete, and then coach, the US official was a privileged witness of this evolution. “In the 1980s, when I started in the sport, there was a stigma attached to women lifting weights and so many ridiculous ideas of how it would impact our bodies. Of course, we now know that lifting weights has so many incredible health benefits that it has become common to the workout routines for men and women, old and young. When I was competing in the 1990s, we were often ridiculed and not taken seriously,” she recalls. [gallery columns="1" size="medium" ids="37493"] However, the train was moving and nothing could stop it. In 1995, the first World Women’s Junior Championships – 75 lifters from 17 nations – is held in Warsaw (POL), and one year later, the news everyone was waiting for: the IOC approves the entry of women’s weightlifting at the Olympics, starting from Sydney 2000 (men could compete in the Games since its first edition, in 1896). In less than 15 years, the growth of women’s weightlifting was worth its entry into the Olympic arena. In Australia, for this inaugural edition, 85 competitors from 47 nations were present. Seven bodyweight categories were on the programme and the gold medals went to China (four), Colombia, Mexico, and the USA with one title apiece. The Olympics, a turning point “Women's weightlifting had a difficult time gaining acceptance. But things have drastically changed in the last 30 years. Inclusion in the Olympic Games in 2000 was the singular most impactful decision to legitimise and support women's weightlifting,” considers the IWF First Vice-President. “Of course, it has taken decades to achieve true respect and reverence for women in the sport but now women have as many fans and athletes as men, sometimes more. Women weightlifters are, as all women are, impacted by the general inequities in society on the whole, but as a sport, the support has continued to grow. The numbers keep going up, in both athletes and kilos,” she adds. If the Olympics came a bit late for Papandrea, that was not the case for Hidilyn Diaz, from the Philippines, gold medallist in Tokyo 2020, in the 55kg category. “The challenge we have in women’s weightlifting is the perception that the sport is for men only. Women are supposedly too weak to lift and too fragile to be a champion,” she says. Also a member of the IWF Athletes Commission, Diaz is a living proof that this is not the case any longer. “Women are excelling and are well represented in the sport! Their role will also be more notorious in leadership positions, or as technical officials and coaches,” she admits. [gallery columns="1" size="medium" ids="37491"] After the Games in Sydney, two more milestones in this successful road: the first World Youth titles for women in 2009 and the entry, in 2010, in the first edition of the Youth Olympic Games in Singapore. A gender-balanced sport Presently, at the world and Olympic level, the participation is gender-balanced: at the last IWF World Championships in Bogota (COL), in December 2022, 265 women were in attendance (there were 263 men), while the quota for the Paris 2024 is strictly the same for both male and female competitors: 60 in each gender. “Women weightlifters are strong athletes physically and mentally. This is now being celebrated as it should have always been. The growth and development in countries like Saudi Arabia, Syria and Iran, which have traditionally had a very conservative approach towards women's participation, is an indicator that the sport has become accepted and acceptable in all corners of the earth. I would predict that as long as weightlifting is an Olympic sport, it will continue to grow,” underlines Papandrea. From a more institutional perspective, the IWF First Vice-President admits that there is still room for improvement. “In the political arena, we have the most work to do. We have increased representation in decision-making bodies, but we still need to develop a programme to create a pipeline of national and international leaders. It's just a matter of time,” she concludes. This optimism is also shared by the IWF President Mohammed Jalood. “The strengthening of women’s weightlifting around the world has been a long road, but quite a successful one. I would like to highlight two dates in this trajectory, 1987 and 2000, when respectively the IWF World Championships and the Olympic Games opened their door to women’s participation. This was a consequence of the development of the sport among our female stars, but it also further boosted the participation of women in weightlifting,” he considers. “Today, we are a perfectly gender-balanced sport and we are very proud of this achievement. We are also committed and determined to get a better gender representation in the governance and structure of the IWF. On this commemorative day, I wish all the best to our lifters, especially to our female competitors in the five continents!” concludes Mr Jalood. By Pedro Adrega, IWF

Cuba GP: new dates, new entry deadlines

Following the recent change of dates of the 2023 IWF Grand Prix I in Havana (CUB), now taking place from June 8-18, the deadline to submit preliminary entries for the competition was also modified: it is now March 8, three months before the start of the event. The IWF has sent a Circular to all its Member Federations (MF) informing them on this new deadline. Moreover, in accordance with the IWF rules, it is mandatory to register all athletes by March 8, so that the whereabouts information about the competitors is taken into account (Article 5.5.16 of the IWF Anti-Doping Rules). For the time being, and for the purpose of the Preliminary Entries, each MF can register up to 20 athletes per gender, which will then be reduced to a maximum of 10 male and 10 female athletes (+2 reserve athletes per gender) with the occasion of the Final Entry submission. The registration can be done through the IWF Online Entry System at: https://mf.iwf.sport Along with the 2023 IWF World Championships and the Continental Championships, the IWF Grand Prix in the Cuban capital is also a Qualifying Event for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games. The second 2023 IWF Grand Prix having also this important status will be held later in the year, in December, in Doha