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Successful Technical Visit to 2018 IWF WWC in Ashgabat

A delegation composed of Attila Ádámfi, Director General, Anikó Németh-Móra, Director of International Relations, Mátyás Lencsér, Competition Manager and Angélique Mottet, Operations Manager completed a Technical Visit to Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, host of the 2018 IWF World Championships. With their Turkmen partners, the IWF team inspected all the potential venues of competition, training and accommodation and selected the sites to be used for the Championships. The probable competition dates (10 days for the 20 bodyweight categories) are 1st to 10th November, with the meetings and Congress to take place prior. In addition to detailed discussions with the Weightlifting Federation's President Berdinyyaz Myatiyev and General Secretary Charygeldi Mammedov, as well as with the Olympic Committee and its General Secretary Azat Muradov, the IWF representatives were received at the highest level by Turkmenistan's newly appointed Minister of Sport and Youth Affairs Dayanc Gulgeldiyev who also gave his and the Government's guarantees to their determination to host a top-level and large-scale event in the capital city. The World Championships will be compact event with all venues and hotels in walking distance. At what is going to be the first World Championships to be hosted by Turkmenistan in any sport, the splendid facilities built for the 2017 AIMAG will now again be put to use enriching the legacy of the Games and creating new opportunities for

Fuelling Weightlifting – Getting the Right Nutrients from Your Diet

Working towards perfecting your lifting techniques is only part of the challenge for someone who’s looking to maximise their performance with the snatch and clean & jerk. Fuelling your body with optimal nutrition is crucial and, for competitive weightlifters, the right diet can make all the difference in a sport where as little as 1kg can mean the difference between gold and silver. Unlike bodybuilders, building muscle mass isn’t the objective for competitive weightlifters, especially as the athletes need to stay within their designated weight categories. Instead, the right diet needs to accelerate recovery and provide the right foundation for the explosive, yet graceful power required to perform lifts to their maximum potential. The importance of diet in sport has been recognised for many years, but there has been significant research into nutritional importance in resistance training since the turn of the millennium. In a 2004 paper on Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, JS Volek argued that diet can ‘optimise adaptations to resistance training’ by providing key energy substrates at precise times and by altering the hormonal environment to favour anabolism. In short, if you eat the right things, your body will work better. [caption id="attachment_21312" align="aligncenter" width="573"] Chilean Arley Mendez[/caption] PROTEIN POWER It has been a widely-held belief for some time that protein intake is essential for an athlete, but particularly in resistance training-based sports. Antonio et al., writing in the Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition in 2015, claimed that a high protein diet combined with a heavy resistance training programme improves body composition in healthy men and women, without any obvious negative physical effects. Nutritionist and strength coach Joel Giacobbe recommends that athletes should have about one gram of protein per pound of body weight every day. Many trainers and lifters try to include a protein source with every meal – whether derived from pulses, whole grains, soy, beef, chicken, eggs, dairy or seafood. Any snacks in between meals should also be rich in protein, which helps to repair muscle cells when broken down into amino acids. Whole grains and pulses, as well as green and some starchy vegetables such as sweet potato, are also excellent sources of complex carbohydrates, which will delay the onset of muscle fatigue – an essential step to prevent the body from burning useful sources of fuel, such as protein. TIMING IS EVERYTHING Interestingly, there is also evidence that consuming the right foods at different points of the day has an impact on training productivity. Snijders et al., in the Journal of Nutrition (June 2015), find that ‘protein ingestion before sleep represents an effective dietary strategy to augment muscle mass and strength gains during resistance exercise training in young men’. So consuming protein before bed will aid your recovery overnight. Consuming the right nutrients after a training session, though, is even more important. Morton et al. from the Exercise Metabolism Research Group at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada, state that it is pragmatic for athletes to ingest fluid, carbohydrates and protein in the “post-exercise period… when rehydration, refuelling and repair of damaged tissues should occur”. Most of a day’s carbohydrates should be taken post-workout, according to coach and powerlifter Phil Learney of Ultimate Performance. However, despite being the body’s main energy source, weightlifting does not require as many carbohydrates as endurance training. Energy, though, is essential, and failing to consume sufficient calories will jeopardise training, according to the Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition, which recommends that athletes in sports such as weightlifting may need to consume between 23 and 36 calories per pound of body weight per day. Unsaturated rather than saturated fats should be consumed where possible. In 2009, Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise claimed that between 20 and 35 per cent of total calorie intake should be fat-based. Cooking with olive oil, rather than vegetable oils, is recommended by some weightlifting coaches as a source of good fats, as is avocado, flax seed oil and walnuts, to name a few examples. [caption id="attachment_21314" align="aligncenter" width="579"] Vegan lifter Kendrick Farris[/caption] RULES CAN BE BROKEN It is worth remembering that every human body is different and there are no strictly unbreakable rules when it comes to diet, and many weightlifters will treat themselves to ‘cheat meals’ every now and then – even the ones who compete in the lowest weight categories. Morghan King (USA), who finished sixth in the women’s 48kg division at the Rio 2016 Summer Olympics, admitted “You can find ways to eat burgers and pizzas that fit your lifestyle.” Even Lasha Talakhadze (GEO), the newly-crowned World Weightlifting Men’s 2017 Lifter of the Year, enjoys a glass of good wine on special occasions. Then there is vegan Kendrick Farris (USA), who competed at the 2008, 2012 and 2016 Olympics. He told Men’s Fitness that he simply eats when he’s hungry and focuses on protein-rich foods such as avocado, spinach, pulses, nuts and fruit, whilst drinking plenty of water. Aside from the recommended dietary requirements, whether you are a committed carnivore or a veggie-loving vegan, as long as you focus on the right nutrients, there are no barriers to success in weightlifting. -- Follow IWF: Facebook Instagram Twitter

2017 Lifter of the Year Lasha Talakhadze – The Thoughtful Champion

A few books may not be the most likely items you’d expect to find in the backpack of a competitive weightlifter, but then Lasha Talakhadze is not your average weightlifter. The IWF Men’s 2017 Lifter of the Year is a thoughtful and quick-witted world champion, who has built up a cult following in his native Georgia with his articulate responses to interviewers and extraordinary performances in the competition arena. Last year, Talakhadze hit new heights in the +105kg division, and at only 24 years old, the terrifying prospect for his rivals is that he looks certain to keep on improving. Last December in Anaheim, Talakhadze capped an enthralling IWF World Championships with a world record-breaking snatch, adding 3kg to his previous competition best to lift 220kg. He also produced six good lifts in the clean and jerk to pick up a gold for his 257kg and set a new world record of 477kg for his total – a massive 23kg above his nearest challenger. Talakhadze’s career has been gaining irresistible momentum in recent years since he burst onto the senior weightlifting scene in the +105 category with an eye-catching 20th place in the 2011 IWF World Championships in Paris, at the age of just 18! Two years later, he got the taste for gold at the IWF World Junior Championships in Lima, and that soon translated into senior competition. His triumph in Anaheim was his second successive gold at the World Championships. Lasha has also won consecutive titles at the European Championships in Førde and Split in 2016 and 2017. At the 2016 Summer Olympic Games, he briefly set a new world record of 215kg in the snatch before being edged out by Behdad Salimi. However, a dominant performance in the clean and jerk helped him to set a new world and Olympic record total score of 473kg. Following in the footsteps of his father, who was also a talented weightlifter, Talakhadze is determined to set a new benchmark. No man has picked up more than two Olympic gold medals in the heaviest weight category – but he dreams of winning four super-heavyweight golds at the Games before he retires. However, with a focus on continuous improvement, Talakhadze’s winning character was illustrated when he became the first Olympic weightlifting champion to return to competition in an age-group event at the European Under-23 Weightlifting Championships in late 2016, where he duly won gold. Talakhadze enjoys reading and often takes books to sessions. Having graduated from high school in western Georgia and then continued his learning in a special college of physical education and sports. Here he majored in coaching skills, and he plans to continue his education in the future, ensuring he has options and interests outside the sport. His exploits at the Olympics established him as a celebrity in Georgia, where it is estimated that nearly half of the 4.7 million population tuned in to watch him step to the top of the podium. Back in his home town of Sachkhere, thousands of people gathered to watch the action on a big screen in the main square. Countless fans have attended his training sessions to see the great man in action. Talakhadze’s success has been credited with inspiring a sharp rise in entries in Georgia’s national championships and, as a proud representative of his country, he was named as the Georgian National Olympic Committee’s Sportsperson of the Year for 2017, having already been presented with the Order of Excellence by President Giorgi Margvelashvili. Having become the first Georgian to win the Lifter of the Year award since its launch in 1982, could 2018 be even better for Talakhadze? -- Follow IWF: Facebook Instagram Twitter

EWF Seminar and opening of the European Coaching Academy

The European Weightlifting Federation has organized a coaching seminar in Rome between 2nd and 4th February 2018 with the title “Coaching Next Generation”, which has been supported by the IWF CF Contribution. . During the same Event, the European Weightlifting Academy has been also opened in the Olympic Centre of Italian Army. 27 Member Federations have been present at the seminar and among the presenters, they had Dr. Antonio Urso, EWF President, Mr. Colin Buckley, EWF CRSC Chairman and Dr. Patrick Schamasch, IWF Anti-Doping Commission Chairman, Mr. Mahmoud Mahgoub, IWF CRC Chairman and Ms. Karoliina Lundhal, IWF CRC Deputy Chair. Ms. Eva Moska, IWF Development and Education Director was also attending the

2017 Lifter of the Year Lydia Valentin – Loving Success

Weightlifting fans have been seeing a lot more of Lydia Valentin’s trademark celebration. Having first produced the beaming smile and ‘heart’ gesture four years ago, Lydia is well aware of the importance of engaging with her supporters. The charismatic Spaniard has more than 150,000 followers on Instagram and her performances – and celebrations – have cut through into mainstream media coverage around the world. Wearing mascara, earrings and a pink hairband during competitions, Lydia is widely seen to be a poster girl for women’s weightlifting, although she says that her famous celebration is not for anyone in particular – just those who have come to support her and her loyal fans. Now, after the most successful year of her career, she has even more reason to celebrate, having scooped the IWF Women’s 2017 Lifter of the Year award. The popularity of Lydia was underlined by the final poll for the award. With 16,406 votes, the 32-year-old from Ponferrada in north-western Spain was the overwhelming winner, picking up more support than the other four shortlisted candidates combined. As a competitor in the 75kg division, she won her first senior medal at a major event more than a decade ago – a bronze at the 2007 European Championships in Strasbourg – but it was her silver medal at the Summer Olympic Games in Beijing (recently awarded) the following year that brought her to international attention.       Lydia went on to claim gold at the London 2012 Olympics and silver at the Rio 2016 Games – Spain’s first weightlifting medals at sport’s biggest spectacle. She has also collected an array of medals at the European Championships over the years, including three golds in 2014 and 2015, and, most recently, in Split last year. However, despite her successes on the Olympic and continental stages, a gold at the IWF World Championships had eluded her, with a bronze in Wroclaw in 2013 representing her best performance at the event – that is, until 2017. At the IWF World Championships in Anaheim, Lydia registered a 118kg snatch and a 140kg clean and jerk to claim a total of 258kg – a huge 18kg better than her closest challenger – and take home three golds in the process. For Lydia, glory in Anaheim represented the highlight so far of a glittering career and a huge relief after injury had ruled her out of the 2015 World Championships in Houston. Lydia, who was a keen all-round sportsperson in her youth, has previously said that weightlifting chose her, rather than the other way around. She remembers fondly exploring a range of sports – including lifting weights – at her local Camponaraya sports club. Lydia has said that she will continue to compete in elite weightlifting until she stops enjoying it and then, when she retires, she would like to enjoy the sport from a “totally different perspective”. However, as she continues to stick to a rigorous training regime that comprises up to three hours of work every morning and afternoon six days a week, there is little sign of her admirable motivation for medals fading just yet. -- Follow us on: Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube