News and Media

News

Cuba and the IWF Grand Prix: Hard work, emotion, and development

Jorge Luis Barcelan likes to talk with passion about the causes he cherishes. His eyes get wet when he recalls all the hurdles and difficulties until the staging of the IWF Grand Prix, here in Havana (CUB). President of the Cuban Weightlifting Federation since 2014, Barcelan was a dedicated host to the nations and athletes that decided to come to the Caribbean island and compete in an event that is also qualifying for the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris (FRA). The Cuban leader is proud of this achievement and hopes that more opportunities will arise in the future. “It all started two years ago. The IWF, recognising the tradition and history of our country in the sport, decided that we were worth staging a world event of this magnitude. It seemed a dream then, as the last, and only, world competition ever hosted in Cuba were the IWF World Championships, in the already distant year of 1973,” recalls Barcelan. “The International Federation decided that this could be a good occasion to revive and develop the sport on the island. Once we knew that the IWF and the Pan American Federation strongly supported the project, we knocked at the door of the Ministry of Sport and even the leadership of our country. And they were seduced by the idea!” he continues. Jorge Luis Barcelan welcoming the IWF Executive Board in Cuba However, this determination was somehow refrained by the general situation in the country, subject to an economic embargo for six decades now. With tears in his eyes, the Cuban Weightlifting Federation President explains: “We are living and imposing very drastic measures on our people, as we are subject to a very challenging environment. This creates obvious difficulties, not only in the daily lives of our citizens but in all the projects that may involve a huge investment. This was the case at this Grand Prix. Fortunately, all the concerned national authorities understood the importance of this event and immediately offered their help and financial support”. Barcelan gives a very concrete example of the challenges that the organisation of the event underwent in the weeks before the Grand Prix. “Due to bad weather, the ship that was supposed to bring from China some of the material necessary to the competition couldn’t arrive in Cuba on time. Other countries, such as Mexico, Dominican Republic, Colombia, and Venezuela immediately sent their help and we could have all the necessary conditions to welcome in the best possible way all the participating delegations. However, this represented an additional financial effort on our part… But I would like to underline and thank the international solidarity received from these nations from the American continent,” he recalls. Jorge Luis Barcelan on a podium ceremony (far right) A few hours before this interview, the IWF President Mohammed Jalood had been received by the President of Cuba, Miguel Diaz-Canel, who thanked the IWF leader for his support in bringing such an important event to the island. “There is a clear will from the Cuban government to enhance the sport in Cuba: this includes the support to our athletes and respective federations, but also by attracting prestigious and international sports events to the country”. Known for the hospitality of its people, the IWF Family felt very well received in Havana. “Our people are always grateful to those who strongly support our development, in this case in the sportive area. We will never forget the opportunity that was given to us, and we are already studying future opportunities to bring IWF events to our country”. In fact, during the Grand Prix, Barcelan had the opportunity to take the IWF President and the Pan American Federation leader Jose Quiñones to Varadero, where an international centre is also available to stage events of this magnitude. “They were impressed with the facilities we have there. I am sure that with the positive dynamic created by this Grand Prix, continental or world events can be staged in Varadero. We are seriously considering bidding for the IWF World Junior Championships in the years to come,” he confesses. Barcelan (second from the right) is happy to have the weightlifting family in Havana On a more national perspective, Barcelan considers that the competition that concludes this Sunday in Havana, allows Cuban athletes to “compete at home with many Olympic and world medallists in weightlifting”, thus providing them with a “precious international experience”. When asked about the expectation of the Cuban Federation concerning the Games’ participation next year in Paris, Barcelan is optimistic: “Our plan is to take from two to four athletes, if possible an equal number of men and women. Once there, our objective is to get results in the first six of the ranking. That would be a good outcome for us”. Before the last competition day in Havana, Cuban male lifters won three medals (based on total results) – one gold, one silver, and one bronze – while among women two podium positions were achieved – one second and one third place. Given the situation, the Cuban weightlifting leader is obliged to concede that the men’s team is presently stronger than the women’s group. “Yes, this is true. And this is basically due to the gap between the start of the men’s programme in the country, in 1965, and the women’s one, from 2006. There was a misconception concerning weightlifting as a harmful sport for women. We did many studies – physiological and biomechanical – and we of course came to the conclusion that this sport is perfectly suited for women. Since then, I can proudly say that there is a gender balance between men and women in the sport – both in terms of athletes, but also officials, coaches, and administrators. For example, we have already 46 certified female coaches around the country. Things are evolving in a very positive way”.   The next immediate competitive rendezvous for the Cuba team are the Central American and Caribbean Games, taking place a few days after the conclusion of this Grand Prix, from June 23-28 in San Salvador (ESA). Seven male and five female lifters will represent the nation and Barcelan expects good results. “It’s basically the same team that was here in Havana. Those Games will be an opportunity to show our strength in the continent and are of course a priority for us. After that, the main IWF competition is of course the World Championships in Riyadh”. The IWF Grand Prix in Havana was also marked by the participation of a delegation, under the designation of Individual Neutral Athletes. Following the decisions of the IWF on this matter, this possibility had been open to athletes and support personnel with Russian or Belarussian passport. Only the latter agreed with the IWF policy and were present in Cuba. “We strongly believe in unity through sport. These are nations with a strong tradition in weightlifting and we are happy that at least athletes from Belarus could attend the event. They had to fulfil some conditions, which we consider appropriate. Our beloved sport of weightlifting, besides being a healthy and clean sport, needs to be a sport for all, without exceptions,” Barcelan concludes. By Pedro Adrega, IWF

Havana, Day 10: Double for Asia and more progress by Chilean mother Valdes

It was a good day for Asia when athletes from Korea and Chinese Taipei were winners on day 10 of the IWF Grand Prix here in Havana. Jin Yunseong from Korea weighed in only marginally higher than 102kg, in which he is ranked second for Paris, before winning at 109kg. Jin Yunseong (KOR) In the women’s 87kg Lo Ying-Yuan – the eighth and last member of Chinese Taipei’s team entered here – made her last lift after two failures to move ahead of Dayana Mina from Ecuador. That was Asia’s first win in a women’s contest here, whereas the men have won four times. Lo made 106-129-235, Mina 103-130-233 and third-placed Elizabeth Reyes from Cuba 101-128-229. Lo Ying-Yuan (TPE) Although she was out of the medals, fourth-placed Maria Valdes from Chile is making steady progress in her comeback after injury and motherhood. She cut her weight by 10kg in three months between competitions but still posted a better total than last time. Valdes competed at the London 2012 and Rio 2016 Olympic Games and missed Tokyo when a serious shoulder injury required surgery. She is aiming to lift at Paris 2024 but the big target this year is the Pan American Games, which Chile will host in October. The Pan American Championships in March was Valdes’ first competition in two years, and came 10 months after she gave birth to a daughter, Rafaela, who “loves being in the gym and has no problems with noise”. Maria Valdes (CHI) Valdes competed in the super-heavyweights in Argentina three months ago when she weighed more than 94kg. Here she weighed in at 84.65kg – not too far away from the Olympic category of 81kg which is her target. She failed with her final attempts in snatch and clean and jerk, but 100-120-220 was up 10kg on her previous total. “I can truly say that being an athlete is completely compatible with being a mother,” she said before starting out on her quest. “It is super important that athletes know that pregnancy is beneficial and not contradictory, since women generate a little more strength and resistance.” Getting back to the gym after giving birth also improved her mental health, said Valdes, 31. In the men’s event Jin, who was sixth in Tokyo at 109kg, appeared to suffer a twinge from the knee injury that left him in pain at the Asian Championships in his home nation last month. He finished second at 102kg there, posting a 398kg total. Jin, 27, made 165 in the snatch before declining his final attempt. He seemed to be feeling his injury when he missed his second clean and jerk but came out to make 196kg for a total of 361kg. He is the second man in the top 10 of the 102kg to have lifted at all three Paris qualifying events so far, the other being Wes Kitts of the United States. Jin Yunseong (KOR) “It was a bit difficult,” said Jin, who said his aim was to repeat his 109kg numbers, which include two totals of 400kg, at the lower weight. Juan Columbie from Cuba was second on 160-195-355 and Hernan Vierra from Peru third on 145-200-345. Oscar Garces was the latest Colombian to withdraw after weighing in here. The reason for the large number of withdrawals is that Colombia wants to finish top of the medals table in the Central American and Caribbean Games starting on Friday in El Salvador. By Brian Oliver, Inside the

Ecuador: A true story of success!

The Olympic history of Ecuador includes five medals in the most important sports event on the planet. Until Tokyo 2020ne, only male athletes had entered this very selected club – however, in the Japanese capital things changed and two women made history for their country. Both are lifters and both were today competing, on the ninth day of the IWF Grand Prix in Havana, Cuba. In the women’s 81kg, Tamara Salazar and Neisi Dajomes, finished respectively second and third in the A session, both improving their previous results in the Olympic Qualification ranking. Salazar got the silver in 116-149-265, bettering by 3kg the result she had achieved at the 2022 IWF World Championships, where she got the bronze in 262kg. Dajomes was the third best of the field in the Cuban capital, with a 118-142-260 effort – she had a 258kg also from the IWF showcase last December in Bogota (COL). With the change in the Olympic categories, these two immense champions are now fighting for a single place in the same group – Salazar came from the 87kg, while Dajomes was competing in 76kg. Tamara Salazar (ECU) At 25 (she was born on May 12, 1998), Neisi Dajomes is a true phenomenon in the sport. If qualified for Paris, these will be her third Games, after the gold medal in Tokyo and a seventh place at the 2016 Rio Olympics (at the time in the 69kg category). She has also won one silver and two bronze at the IWF World Championships, and was this year the Pan-American champion in Bariloche (ARG), revalidating her 2022 title in the continental rendezvous. Moreover, she comes from an amazing weightlifting family, where her two sisters and one brother are also practicing the sport at the highest level. On Wednesday, also in Havana, her younger sibling Angie Palacios was the star in the 71kg category, establishing the only World Record so far in the IWG Grand Prix, a 121kg lift in snatch. After her success, Palacios emphatically said that Neisi would win today. It wasn’t the case, but the main interested takes the outcome with philosophy. “She always pushes for me… and she believes that I can win all the time. Today, it was not enough, but I’ll continue working hard to improve my result in the ranking. From my side, I am quite proud of Angie – she is a true champion, capable of beating World Records. She is progressing quickly and will be an even greater athlete”. Their youngest sister, Jessica is also a weightlifting star, namely at the youth level – in Albania, last March, she was silver medallist in the 59kg category and was also proud of telling the story of a group of siblings, inspired by an older brother (Javier - regrettably passed away). Finally, brother German was recently Pan-American junior champion. Neisi Dajomes (ECU) Salazar is also a national hero in Ecuador, after being a silver medallist in the Tokyo Games with a total of 263kg in the 87 kg. More recently, she was twice third, in the 2022 World Championships and in the 2023 Pan-American Championships. “The goal here in Cuba was to improve our positions in the Olympic rankings. The objective was accomplished and we are of course very happy with that. The road is still long, but with perseverance and work we will make it,” she admits. Next to her, Dajomes explains: “We are in the middle of our pathway to the Olympics in Paris and the idea is to get better along the way. We fight the best we can in each event, and the next battle is already defined – the World Championships in Saudi Arabia”. Neisi Dajomes (ECU) Since the introduction of new bodyweight categories, Salazar and Dajomes have become partners in training. “We are like sisters… We are very good friends and we are also cheering for each other. We know we are fighting for the same thing, but the most important is that Ecuador is well represented in Paris and with a good chance of getting a medal. I believe this is the strongest category we have, the one that is in a better position to place an athlete on the podium,” Salazar recognises. “Yes, we are here to motivate each other. It doesn’t matter who makes the place. Things evolved like that and we ended up lifting in the same category. No problem, in the end each of us will compete stronger and more motivated,” Dajomes says. “Sport is like that: to fight until the end and until the very last available competition!” Tamara Salazar (ECU) After the outstanding results in Tokyo, it will be inevitably difficult to do better in Paris. “We know that. We are respectively Olympic champion and Olympic silver medallist. We reached the top of the world hierarchy. But let’s take things in the right order: one of us needs to first qualify for the Games. Then, after what happened in Japan, the expectations are of course very high. We can only promise that arrived on the Olympic stage we will do our best to make Ecuador proud of our performance,” Salazar concludes. By Pedro Adrega, IWF

Havana, Day 9: Norway’s Koanda overcomes cramp to win a classic and take third place in Paris rankings

Gold and silver medallists from the Tokyo Olympic Games and a world champion provided the best spectacle of the IWF Grand Prix here on the ninth day of competition. All three – Solfrid Koanda from Norway, and the Ecuadorians Neisi Dajomes and Tamara Salazar - made totals of 260kg or more, which has never happened before at the Olympic weight category of 81kg. World champion Koanda came out on top in dramatic style, making her final attempt at 150kg to edge ahead of Salazar before collapsing with cramp in her left thigh. “I knew it would happen. Making the lift felt easy enough but it was always in my head that the cramp would come, so it was mentally very hard,” said Koanda. Solfrid Koanda (NOR) “It kept happening in the warm-ups and was so bad I was nearly forced to pull out. “I couldn’t make warm-ups at my usual weights, it was getting desperate but I told myself ‘You’re not cutting down to 81 and coming all the way to Cuba to pull out.’ “I went out and made the 150. It was a very good session.” Koanda had made all her previous international appearances at 87kg, winning two European titles and the world title in the last three of them. Whether her weight-loss regime had caused the cramps, Koanda was unable to say. “This was the first time I’ve had to cut weight, and you have to have a lot of discipline to do it. It wasn’t too bad until last week when I woke up dreaming of a doughnut.” What would she be eating for her celebratory meal? “It’s funny, but I’m not hungry,” she said. Koanda, who made 116-150-266, came desperately close to being timed out as she made her second snatch. The clock was showing 00:00 as she began her lift but the jury did not intervene. Salazar made 116-149-265, which was 2kg more than she made in taking silver at 87kg in Tokyo. Her final clean and jerk had put her 5kg clear of Koanda. Dajomes, champion at 76kg in Tokyo and moving in the other direction in the weights, made 118-142-260. The medallists here, who all made four from six in a gripping contest, will be respectively third, fourth and fifth in the Paris 2024 long list. The American Mattie Rogers improved her best qualifying total by 1kg on 110-138-248 and Canada’s Rosalie Dumas made a career best by some distance on 108-125-233 to move into 21st place. There was quality in the men’s 102kg too, where Yauheni Tsikhantsou made a winning return as an Individual Neutral Athlete with a final clean and jerk of 212kg to edge out Wes Kitts of the United States. Wes Kitts (USA) Tsikhantsou was a world champion at 20 for Belarus when he last competed at this weight in 2019, and had not lifted since the delayed Tokyo Olympic Games in 2021, where he failed to make a total because of injury. He made 178-212-390, good enough for sixth place in the Paris rankings, to finish ahead of Kitts on 177-211-388 – a very impressive 9kg improvement on his best qualifying total. Yauheni Tsikhantsou (AIN) Chen Po-Jen of Chinese Taipei was third on 173-208-381. Rasoul Motamedi from Iran, who underwent elbow surgery last November, joined the qualifying pathway by weighing in for the B Group but he did not lift. The withdrawals from the A Group were Lesman Paredes from Bahrain, the 96kg world champion, the American Ryan Sester and the Colombians Jhor Moreno and Jhonatan Rivas. By Brian Oliver, Inside the

Brandon Vautard (FRA): “All the eyes will be on the French athletes during the Games!”

“Yes, there is undeniably an additional responsibility on the French athletes”. Brandon Vautard hesitates before replying, but the answer then comes fast. The 2024 Olympic Games, to be held in about 13 months in Paris, should be the career pinnacle of the French athletes. Weightlifting is no exception. “All the eyes will be on us, the French delegation. We must be up to the task,” adds the 22-year-old lifter, after getting two medals on the eighth day of the IWF Grand Prix, concluding this Sunday in Havana (CUB). Competing in the men’s 96kg category, Vautard got the silver in the clean and jerk with a 196kg lift and the bronze in total (336kg). With a personal best of 150-200-350, recently achieved in France, he knows that he needs to dramatically improve to dream of a Games’ place in Paris. Usually competing in the Olympic 89kg category, Vautard admits that we will be back to that group in time for the IWF World Championships next September in Riyadh (KSA). Brandon Vautard (FRA) If the cut of 385kg in the 102kg category seems unachievable, the 10th-place score in the 89kg is around 365kg. “I hope I can make it. I feel in good physical shape and I have good conditions to progress”. Enrolled in the French army, Vautard dedicates his medals to all the “brave French soldiers who are serving the country” and explains that his duties facilitate his weightlifting training. “Both from a physical perspective and in terms of available time, the army is the perfect environment to proceed with my Olympic preparation”.  In a career that spanned internationally since 2011, Vautard achieves his best-ever result in 2018, when he gets the European bronze in 85kg, at the time with 144-191-335. “Coming to Cuba, my goal was to achieve at least 355kg. In terms of weight, I couldn’t get it, but I got two medals as a consolation. It was a good start in my Olympic path and it gives me confidence for the upcoming competitions”. Starting at the age of nine in a club, the French lifter had the “physical morphology” to practice the sport. “I knew another kid that was also doing it, and it came like that. I got hooked, and many years later, I am still here. During my first domestic competitions, my coach kept saying I could be a good lifter, so I trusted him and I continued to work hard”. Presently training at the INSEP in Paris (where the French national teams are getting prepared), Vautard admits that the daily routine is hard but necessary. Reflecting on the overall level of French weightlifting, he is quite optimistic. “We are getting better and we have the conditions to be at the top of the world hierarchy”. In order to progress faster, and with the active support of the French Embassy in China, seven lifters went on an exchange programme for 20 days in Wuzhishan last February. The idea was to share experiences with the strongest nation in the weightlifting world and to benefit from their successful strategy. “We were of course very happy to be there and to see how they train and prepare. There was a very strong group with us, including Olympic and world champions. This was really beneficial for the French team,” Vautard recalls. Asked about the differences in terms of intensity and quality of Chinese training when compared with the French preparation, he smiles and recognises: “We had no chances against them… They are clearly above the field and their training programme is outstanding. It was a very rich experience for us!” The idea is now to invite Chinese lifters to France so that this co-operation programme can continue bringing positive results for the two teams. At present, the Olympic qualification for France is more successful in the women’s field, with Dora Tchakounte being 10th in the 59kg and Marie Josephe Fegue sixth in both the 71kg and 81kg categories. Among men, a direct qualification is so far distant, but in accordance with the Olympic Qualification System, the host country of the Games has four guaranteed places – two among men and two among women. By Pedro Adrega, IWF

Havana, Day 8: 2012 weightlifting champion Valentin sets out for fifth Olympic Games – aged 38

Lidia Valentin, the London 2012 Olympic gold medallist from Spain, has joined the qualifying pathway for Paris 2024 at the age of 38 despite an injury that could thwart her hopes. Whether she will be fit enough to make a realistic attempt for a fifth appearance at the Olympic Games remains to be seen, Valentin said after weighing in and withdrawing from the women’s 76kg category at the IWF Grand Prix in Havana. Her “participation” here is enough for Valentin – who also won silver at Beijing 2008 and bronze at Rio 2016 - to be eligible but she has not competed since finishing 10th at the delayed Tokyo Games in 2021. Lidia Valentin (ESP) Valentin weighed in here at 72.8kg, which suggests she could go down to 71kg or up to 81kg, but she was not making any predictions. Asked what was her percentage chance of making it through qualifying, Valentin said, “I can’t say, I don’t know. “I am still recovering from a hip injury I had before the last Olympic Games. I went to Tokyo with the injury. “I don’t know how it will go for me, but I came here because I didn’t want to close the doors yet. “Training is now completely different for me because when I make the normal weightlifting movements I feel pain. “I will only compete again if I am 100 per cent.” When her career does finally end, Valentin said, she will try to spread the word of “the beautiful story of weightlifting”. She does not want to be a coach of professional athletes who already know the sport, but would like to do what she can to bring in new people to weightlifting. “I love the sport,” she said. The American Olympic medallist Kate Vibert (formerly Nye) won the competition and is now ranked in the top 10 in two weight categories for Paris. Kate Vibert (USA) Vibert, ranked fourth at 71kg, made her final clean and jerk after two failures to finish 110-137-247, equalling the best 81kg effort by her team-mate Mattie Rogers, who lifts here at that weight on Friday. Bella Paredes from Ecuador was second on 111-134-245 and the Mexican Diana Garcia was third on 97-131-228. Pavel Khadasevich became the third Individual Neutral Athlete to claim gold here when he won the men’s 96kg by a wide margin. Khadasevich missed his final attempt in making 170-203-373, which will put him in the top 25 of the 102kg rankings for Paris. Pavel Khadasevich (AIN) Boady Santavy, fourth in Tokyo, withdrew after weighing in. His Canada team-mate Xavier Lusignan started well in the snatch but dropped away to finish fifth. Second-placed Jose Lopez from Mexico was 32kg behind Khadasevich, a silver medallist for Belarus at the 2018 IWF World Championships, and Brandon Vautard from France was third on 140-196-336. Three Olympic medallists lined up in the women’s 81kg B Group but only one of them lifted when Polina Guryeva from Turkmenistan and Leidy Solis from Colombia withdrew after weighing in. Guryeva, who took a lengthy time-out to have a child, has not lifted since Tokyo but she is now eligible to qualify for Paris. Aremi Fuentes from Mexico was back on the platform for the first time since she won a bronze medal at 76kg in Tokyo. On the way back from a serious injury, she took it easy and made six from six for 91-112-203, which was 42kg down on her Olympic total. “It was fine, I am taking it step by step,” said Fuentes, 30. “Today is exactly six months since I had knee surgery, and I’m feeling good. I’m doing what the doctors tell me so I don’t ruin my recovery.” Another B Group lifter, Katrina Feklistova from Great Britain, is considering her future after getting a chance to take weightlifting more seriously. Feklistova, who has a degree in economics and works in consulting for banks at the financial technology company Accenture, is one of four GB weightlifters who will receive UK Sport funding that could stretch through to Los Angeles 2028. Katrina Feklistova (GBR) The others are Fraer Morrow, Jess Gordon Brown and Chris Murray. “I only started weightlifting two years ago, as a hobby,” said Feklistova, 26, after making a career-best total of 224kg. “My employer has an elite athletes programme that offers extra days off for competitions and training, in exchange for the publicity they get. They also offer sabbaticals of up to a year.” The funding could allow Feklistova – who was a gymnast and also represented Britain at junior level in fencing - to go part-time in her job and focus more on her sport. “I’m thinking I might put more time into weightlifting for a while, maybe go part-time, and see how far I can get up the rankings,” she said. Feklistova lives in East London, near the Olympic Stadium in Stratford, and trains in South London at a gym run by her coach Mehmed Fikretov, a multiple champion when he lifted for Bulgaria. By Brian Oliver, Inside the