News and Media

News

Bariloche, Day 3: Local fans celebrate Ullua’s gold; double win for Venezuela

Local fans had good reasons to celebrate the third day of the Pan-American Championships, taking place in Bariloche, as Argentinean Tatiana Ullua shone in the women’s 64kg, taking the gold medals at stake. In the snatch, Ullua lifted 92kg, followed by a 111kg effort in the clean and jerk and a winning total of 203kg. In the other two finals of the day, Venezuela controlled operations, with gold going to Julio Mayora Pernia in the men’s 73kg and to Darvin Castro Palma in the men’s 81kg. In Ullua’s event, the second best of the session was Sema Ludick Rivas (NCA), collecting the three silver linings with 88-110-198. The bronze medals went to Canada’s Nadia Yangui, who lifted 86-107-193. In the men’s lighter category, US Ryan Grimsland had to content with silver, after lifting 141kg in snatch and a subsequent 182kg in the clean & jerk (total of 323kg). The bronze went to Jorge Cardenas Estrada (MEX) in the snatch (140kg) and total (310kg), while a second US representative, Caden Cahoy, completed the podium in the clean & jerk (171kg). In the men’s 81kg, Palma’s win was also undisputed. Local star Dante Pizzuti earned three silver medals, with respectively 142kg, 175kg and 317kg in the snatch, C&J and total. The bronze linings went to two lifters: in the snatch, Samuel Guertin (CAN) lifted 140kg, which contributed to a third-total best of 310kg. In the clean and jerk, the third position also went to Canada, with Nicolas Vachon successfully lifting 174kg.   Read more:Bariloche, Day 2: Clear victories for Charron (CAN), Contreras (PER) and Morales (NCA) – International Weightlifting Federation (iwf.sport) Bariloche, Day 1: USA, Mexico and Venezuela start with gold – International Weightlifting Federation

The national sport in Turkmenistan? Weightlifting, of course!

After the conclusion of the fifth day and 14th event at the IWF World Youth Championships in Durres, Turkmenistan is the second most medalled country in Albania, with a total of 10 awards, six of them gold. The Philippines are the actual leaders of the medal chart, with 12 podium presences (including seven victories). The latest success for the Asian nation came in the women’s 64kg, where Gulalek Kakamyradova got a bronze in the snatch, lifting 88kg. With three days to go, Turkmen officials hope that more top-3 finishes will come.   “Weightlifting is definitively a national sport in our country,” says Chary Mammedov, General Secretary of the Turkmenistan Weightlifting Federation. The explanation is simple: despite a historically solid tradition in the sport, the pivotal moment occurred during the last Olympic Games in Tokyo. In the women’s 59kg category, Polina Guryeva manages to achieve an unprecedented feat: the first-ever Olympic medal (all sports included) for the country in the history of the Games! “Needless to say that she is a hero for us. Moreover, it caused a great development for our sport. It brought many children and young athletes to weightlifting,” Mammedov explains. More recently, last December with the occasion of the IWF World Championships, Rejepbay Rejepov was also second in the men’s 81kg.   “We have a national programme of talent detection. When we find an athlete with the potential to shine, we take him to our Olympic Centre in Ashgabat. There, from 15 years old, they can continue studying and training, but they are already on the right pathway to eventually represent our country in the Games,” the Turkmen official explains. “The majority of our lifters come from two of our five provinces in Turkmenistan. The sport is very developed there. Overall, we have almost 300 weightlifters registered in our Federation, but many more are practicing this activity,” Mammedov adds.   After Guryeva's exploit in the Japanese capital, there is hope that up to six lifters (three men and three women) can compete at the Paris 2024 Games. “I think we will make it. There is a good group of Olympic hopefuls that have good possibilities of getting there”. Before that, the main rendezvous of the year are the IWF World Championships next September in Riyadh (KSA). “We will have a strong team there. We are aiming at around eight medals in Saudi Arabia!”   When asked about the expectations coming to Albania, the National Federation General Secretary is clear: “We knew we could perform well, especially among women. The only small deception was perhaps in the men’s 61kg, where Perhat (Bagtyyarov) could have won the overall gold. If he had achieved his entry result, he would be first, but unfortunately he stayed 2kg short (258/260) and ‘only’ got silver. All the remaining events are going in accordance with the plan. And more successes will come in the days to come”.   The Turkmen delegation in Durres includes nine athletes – four of them medalled so far (three women, one man), and a real podium possibility will come in the women’s 81kg, where Amanjan Rustamova shares the best total entry with two other competitors. For the time being, the most successful one in these Championships was Medine Amanova, with three wins in the women’s 59kg category.   After the podium ceremony, the hero of the day was smiling but somehow disappointed with the result. “Of course, it’s always good to win a medal, but I could have done more. I did my best ever in the snatch, but I was not so solid in the clean & jerk,” confesses Gulalek. In the end, she finished fourth overall (189kg), after only lifting 101kg in the C&J. “While training, I lifted 107kg, so I had a margin to do much better”. Aged 17, she started practicing weightlifting after watching the sport at the 2017 Asian Indoor & Martial Arts Games, held in the Turkmen capital. “I liked it very much – as our national team won some medals there – and from then on I continue training hard,” she admits.   The first promising results came in 2020, at the National Championships. “I then understood that I had potential and that this was my way in the sport”. Training five times a week (including a three-day double session), Gulalek is now aiming at the Asian youth and junior championships. “But the ultimate goal are the 2028 Olympic Games!” By Pedro Adrega, IWF

Durres, Day 5: Golden double for Thailand as five more nations join medals table 

Thailand had two debut winners on day five of the IWF World Youth Championships and one of them, Thanaporn Saetia, is hoping to step straight up to senior level by lifting at the Asian Championships in Jinju, Korea next month. Saetia was impressive in taking a sweep of golds in the women’s 64kg, failing only with her final attempt to finish 93-113-206. That would have earned her second place in the heavier 71kg category where the clear winner was her team-mate Phattharathida Wongsing. Five more nations came into the medals table throughout the day – Thailand, Turkey, Venezuela, Finland and Syria. So far 27 nations have won medals. Saetia, 17 last week, was a late starter compared to many of the athletes here in Durres, and she is from a family with no sporting background. The key moment was meeting Sukanya Srisurat four years ago when Thailand’s Rio 2016 Olympic champion visited a sports school in Chonburi. She persuaded Saetia to try weightlifting and the newcomer immediately fell in love with it. “Sukanya Srisurat is my idol, I want to be like her,” Saetia said. “I have a dream to go to the Olympic Games. “When I started I paid close attention to what I was told and it was just training, training, training. I like all the exercises, all the movements.” Thailand clearly has high hopes of Saetia. This was her first competition, and team manager Phetkasem Rataporn said her second could be the senior Asian Championships, an Olympic qualifying event that runs from May 3-13 in Jinju. There would be no pressure on her to win a medal and she would learn from the experience, he said. “For young athletes here or anywhere we try to make the competition more like a training session than worry about winning medals. We make training like a competition, and make a competition like training.” Saetia was 5kg clear of Taissiya Alexeyeva (KAZ), who made 89-112-201. Ingrid Segura (COL), the winner at this weight in the past two World Youth Championships with totals of 204kg and 211kg, was third on 86-108-194. Gulalek Kakamyradova (TKM) was third in the snatch on 88kg and won a 10th medal of these Championships for Turkmenistan. Olivia Selemaia (NZL) had her country’s best ever result at the World Youth Championships when she finished fourth on 84-107-191, the same as her winning total at 71kg when she won Oceania youth and junior titles last May. Wongsing, also from the Chonburi sport school and also making her first appearance in international competition, was a wide-margin winner at 71kg, posting 92-120-212. Burcu Gercekden (TUR) was next on 88-113-201 and Keily Silva (VEN) third on 87-112-199. Last year’s runner-up Anna Ylisoini (FIN) took the snatch silver on 91kg and finished fourth on total with 198kg. Turkey had its first winner of the week when Kerem Kurnaz (TUR) made six from six in the men’s 89kg, finishing 144-183-327. It was a great effort because Kurnaz, 16, said had to overcome injury since his victory in the European Youth Championships in 2021. “I broke my arm in three places in training and also I had shoulder surgery for another injury,” he said. He will try for a second European title in Moldova in July. Kurnaz’s father and coach Hayrettin was a national champion and Kerem’s 18-year-old brother Hakan is the junior world champion at 81kg. The winner was the only one of 16 athletes in this category to post a bigger total than Levan Ochigava (GEO) made in winning at 81kg on Tuesday. Nurdos Sabyr (KAZ) was second on 145-176-321 and Valerik Movsisyan (ARM) third on 140-166-306. Ahmad Shammaa (SYR) made 41kg more in clean and jerk than snatch, taking the clean and jerk bronze and fourth place overall on 130-171-301. By Brian Oliver, Inside the

Bariloche, Day 2: Clear victories for Charron (CAN), Contreras (PER) and Morales (NCA)

The second day of the Pan-American Championships, being held in Bariloche (ARG) until April 2, was marked by clear wins from the dominators of the three categories at stake. In the women’s 55kg, Shoely Mego Contreras, from Peru, controlled operations with a 85kg snatch, a successful clean & jerk of 107kg, and an accumulated total of 192kg. Things were also clear for Orlando Vasquez Morales, from Nicaragua, in the men’s 67kg. In the snatch, he lifted 125 kg, then 154kg in the clean & jerk, for an overall gold in 279kg. Finally, Maude Charron (CAN) controlled operations in the women’s 59g, with 101-124-225kg. The minor medals in the women’s lighter category went to Josee Galant (CAN) in the snatch (silver in 84kg), Jennifer Hernandez Chamorro (ECU) in the clean & jerk (second in 106kg), and again to Galant in the total (189kg). The bronze linings in this category went to Ana Lopez Ferrer (MEX) in snatch (82kg), to Galant in clean & jerk (105kg), and to Chamorro in the overall count (187kg). Among men, things were even clearer, with silver going to Vicente Montoya Alvarado (MEX, 121-147-268) and bronze to Mateo Renteria Caamano (PER, 116-146-262). Finally, in the women’s 59g, Danielle Gunning (USA) was 1kg behind Charron in the snatch (100kg for silver) and 5kg in the total (second in 220kg). In the clean & jerk, Daphne Guillen Vazquez (MEX) was the runner-up, in 122kg. The Mexican was also third overall (217kg), while her teammate Janeth Gomez Valdivia won bronze in the clean & jerk (121kg). In the snatch, it was a North American affair, with Taylor Wilkins (USA) on top of the lower podium march (96kg). Read also:Bariloche, Day 1: USA, Mexico and Venezuela start with gold – International Weightlifting Federation

IWF Grand Prix: get ready for a great event in Cuba!

The IWF sent this week an invitation to all its National Member Federations for the participation in the IWF Grand Prix I taking place in Havana (CUB), from June 8-18, 2023. This is a crucial competition for lifters around the world as it is included in the list of Qualifying Events for the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris. In the information package sent by the IWF, the “Competition Regulations” give all the details concerning accommodation, financial conditions for the participating teams, deadlines for registration (preliminary and final entries), visa and covid-19 procedures, local transportation details, eligibility criteria and provisional competition schedule. The next relevant date in this process is May 8, 2023 when all delegations must send their final entries for the competition. Besides all continental championships and the IWF World Championships in September in Riyadh (KSA), two IWF Grand Prix (Olympic qualifiers) are on the programme for 2023: the one in Cuba and the IWF Grand Prix II in Doha (QAT), from December 1-17. The relevant documents related to the participation at the IWF Grand Prix I in Havana are: COMPETITION REGULATIONS Accommodation & Transportation Form IWF E-Entry System Media Registration

The weightlifting clan from Amazonia

Located in the eastern part of the country, on the border with Peru and with no sea access, Pastaza is the biggest Ecuadorian province in terms of surface. But if its 83’000 inhabitants enjoy an immense territory, situated in the Amazonian jungle, they are also proud of the most famous weightlifting family in the South American nation: the Palacios Dajome clan, whose four children are all shining at the international level. There is Neisi, 24, Olympic champion in Tokyo 2020ne in the women’s 76kg, a national hero. There is also Angie, two years younger and bronze medallist at the last IWF World Championships in the women’s 71kg. The third one is German, born in 2003, and fifth at the 2022 Junior Pan-American Championships in the men’s 81kg. Finally, we have Jessica (17), who got three silver medals on the fourth day of the IWF World Youth Championships here in Durres (ALB), in the women's 59kg. After a third place last year in Leon (MEX), Jessica upgraded the colour of the medal, after a personal best of 88-107-195. She was slightly worse than the winner, Turkmenistan’s Medine Amanova (90-109-199). The result was even more impressive after a thrilling final, where two athletes “broke” under the nerves' pressure, Egypt’s Hanin Elsayed and Kazakhstan’s Altynay Tanibergenova. “I stayed focused on my lifts, but it’s obvious that it was a bit disturbing. In these moments, I try to remain concentrated and control my breath. In the end, my performances were quite good,” recalls a smiling Jessica after her successful result. “Before coming here, the number one goal was to improve my personal bests. I did that, but I believe I could even do better… I am quite grateful to all my entourage for these medals!” Talking about the family connection to weightlifting, the 17-year-old Ecuadorian star recalls: “It all came from my brother Javier [deceased], who got my sister Neisi to the sport. Our parents were not connected with it, but he got hooked and ‘pushed’ the others to weightlifting. I started at 11 and from the very beginning my coaches were saying that I was good at it. As I had all the family involved, I continued to train hard and I am doing my own way in the sport”. With an Olympic champion at home, Neisi is obviously the “idol” of her younger sister. “My goal is to compete at the Olympic Games. Whatever comes next is a bonus. And given my age, the most realistic opportunity should be the 2028 Los Angeles Games. I am of course very confident that weightlifting will be at those Olympics. And I’ll continue training hard with that precise objective,” she admits. To reach this competitive level, Jessica has a double training session on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays and a single session on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays. “It’s a bit complicated to conciliate with the school, but as I am in a high school with a huge sport component the environment there is quite sensitive to my training schedule and travel pogramme,” she concedes. “We have a very good relation between students, as other schoolmates are competing in several sports”. Jessica is living with Neisi and German with Angie, so the question is obvious: when the four siblings are together, what are they talking about? “You could expect that we only discuss weightlifting, but it’s not true. We have other topics, we are young people like all the others. For example, I still didn’t call them. When I am competing, they want to leave me in my ‘world’, in my own space,” confesses Jessica, whose next competition will be the Pan-American championships in her age group. Her older sisters – Neisi and Angie – are currently competing in Bariloche (ARG), at the continental senior showcase, trying to get a “ticket” for the Paris 2024 Olympics. After successfully competing in Albania, Jessica will try to see something of the country, as it is the first time she visits the Balkan nation. “Now, I will go out and visit a bit Durres. I am relaxed and happy, so it will be even more pleasant!” By Pedro Adrega, IWF Communications Photos by Dejni Trebicka