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Get to know… Loredana Elena Toma

Name:  Loredana Elena Toma DOB: 10/05/1995 Nationality: Romanian Weight category: 64kg Medal record: 9 gold medals European championship, 3 gold medals and 1 silver medal World Championship Senior Personal Bests: Snatch: 111kg Clean and Jerk: 131kg Total: 239kg Loredana Elena Toma celebrating in Ashgabat. Career Snatch or clean and jerk? - Snatch What do you like to listen to when training?– Hip Hop How many hours a week do you spend in the gym?- Depends on the training period, up to 25-30 hours week What's your favourite aspect of training? - The technique aspect of the competitive exercises Which aspect of training do you hate the most? – The jerk If there was one thing you could improve about your technique, what would it be? – The jerk technique What is your most memorable lift? – 110kg snatch in the World Championships in Turkmenistan What achievements will allow you to retire happy? – Olympic Medal Knowing what you know now, what one thing would you change in your first training routines? – I believe I wouldn’t change anything Who is the greatest weightlifter of all time? – Nicu Vlad What is the most important thing needed to be an Olympic weightlifter? – Strong mind   Loredana Elena Toma's clean & jerk in Ashgabat.   Personal Describe yourself in 3 words – Determination, strength & focus What other sports do you like to play? – Ping Pong What is your favourite meal?– BBQ Ribs/ Cake If you could only eat one type of one cuisine for the rest of your life, what would it be? – Romanian cuisine Describe your perfect day off – Eating in a good restaurant Which person, alive or dead, would you like to have a conversation with? – Deng Wei Name one skill you would like to learn – To swim Where is the one place you would like to visit? – Indonesia What's the best piece of advice you've ever received? – Never give up on your dream   Loredana will be taking over IWFs Instagram on Thursday 16 May, make sure you tune in to see what this weightlifting star gets up to on a daily basis!  

IWF and ITA Sign Anti-Doping Partnership

  An agreement between the International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) and the International Testing Agency (ITA) was signed earlier today during the SportAccord convention in Gold Coast. The agreement builds on one already signed in November 2018. Until now, the partnership between the two organisations included detailed risk assessment, test distribution planning and management, out of competition testing, Therapeutic Use Exemption (TUE) management, and support with regard to the IWF’s education programmes. In-competition testing, management of the IWF Athlete Biological Passport programme, result management, and long-term storage and re-analysis of samples have now been added. The partnership is further evidence of the IWF’s clear and considerable commitment to protecting clean athletes and promoting clean sport. It builds on several years of consistent improvements on the part of the IWF and its member federations, achieved with the support of the Clean Sport Commission, the World Anti-Doping Agency, the International Olympic Committee and others. “The IWF is already widely considered to be at the forefront of anti-doping efforts in sport, thanks to its efforts and innovations in testing, Olympic qualifying, education and more,” said ITA Director General Benjamin Cohen. “We are grateful for the opportunity to add to these efforts and innovations with the ITA’s expertise. I am confident that our partnership will deliver for clean weightlifting all around the world.” “Ensuring clean competition and a culture of clean sport requires a great team. The IWF is very happy to have the ITA alongside us and enhance our existing partnership” said IWF Director General Attila Adamfi. “The IWF is rightly proud of its efforts to ensure clean sport and we look forward to having the ITA help extend those

Tokyo 2020 vision – Morghan King

Trailblazing American weightlifter and Tokyo 2020 medal hopeful Morghan King talks to Sam Price about being a woman in a sport that has historically been dominated by men, and how she wants to promote body positivity to the next generation of female athletes. It's never too late to find the right sport: just ask Morghan King. A successful college football scholar with a background in gymnastics and athletics, King completed marathons and triathlons after graduating with a qualification in graphic design, but it wasn't until she lifted weights for the first time, at the age of 26, that she found her true calling. In 2013, the same year she decided to pursue the sport professionally, she won the US national championships in her category and qualified for the IWF World Championships in Wroclaw (Poland). Less than three years later she was on her way to the Olympic Games Rio 2016, where she made history, snatching 83kg to break a 16-year American record set by pioneering Olympic gold medallist Tara Knott. King's record-breaking snatch would have been enough for gold in the 48kg competition at Sydney 2000 - the first-ever women's weightlifting event in the history of the Games - but the woman's side of the sport has developed so rapidly in the intervening period that it meant she only finished sixth in Rio. Still, it completed a remarkable four-year progression from complete beginner to someone who could lift more than twice her weight class set to favour King, a coveted place on the podium looks within reach should she arrive at Tokyo 2020 fit and healthy. The 33-year-old is working hard to achieve this goal alongside her coach and fiancé Dean Kruse but says she doesn't need an Olympic medal to define her, and is already using her status to break down gender-based stereotypes about weightlifting and inspire the next generation of female athletes to practise the sport. She explains: "After Rio 2016, my friend [US lifter Holley Mangold], who is also an Olympian, said to me: 'I hope you realise, because of social media and the reach we now have in weightlifting, how many young girls you've inspired'. Before that it hadn't really occurred to me, but after hearing that I wanted to share the excitement [of the Games]." This sense of duty took King to the Youth Olympic Games (YOG) Buenos Aires 2018 as an Athlete Role Model, where she enjoyed passing on her experience to future stars of her sport - particularly those competing in the women's events.   "In Buenos Aires, my volunteer - who translated everything for me! - asked a Peruvian athlete [Gianella Valdiviezo] how she got into weightlifting", King recalls. "She said that she had found me on Instagram, and was so inspired by what I was doing that she wanted to start working hard to get to [the YOG]. "I think that's so powerful because as athletes we get so focused on ourselves that we forget how inspiring we are to other people." King has more than 70,000 followers on Instagram where, like many professional sportspeople, she interacts with fans and provides an insight into her life as an elite athlete. Competing in such an individual sport can be lonely - particularly weightlifting, where the movements are respective and the improvements incremental - but King believes that social media can help to negate that sense of isolation and if used honestly rather than idealistically, can be a tool for good. "We're in this alone, but [social media] takes away from that feeling of 'I'm all by myself' ", explains King, who acknowledges that Tokyo 2020 will be her final Games due to the rigorous of the sport and the impact it can have on personal relationships. " I've always wanted to be able to inspire young girls and their mothers, so that was important for me when I started getting into the public eye. I do want to be that role model and I want people from all ages to look up to me. If you're projecting somebody else on social media then you're going to start fighting that, so be yourself, enjoy your journey and share it with people+. In particular, King is determined to promote female body positivity to counter prejudices about a sport that was long seen as a pursuit only suitable for men. Attitudes are now changing, helped by increased funding and sponsorship for female lifters, the rise in popularity of CrossFit (the form of high-intensity training that introduced King to the sport) and feminist campaigns like the viral #LiftLikeAGirl hashtag, with King excited to be part of this growing movement. " I think it'really powerful and inspiring to promote positive body images to women", says the Seattle native, who herself stands at just 1.53m tall. "Strenght sports have kind of got a bad reputation, like 'We're bodybuilders, and we're going to get really big'. But it's not like that at all, and I think with their reach that we're starting to get we're going to be able to inspire more young girls. We've got so many women that are already involved that I'm hoping [the sport] will just continue to grow and grow, and becomes more normalised rather than something to be scared of." For King, there is something empowering about lifting weights, and she wants more young women to feel the same sensation that she does when competing. "I love the perfection of [weightlifting], love that it's always me against the bar," she adds. "For me, there's something about touching that iron. When you touch it there's incredible power that you feel; not only the only you're projecting on the outside, but on the inside, you feel as if you can do anything. I think that is just an incredible feeling, and I hope that women will start to see that." It's not just the next wave of professional weightlifters that King wants to inspire, either. When done in sensible measures with the right technique, weightlifting is proven to have myriad benefits that can help athletes from a range of disciplines, with US Alpine skier Mikaela Shiffrin just one example of a superstar female athlete from a different sport using it in her training regimen. "You can use weightlifting with any sport; it doesn't just have to be the sport of weightlifting", explains King, who wants to study sports psychology and become a coach after she retires. "I think it's really important to make sure women know not to be scared of the bar, or scared of the weights. It's going to make you stronger and more powerful. I would really like to spread weightlifting through other sports because it can benefit you in everything," she continues. "I think that's what I was missing when I played college football because we didn't do strength work. Looking back, I can only imagine the athlete I would have been if I had that background." Never mind the footballer shoe could have been; King is a phenomenal athlete in her own right, and a shining example of what can be achieved in a short space of time with talent, strong work ethic and a good support network. But even more impressive than her rise through the weightlifting ranks to become, pound-for-pound, one of the strongest women in the world is how wholeheartedly she is embracing her mission to shatter gender stereotypes and inspire young women. With King among a growing number of strong, powerful female athlete role models across the Olympic Movement, the future of the sport has never been brighter - and never more female. Source: Olympic Review, Sam Price

World Record sweep at the Asian Championships

The 2019 Asian Championships brought success to the host country, China, which was a Gold Level Qualification event for Tokyo 2020. The continental championship was hosted by Ningbo and both the women’s and men’s Chinese team took a significant lead in the team classification and on the medal board. As of the latter, the women collected 28 medals, 15 gold, 11 silver and 2 bronze, followed by PRK (6,6,8), Vietnam (3,2,3), TPE (3,0,0), KOR (2,1,4) and KAZ (1,1,1). Twelve countries won medals out of 20. At the men’s, the Chinese team kept 26 medals at home (16,8,2), after them, the ranking looks like this: IRI (7,7,3), KOR (3,1,3), KSA (3,0,0), PRK (1,4,5) and UZB (0,4,0). There could be no complaints about the niveau of the Asian Championships, as 13 women’s and 6 men’s new World Records were set. The younger generation also performed extremely well with 1 Junior and 5 Youth World records for women and 17 Junior and 4 Youth World Records for men. Individually, KUO Hsing-Chung (TPE), DENG Wei (CHN) and RIM Jong Sim (PRK) stood out of the crowd.  KUO set 4, KIM and RIM set 3-3 World Records respectively. In the men’s field, two Chinese lifters, CHEN Lijun and SHI Zhiyong achieved 3-3 World Records each. DJURAEV Akbar (UZB) had the extraordinary achievement of setting 9 new Junior World Records. Lifters of 18 countries out of 25 shared the

American sensation Cummings shined on day two of Pan American Weightlifting Championships

The United States' CJ Cummings was in record-breaking form as he claimed the men’s 73 kilograms title on day two of the Pan American Weightlifting Championships in Guatemala City. he 18-year-old, a junior world champion for three years running, went six for six to snatch 153kg and clean and jerk 191kg on his third lifts at Coliseo Deportivo. Each of those lifts, and the total of 344kg, set junior and senior American records, junior and senior Pan American records, as well as the junior world record. In many cases, Cummings was breaking his own records, including his junior world records set at last year’s Senior World Championships in Turkmenistan’s capital Ashgabat. "Are you serious?" Cummings gasped when told he had set 15 records. "Wow – oh my gosh. "I'm speechless right now, I’m speechless." The result will go a long way towards Cummings qualifying for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games. The Pan American Championships are considered a gold event for Olympic qualification, meaning his total is weighted at 1.1 for the International Weightlifting Federation Absolute Ranking, which will largely determine the Olympic team come April 2020. Colombia’s Luis Mosquera was the overall silver medallist with 322kg, while compatriot José Gavino took the bronze with 319kg.