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Updated IWF Android App and website

The updated version of the official IWF Android App includes an always up-to-date Ranking list beside the Sinclair Point Calculator and the Loading feature. We also created a direct link to reach our website easier. Sinclair Enter your bodyweight and Total Result, select your gender and click Calculate to get your Sinclair Points. Loading Select your gender; enter the requested weight and click Ok to see how the bar should be loaded. With Up and Down you can increase or decrease the weight by 1kg. Ranking (internet connection needed) Select the gender, year, age group, bodyweight category, number of Athletes/Nation and click Ranking to see that given Ranking list. Download it here and try yourself Loading feature on our

FISU gives 2016 University Worlds to Mexico

  The FISU Executive Committee, at its meeting in Brussels, on November 9th 2013, attributed the organisation of the 5th World University Championships 2016 to Mexico. Although the event is officially attributed to the Mexican Student Sport Organisation, the Mexican Weightlifting Federation and its President Mr. Alvarado Rosalio del Angel must be congratulated also for the initiative and the contribution to this successful bid. After 2008 Komotini (GRE), 2010 Taichung (TPE), 2012 Eilat (ISR) and 2014 Chiangmai (THA), this will be the first World University Weightlifting Championships under FISU to be organised in Pan-America. The Championships will take place in the beautiful city of Monterrey. (Source: FISU

The IOC appointed Kit McConnell as its new Sports Director

Mr McConnell currently holds the position of Head of the Rugby World Cup and RWC Tournament Director at the International Rugby Board (IRB). In his 10 years with the IRB, he has assisted with the delivery of three very successful Rugby World Cups on and off the field. His responsibilities ranged from the management of the RWC Board, stakeholder relations and RWC event delivery to the management of the RWC tender processes and the development and implementation of all RWC-related strategies, including the redevelopment of the event-delivery, commercial and financial models. Mr McConnell is no stranger to the Olympic Games and the Olympic Movement. From 2000 to 2002, he was the IOC’s Manager of Sport Operations, where he was responsible for the coordination of sport planning with Organising Committees and relations with International Federations. Before that, he coordinated the planning of all sports, including relations with each respective International Federation for the Sydney 2000 Organising Committee. Mr McConnell brings great expertise to the IOC in the area of planning, managing and delivering major sporting events and has strong ties to the International Federations. He will succeed Christophe Dubi, who will take on the role of Olympic Games Executive Director next year. A national from Australia and New Zealand, Mr McConnell, 40, will take up his post in early

New Glasgow 2014 Weightlifting Competition Manager

Greg Warnecke, Head of Sport of the Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games Organising Committee reports Ms. Moira Lassen has been appointed as the new Weightlifting Competition Manager, effective from 06 January 2014. This follows the recent resignation of Matthew Curtain who has recently been appointed as the first-ever Director of Sport with the Commonwealth Games Federation. Matthew finishes his tenure with Glasgow 2014 on 15 January 2014. ‘As an active member of the IWF Executive Board (and Chair of the Women’s Commission), Moira comes to her new role with extensive management expertise, strong technical skills and a work ethic beyond reproach. Equally, I pay gratitude to the work undertaken thus-far by Matthew and wish him well in his new position’ said Dr. Tamás Aján, IWF President. Upon the announcement of her appointment Ms. Lassen said ‘Naturally, I am excited to serve as the Weightlifting Competition Manager for Glasgow 2014. With the memories of my daughter Jeane winning Gold back in 2006 still as fresh as ever in my mind, I am committed to ensuring the athletes of the Commonwealth remain at the forefront of all our

Fatima Rummun passed away

It is with great sorrow that the IWF was informed about the death of Mrs. Fatima Rummun (MRI). Mrs. Rummun was one of the very few female National Federation leaders and technical official in the 90's. She worked hard to upgrade the sport of weightlifting in Mauritius and took an active part in the development of African weightlifting as well. Mrs. Rummun long suffered from a cancer which finally took over her health. On behalf of the Weightlifting Family, the IWF wants to present its deepest condolences to the Mauritius Weightlifting Federation, to Mr. Bhollah Poorun, Mrs. Rummun’s son and her

Rio 2016 launches Games sport pictograms – 1000 days to go

For the first time all Olympic and Paralympic sports will be individually represented Rio de Janeiro, Brazil: 7 November 2013: The Rio 2016 Organising Committee for the Olympic and Paralympic Games today launches its sport pictograms, continuing the tradition of each edition of the Games defining the sports on its programme through graphic icons. “For the first time, all Olympic and Paralympic sports are individually represented. This is one of our unique contributions to the history of the Games,” said Carlos Arthur Nuzman, the President of the Rio 2016 Organising Committee. During the creative process for the Paralympic pictograms, Rio 2016’s team of designers sought to portray the integration of the athletes’ different impairments with sport in a balanced, natural way, depicting prostheses, blindfolds and other elements. The word ‘pictogram’ comes from Greek and Latin. Originally, it means ‘painted word’. This original meaning was the source of inspiration for the first strokes of the Rio 2016 pictograms, which were based on the official Rio 2016 typography. After researching each sport, the first strokes were made by hand. These strokes were then reconstructed on a computer, fitting the contours of the letters. The athlete bodies and sports equipment were built from the characters, or part of them, in a continuous stroke, with variations in thickness in order to give the impression of depth. The pebble shapes, which are a characteristic of Rio 2016’s visual language, support the designs and alter their shape according to the athletes’ different movements. Work was completed in 16 months, five of which were devoted to the validation of the pictograms by the 42 International Federations. In total, there are 64 pictograms, 41 Olympic and 23 Paralympic. The pictograms can be used both inside and outside the pebbles, in all colours. Rio 2016 Brand Director Beth Lula said they are important tools for engaging the public from an early stage. “The pictograms, from now until 2016, will serve as a communication platform for the promotion of the sports, for partner activations, and will be present in all the Games’ visual identity, including their application in venue decoration, signposting, tickets and licensed products, among other things,” she said. The origin of the strokes: the Rio 2016 font The development project of the Rio 2016 font, launched in July 2012, was one of the innovations of the Games’ branding programme. The typographic concept, developed by Dalton Maag, was inspired by the letters and numbers of the Rio 2016 logo and the essence of the Games — passion and transformation — which links the Olympic and Paralympic brands. Based on the contours of Rio, the font represents elements such as the calçadão de Copacabana (Copacabana promenade), which is depicted in the letters ‘m’ and ‘n’, and the Pedra da Gávea (a mountain in Rio de Janeiro), which is depicted in the letter ‘r’. The letters are drawn with a single, continuous stroke, an agile and fluid movement that suggests the movement of