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Remembering Marino Ercolani Casadei

Marino Ercolani Casadei's sporting career has seen him protagonist in every role he has played in over sixty years of activity. As a manager he was a member of the Board of the FILPJ (Italian Weightlifting and Judo Federation) for 3 Olympic mandates and then was elected to the EWF (European Weightlifting Federation) as Secretary General, a role he maintained, for over 25 years from 1991 until 2016. For his commitment and his determination in constantly trying to innovate the sport of weightlifting, the IOC (International Olympic Committee) awards him with the !Pier De Cubertin Medals" for his extraordinary responsibility and and dedication.For the same reason, last September CONI (Italian Olympic Committee) recognized Marino Ercolani Casadei with the Gold Star for Sporting Merit and last December 4th, during the IWF Congress, he was awarded with the Golden Collar. A further testimony of how much Marino has given everything to sport and how much the world of sport has appreciated his commitment, his sporting culture and his solid and stainless

Lasha Talakhadze fights hard to claim his sixth world title

By Brian Oliver Lasha TALAKHADZE (GEO) had to battle for his sixth straight super-heavyweight world title in an exciting final session at  the International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) World Championships in Bogotá, Colombia. The multiple world-record holder and double Olympic champion missed two lifts for the first time since 2015. After he made 251kg to claim the +109kg gold on total he had to watch while two men tried to overtake him in the clean and jerk, Man ASAAD (SYR) and Ali DAVOUDI (IRI). Asaad was close to finishing off the lift, but he dropped the bar, and Davoudi did not clean his attempt so Talakhadze had yet another sweep of golds on 215-251-466. “Yes, I had to fight for it, but I will come back and win again next time,” he said. Talakhadze weighed in at 166.5kg, about 10kg lower than last time at the European Championships and 16kg below his weight when he won the world title last year. He lost weight on his doctor’s advice, when a very minor irregularity heart irregularity was detected, he said, and he had suffered a leg injury in his preparations. The extertions of competing at altitude also appeared to take a toll, as Talakhadze took on oxygen before the medal ceremony. But he said, “I will be back stronger.” Talakhadze’s first clean and jerk at 245kg was ruled a no-lift, and the Georgians’ challenge failed. It was a no-lift “due to a pause during the extension of the arms” – and Talakhadze admitted that he had given the referees cause to make their decision. Gor MINASYAN (BRN), who switched nationality from Armenia to Bahrain this year, was second only 4kg behind. Minasyan, 28, missed his last snatch and first clean and jerk, and got closer to Talakhadze than he has ever been. In third place was Varazdat LALAYAN (ARM), who earned a huge cheer from an appreciative  crowd when he avoided a bomb-out by making his final clean and jerk at 246kg to finish 215-246-461. Asaad, the Olympic bronze medallist, took the clean and jerk bronze and finished fifth on 198-247-449, a place behind Davoudi on 202-247-449. There were plenty of other Olympic medallists in the line-up, including the first two finishers at 109kg in Tokyo, Akbar DJURAEV (UZB) and Simon MARTIROSYAN (ARM), who were the lightest athletes in a field of 10 at 124kg and 127kg. Djuraev withdrew – his presence still counts as a “participation” in qualifying – and Martirosyan made only two good lifts in his 190-235-425. The best lifter awards at the Championships went to Chinese athletes, JIANG Huihua (CHN) in the women’s 49kg, and LI Dayin in the men’s 81kg. China, the United States and Colombia topped the women’s team classification in that order, and it was Colombia, Georgia and China in the men’s

IWF ANNOUNCES RESULTS OF HISTORIC ATHLETES’ COMMISSION ELECTIONS

The International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) has today revealed the ten (10) athletes elected to serve as members of the IWF Athletes’ Commission until the 2024 Electoral Congress held after the Olympic Games in 2024.The successful candidates, who include five (5) men and five (5) women representing all five (5) continents, are: Maude CHARRON (CAN) Hidilyn DIAZ (PHI) Fares Ibrahim ELBAKH (QAT) David LITI (NZL) Forrester OSEI (GHA) Luisa PETERS (COK) Marie Hanitra Roilya RANAIVOSOA (MRI) Yasmin Zammit STEVENS (MLT) Cyrille TCHATCHET II (GBR) Keydomar Giovanni VALLENILLA SANCHEZ (VEN) This is the first time elections have been held for the IWF Athletes’ Commission, reflecting the federation’s commitment to ensure a strong athlete voice is represented across all decision-making.The Election took place between December 5 and 16, alongside the 2022 IWF World Championships in Bogotá, Colombia. During the Athletes' Commission Election, the Sports Desk of Ernst & Young Ltd., Switzerland, acted as Electoral Manager and conducted – under the supervision and scrutiny of the Electoral Commission - the election proceedings regarding the Athletes' Commission Election.Each competing athlete was eligible to cast their vote, choosing from a list of eighteen (18) candidates approved by the IWF’s independent Eligibility Determination Panel.Following the elections, the IWF will set new standards for athlete representation by having three athletes on the IWF Executive Board and also having three athletes as full voting members of the IWF Congress. IWF President Mohammed Jalood said:“I would like to congratulate and express our thanks, both to the athletes elected and all those who put themselves forward in this process. It has been encouraging to see such strong engagement and commitment to shaping a new future for weightlifting from our athlete community. The IWF is proud to be setting a new standard for athlete representation in governance. As we look ahead, we see these elections as a crucial milestone in our journey of reform and towards ensuring a positive, sustainable and athlete-centred future for our

Li Wenwen wins again – and Britain’s Campbell speaks up for ‘beautiful’ weightlifting

By Brian Oliver at Gran Carpa Américas Corferias in Bogotá The Olympic champion LI Wenwen (CHN) finished 24kg clear of her nearest rival – the Tokyo silver medallist Emily CAMPBELL (GBR)  – in the women’s +87kg super-heavyweights at the IWF World Championships in Bogotá. This is the first qualification event for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games and Li is already in a very strong position after making a total of 311kg. The top 10 in the rankings (one athlete per nation) at the end of April 2024 – based on the single best performance from at least five participations during qualifying – are guaranteed a place for Paris provided their national federation selects them. Nobody else in the world is capable of making anywhere near the numbers posted by 20-year-old Li, who won by 37kg in Tokyo - except Tatiana KASHIRINA (RUS), whose world records in the old +83kg class are bigger than Li’s current +87kg world records. Thomas Bach, the IOC president, “explained the unifying mission of the IOC and the Olympic Games enshrined in the Olympic Charter” when he spoke with the president of Ukraine, Volodimyr Zelensky, according to an IOC statement today. “We will go along with whatever the IOC decides,” said Mohamed Jalood, the IWF president, in Bogotá after Li’s victory. Asked if she would like Kashirina to compete in Paris, Li said, “I respect all rival athletes the same.” She did admit, though, that in the long term she has set herself a target of beating Kashirina’s +83 world records of 155-193-348, which are all better than Li’s +87kg world records of 148-187-335. Li came out after everybody else had finished in both snatch and clean and jerk, finishing on 141-170-311. Campbell had to work hard for silver after missing her first clean and jerk at 157kg. She them made 161kg after a good break while others lifted and her numbers went up, and followed it up with a career-best 165kg to claim second place. “I’ve done a lot of good prep for this and I never miss jerks, it’s one thing I never do, but I felt all over the place,” Campbell said. “This altitude really gets to you and after that last jerk I felt like I was in another world.” There were far fewer no-lifts than in most sessions here. “Look at that scoreboard, there’s a lot of blue (good lifts) on there,” said Campbell, 28. “You’d think it would be harder for us, at the higher weights at this altitude but that’s a good effort all round, a good session.” Yesterday Dave Sawyer, Britain’s national coach who with Cyril Martin runs the gym where Campbell trains, had helped Solfrid Koanda to become Norway’s first female world champion when she was without her usual coaching team. “Solfrid needed that help yesterday. She has been a training partner of mine in the lead-up to this, and it just felt natural for Dave to help her - and look at what she achieved last night,” said Campbell. “She’s here supporting me today, they’ve come in with all guns blazing, with the same energy for me today, my special support group – Solfrid and the boys, Enzo and David.” The “boys” are Enzo KUWORGE (NED) and David LITI (NZL), who have also trained at Sawyer’s gym with Campbell and Koanda. “We’re a beautiful, beautiful community in weightlifting and I think people forget how beautiful we are,” she said after yet another medal ceremony where the athletes showed each other the utmost respect. The fourth-placed finisher Sarah ROBLES (USA) wore a Father Christmas hat to receive her snatch silver medal, having made 127-155-282. “Weightlifting is very special and we should be so thankful that we have such beautiful people in our sport,” Campbell said. Campbell made 122-165-287 and Duangaksorn CHAIDEE (THA) made six from six for third place on 126-160-286. Another strong favourite, the clean and jerk world record holder Ruslan NURUDINOV (UZB), won a sweep of golds in the day’s other medal event, the men’s 109kg. Nurudinov, who was 31 last month, made only three good lifts but still finished 8kg clear on 177-220-397. Giorgi CHKHEIDZE (GEO) was second on 170-219-389 and the Rafael CERRO (COL) third on 174-214-388. The two snatch medallists behind Nurudinov, Mehdi KARAMI (IRI) on 176kg and Aymen BACHA (TUN) on 175kg, dropped to fourth and fifth on

IWF honours Paul Coffa, coach of 540 weightlifters, with place in Hall of Fame

By Brian Oliver On the day when his athlete Eileen CIKAMATANA (AUS) won a sweep of bronze medals at the IWF World Championships in Bogotá, Paul COFFA (AUS) was officially inducted into the IWF Hall of Fame – after more than 60 years of service to the sport. The man who is known as “the father figure of weightlifting in the Pacific region”, is the first coach to join the Hall of Fame. Before Cikamatana competed in the women’s 87kg he was given his award on the platform by Mohamed Jalood, President of the IWF. Jalood praised Coffa’s huge contribution to the sport as a coach and as general secretary of the Oceania Weightlifting Federation (since 1992) and the Commonwealth Weightlifting Federation (since 2006). “This is a man who deserves so much respect, for his coaching, for helping to make weightlifting popular throughout Oceania – and for making sure it is a very clean sport,” said Jalood. No weightlifter from Oceania has tested positive in 16 years, Coffa said. Coffa became a coach in unusual circumstances. “My last tournament as a competitor was in 1965, when I was in my early twenties,” he said. “All three referees judged my first and last attempts in the press a no-lift, and I didn’t make the second one. I was disqualified and I abused the referees for not knowing the rules, so I quit lifting. “Sadly the three referees passed away, so you can’t question them why they disqualified my press.” The highlight of his coaching career came at the Los Angeles 1984 Olympic Games, where the Australian tuna fisherman Dean Lukin made a huge personal best clean and jerk of 240kg to win gold. Coffa relived that event in Bogotá yesterday when he met another of the sport’s longest-serving coaches, the American Jim Schmitz, who coached the LA silver medallist Mario Martinez – the last American male weightlifter to win an Olympic medal. After a successful time as Australia’s national coach, Coffa moved to Nauru – and weightlifting was about to take off around the Pacific islands. He helped to promote the sport to such an extent that at one point in the late 1990s Nauru - population at the time 9,500 - had more weightlifters registered with the IWF than China. The big boost came when Marcus Stephen, coached by Coffa, won Nauru’s first gold medal in any sport at the Commonwealth Games in 1994. “Paul helped to make weightlifting so popular on Nauru that the Cabinet would stop its business to discuss why the split jerk is more effective than the famous Pyrros Dimas push jerk,” said Stephen, who became President of Nauru after he retired from competition. Stephen, President of the Oceania Weightlifting Federation, described Coffa  as “the father figure of weightlifting in the Pacific region”. He added: “Don’t forget, Lilly (Coffa’s wife) is everything to us as well.” Paul and Lilly founded the Oceania Weightlifting Institute, which moved around the region and hosted athletes from many Pacific islands, in 2001. Dika TOUA (PNG), another one of Coffa’s athletes, is attempting to qualify for a record-breaking sixth Olympic Games. She will be 40 when Paris 2024 begins. Coffa, 80, and his elder brother Sam, chair of the IWF Technical Committee, fell in love with weightlifting while watching athletes train in a hall just down the road from their home in Hawthorn, for the 1956 Melbourne Olympic Games. They emigrated to Australia from Sicily in the early 1950s. The brothers, who have maintained their links with Italy over the years and have trained there and held training camps, were both awarded the highest honour by Italy’s National Olympic Committee, the gold star, in 2018. Paul Coffa was also awarded an MBE, one of the top honours bestowed in Britain and its Commonwealth nations, and the Australian Sport Medal in 2000. “Paul has quite literally devoted his life to athletes,” said another of his former athletes, Matthew Curtain, general secretary of British Weight Lifting, who sits on the IWF Executive Board. Coffa has coached 540 lifters from 15 nations since 1965 and has been responsible for 104 medals,  including 39 golds, at the Commonwealth Games, plus two Olympic medals – it could be three if Cikamatana keeps up her progress - and hundreds more around Oceania. Cikamatana took Coffa’s IWF World Championships medal tally to 27 today. Asked who was his favourite lifter among those 540, he said, “Robert Kabbas, not just for his medals but for his attitude and his love of the sport.” Kabbas, who was born in Egypt and emigrated to Australia, won an Olympic silver medal in 1984 and two Commonwealth Games golds. Coffa has also been the chief organiser of 70 events including the 1993 IWF World Championships in Melbourne and the 2011 IWF Junior World Championships in Malaysia. When will he finally quit? “When Eileen wins a medal in Paris,” he

Electrician Koanda in tears after becoming Norway’s first female world champion

By Brian Oliver Solfrid KOANDA (NOR) became Norway’s first ever female world champion when she won a sweep of golds in the women’s 87kg at the IWF World Championships in Bogotá, Colombia. Koanda suffered such a bad injury in training in August that she thought she might not be fit in time for these Championships. She was in tears on the platform after the medal ceremony as she explained what had happened. “Not long ago I didn’t even know if I would be able to compete, and now I am standing here with three gold medals – a dream come true,” she said. "All I’ve been thinking about is my journey since August. It’s been very slow, very hard work, and I am really proud of myself.” Because of that stress fracture in her wrist, Koanda was training first with a stick, then just a bar until only a few weeks before she competed here. She was also without her usual support team of Stian Grimseth, president of the Norwegian Federation who had to return home early for back surgery this week, and coach Zygmunt Smalcerz, who did not travel to Colombia. “I had to slow everything down. It gave me a chance to work on myself as an athlete, mainly in the head, and now I’m full-time as a weightlifter.”   In 2021, when she ended the year by finishing third at the IWF World Championships, Koanda was working full-time as an electrician, having started her apprenticeship when she first moved out of CrossFit and began weightlifting seriously. For her big day in Bogotá, Koanda, 24, turned for help to Britain’s Dave Sawyer, who joined the team to help her in the back room. “For a World Championship you have to be tactical and make smart choices, so Dave was perfect today. Without him I think I would have been a little bit lost.” Koanda is a friend of Emily Campbell, Britain’s Olympic silver medallist who trains at Sawyer’s gym. She spent some time there in preparation for Colombia and asked Sawyer to help here “because I trust him”. Grimseth, whose surgery was successful, said after watching from Norway, “This is incredible. Solfrid has been training Olympic lifts with a stick and a bar from early September almost until mid-November. She increased slowly to start with, then more and more in the two last weeks. “She has done a lot of other training, and I see a big progress coming for the Europeans.” The European Championships are in Armenia in May, by when Koanda will have dropped down to the Olympic weight category of 81kg. Koanda’s only serious challenger for gold was Eileen CIKAMATANA (AUS), but she failed with four of her six attempts. Koanda finished 113-147-260, all career bests, and Cikamatana made 109-140-249, taking bronze in the two lifts and silver on total. In third place was Tursunoy JABBOROVA (UZB), who was second in the snatch. The clean and jerk silver was won by Ankha MUNKHJANTSAN (MGL), who missed all three snatches and was one of five athletes who failed to make a total. Koanda will face strong opposition in the 81kg class. Three hours before her victory, two Olympic champions and a silver medallist from Tokyo lined up for the 81kg and all of them were beaten by LIANG Xiaomei (CHN) in her first senior competition. None of those Olympic medallists – 87kg champion WANG Zhouyou (CHN) and runner-up Tamara SALAZAR (ECU), and 76kg winner Neisi DAJOMES (ECU) – even made the podium in the snatch. Two Ukrainians, the only Europeans among the 11 athletes, won gold and silver in the snatch - Iryna DEKHA (UKR), who bombed out in Tokyo, on 122kg and Alina MARUSCHAK (UKR) on 119kg, with Liang third on 118kg. The Ukrainians dropped away to finish fourth and sixth on total when they both failed twice at 142kg in the clean and jerk. Dajomes missed two of her clean and jerks to finish fifth, while Salazar moved up from sixth to third place on 114-148-262, taking the clean and jerk bronze behind Liang and Wang. Wang went from fifth to second by making all her clean and jerks. Her 115-151-266 was 4kg down on her Tokyo total. Liang was clear on 118-152-270 and even had a try at a clean and jerk world record, failing with her last attempt at