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Bahrain, Day 2: Two golds and big numbers for PRK – and more world records for a China newcomer

PRK went to the top of the medals table, where they are expected to remain, by winning both medal events on day two of the IWF World Championships in Bahrain. Their champions, Ri Song Gum in the women’s 49kg and Pak Myong Jin in the men’s 61kg, posted impressive numbers, as did China’s international debutant Xiang Linxiang. All three made totals that would have been good enough for a place on the podium at the Paris Olympic Games, where these two weights were on the programme. Xiang was not in China’s Olympic qualifying team, while PRK athletes were not eligible because they did not return from a lengthy Covid-related absence in time to qualify for Paris. None of the six Olympic medallists at these weights lifted here today. Ri Song Gum (PRK) Ri missed three of her six lifts, two of which were world record attempts, but she held off a strong challenge from Xiang, who set four junior world records. Ri’s winning total of 213kg was 7kg more than Xiang’s team-mate Hou Zhihui made for gold in Paris four months ago. Pak Myong Jin was the only man to surpass 300kg in the 61kg session, finishing well clear of Aniq Kasdan from Malaysia, who had finished fourth in Paris. A Chinese newcomer had gone head-to-head with one of PRK’s many women’s world record holders on Friday. Zhao Jinhong surprised multiple winner Won Hyon Sim at 45kg, taking two of her world records and finishing 9kg clear. Today, 20-year-old Xiang marked herself out as a serious contender in the coming years but she could not stop Ri claiming  PRK’s first victory of the Championships. Xiang Linxiang (CHN) Xiang took China’s tally to eight world records in two days, four senior and four junior, when she made 92-120-212, a 5kg improvement on her best domestic total this year. She set junior records in clean and jerk and total twice when she made 117kg and 120kg with her final two attempts. Ri was not so lucky with her world record attempts, failing with a 98kg snatch and a 126kg clean and jerk. She made 91-122-213. Finishing ahead of Chinese athletes is special for Ri. She had to wait a long nine years from the Youth Olympic Games in 2014, when she was 16, to get the better of Jiang Huihua or her team-mate and double Olympic champion Hou Zhihui. Ri has beaten both and set seven world records since September last year. Now she will have to improve again to contend with Xiang’s challenge. Xiang improved the junior world records, previously held by Jiang Huihua, by 6kg in both clean and jerk and total. Rosegie Ramos from the Philippines was third, 20kg behind Ri on 88-105-193. That was a career best for Ramos, who had made four straight totals of 190kg or 191kg in the past year. Lin Cheng-Jing from Chinese Taipei won clean and jerk bronze with 107kg. She was fourth, one place ahead of Gyaneshwari Yadav from India, who had a career-best total of 182kg. Pak Myong Jin (PRK) Pak had a sweep of golds on 132-173-305, failing only with his second snatch attempt. Aniq was second on 130-166-296 and Tran Anh Tuan Nguyen from Vietnam was third on 131-160-291, ahead of Wei Haixian from China who made only two good lifts in totalling 288kg.  Tran’s Olympian team-mate Trinh Van Vinh failed with all three clean and jerks and bombed out for the fifth time in his past 10 competitions. The men's 61kg podium There was a B Group snatch bronze for Garnik Cholakyan from Armenia on 130kg, and newcomer Wei won silver in clean and jerk on 160kg. The United States Air Force was represented in the morning session, the men’s 67kg C Group, by a man who hails from a remote Pacific island, graduated in Colorado Springs and is now stationed in Japan, where he trains in his garage. Leowell Cristobal is from Northern Mariana Islands (NMI), which presents him with a big challenge in reaching his ambition of lifting at the Olympic Games. NMI is an unincorporated territory of the US. Other nations with a broadly similar status, such as Puerto Rico, Guam and Marshall Islands have National Olympic Committees but MNI does not. Cristobal realised a boyhood dream when he joined the US Air Force, but his other big goal, competing at the Olympic Games, depends on NMI gaining recognition from the International Olympic Committee after many years of trying. “I need it to happen in time for LA 2028,” said Cristobal, 26, who would have a chance of a tripartite place if it did. He moved from Saipan to the US to graduate at the USAF Academy in Colorado Springs, and switched from track and field in 2018 when he found he liked lifting weights more than running. “My role is battle management, which is managing the airspace,” he said. Leowell Cristobal (NMI) While based in Japan, Cristobal is performing his USAF duties, training four to five times a week, and studying online for a Masters in kinesiology. His training programme is devised by the American coach Jackie Black, whose arranged for her friend Kyle Pierce to take on the coaching duties in Bahrain. “I only met him yesterday,” said Pierce. “He’s very focused and I’m sure he can improve.” The next competition for Cristobal, who made a career-best 105-143-248, will be the Pacific Mini Games in Palau in July. He will probably need to improve his total by at least 30kg to be Oceania’s top lifter if he opts for the new 65kg category. Two members of the USA team are also familiar with aircraft. Gabe Chhum, who finished first and second at the past two World Juniors, is an aircraft engineer and Preston Powell, also a World Juniors medallist in 2023, is training to be a commercial pilot. By Brian Oliver Photos by

Bahrain, Day 1: Historic podium place for Brazil, gold for Thailand and world records for China’s newcomer Zhao

There were victories for China and Thailand, plus world records for China as Asian athletes filled five of the six podium places on total on day one of the 2024 IWF World Championships in Bahrain. It would have been six out of six for Asia but for a remarkable performance by Thiago Felix from Brazil, whose silver at 55kg was a first ever senior Worlds medal on total for one of the sport’s most improved nations. He was in the lead until Natthawat Chomchuen from Thailand made his fifth lift. Chomchuen finished 120-153-273, up 14kg on his total when he was third at last year’s World Championships. Natthawat Chomchuen (THA) Pang Un Chol from PRK took clean and jerk gold but had bombed out in snatch, while Yang Yang from China could not build on second place in snatch, dropping to fifth on total. Fernando Agad from the Philippines was third. The triple Olympic super-heavyweight champion Lasha Talakhadze, who weighs more than all three men on the podium, was among the medal presenters. He is not competing in Bahrain but took part in the opening ceremony on Thursday. Felix excelled in gymnastics and took up CrossFit before he became a weightlifter seven years ago, despite coming from a non-sporting Sao Paulo family. He competed at 61kg for more than four years before taking a break from competition to drop down to 55kg and prepare for this event. Thiago Felix (BRA) “This medal was always the target, I thought I could do it,” said Felix, who will be 24 later this month. “I took my time to lose the weight, had good nutrition, kept calm and found it quite easy to cut down. “Now I have to go back up again because of the change in weight categories, but there’s more than six months till the Pan American Championships so I can take my time again.” Brazil’s national coach Dragos Doru Stanica also put in quite a performance, enhancing his reputation as the loudest coach in weightlifting. “I nearly lost my voice, and as you can see it’s moments like these that make me lose my hair,” he said. “I’m so proud of Thiago, competing against China, PRK, Thailand, Vietnam. He is well suited to 55 and wasn’t going anywhere at 61, so that’s why we went down. This is a great result.” Felix made a six-from-six 121-148-269 for snatch gold, clean and jerk bronze and second place on total. It was only 2kg below his best total at 61kg. Agad made 116-147-263 to finish 1kg ahead of Saudi Arabia’s Mansour Al Saleem, who was fourth. Four athletes failed to make a total, including two from Vietnam. There were good moments for Brazil in August and September, too. Laura Amaro – who also likes to make a lot of noise - finished seventh at the Paris Olympic Games after qualifying at 81kg, and Mattheus Pessanha briefly held a junior world record when he was second at the World Juniors in Spain in September. Zhao Jinhong (CHN) China entered the women’s 45kg category at a World Championships for the first - and only – time and ended with a sweep of gold medals plus two world records that will probably never be beaten. Zhao Jinhong, who was competing internationally for the first time at the age of 23, finished well clear of PRK’s reigning champion Won Hyon Sim. Won started the session with all three world records but finished with only one. The 45kg category will cease to exist from June next year, after the IWF agreed on new weights and a reduction from 10 categories to eight. The last time China had entered the lightest women’s category at a World Championships was in 2015, when Jiang Huihua won aged 17. That was at 48kg, before the categories changed in 2018. Won Hyon Sim (PRK) Zhao showed that she might have won many more times in the past few years if China had opted to challenge in the non-Olympic 45kg category. Her first lift on the world stage gave her the lead ahead of Won, and her third was a snatch world record attempt. She failed on 88kg, but Zhao made amends when her fifth lift on 110kg gave her two world records, in clean and jerk and total. Zhao bettered them on her final attempt, finishing 87-113-200. It was no great surprise because last year Zhao had totalled 198kg in a national championship, 2kg better than the world record. Won retained her snatch world record – both she and Zhao failed to beat it on 88kg – but missed her final two attempts and finished 9kg behind on 86-105-191. Pham Dinh Thi from Vietnam moved up from fifth in snatch to third on total with 73-97-170. Cicely Kyle (USA) There might have been three world records for Cicely Kyle from the United States, too – in Masters weightlifting. Kyle, who finished fifth, is the oldest athlete in the Championships at 40. She made three good lifts on 72-95-167, narrowly failing with an American clean and jerk record attempt at 98kg. “That would have been nice – but they’re Masters records for sure!” Kyle said. At national level, yes, but despite exceeding the 40-44 age group world records by some distance, they will not count because they were not made in a Masters competition. Kyle was in gymnastics and competitive fitness before starting in weightlifting about 10 years ago. “I had my first international competition in 2020, when I was 36, and then the world shut down because of Covid,” she said. Fifteen months later she won the Pan American title. Kyle is a physician’s assistant in the critical care department of a hospital. Her medical training helped her to pull off a remarkable feat six months ago, when she dislocated a finger performing a clean at a national competition, popped it back into place with the barbell across her shoulders, and completed the lift. “It’s still pretty much out of shape,” Kyle said, holding up her crooked finger. Asked which body parts hurt the most when you’re still competing at 40, she said, “The knees, definitely. “I don’t know whether I’ll keep going after this – it depends what my knees are telling me. They’re feeling good now but tomorrow they might be telling me something different.” By Brian Oliver Photos by

Cyrille Tchatchet: “My trajectory in weightlifting and in life can be useful at the WADA Athlete Council”

His life could be a book, but it almost became a movie. When presenting the Paris 2024 Olympic Refugee Team, the International Olympic Committee produced an inspiring documentary about the journey of these athletes before and during the Tokyo 2020ne Games. One of the profiled stars was Cyrille Tchatchet, born and raised in Cameroon, then a refugee in England, and now already a British citizen. He is in Manama, Bahrein, and will be an active spectator of the IWF World Championships starting this Friday. At the same time, we will also campaign for his most recent endeavour – the candidature to a World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) Athlete Council membership. “The idea of weightlifting came at a cousin’s baptism, while in Cameroon. During the celebration, I saw a picture of his father (my uncle), a lifter, and I liked that image so much that I decided I would also try,” recalls Cyrille, also an IWF Athlete Commission member. “But, back then – I was only 14 -, there weren’t many conditions to practice the sport. I was nevertheless strong – in the space of few months, I could snatch 70kg… - and I started to get some encouraging results, both on a local and national level”. Cyrille Tchatchet: "Weightlifting is now a credible sport!" That is when his life changed forever. In 2014, at the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, he competes for his country, but never returns home. “I felt it wasn’t safe any longer to come back. With the distance and time, I think the decision was taken too much in a hurry, without really thinking about the consequences”. And those challenges were huge. “I had no acquaintances in the UK, no family, no friends, nothing. I ended up living in the street, and then being detained in many immigration centres. In one of these places, there was a club and could eventually train… That saved me, but I went through a very painful personal experience, mainly from a psychological point of view,” Cyrille admits. In 2016, he finally gets his asylum request accepted and he enters university to conclude his studies. He always wanted to be a nurse and got specialised in mental health care, which is now his main job. “While enduring my difficult experience, I always had people that helped me, so I felt that I wanted also to assist others”. In parallel, with a new status and residing in the UK, he could eventually get a membership to compete at British Weightlifting events. Which he did, with remarkable success. In 2018, his efforts paid off, and he was offered an IOC scholarship – that would be the first step into getting his place in the Olympic Refugee Team. 2020 meant a worldwide COVID pandemic and the Tokyo Games had to be postponed. “To be honest, it served quite well my interests. I got a hip injury by that time and the additional year to the Olympics was precious to fully recover,” Cyrille recalls. When the team is formalised, he learns with joy that he will be in the Japanese capital, lifting in the most important sports event on the planet. “It was surreal, a kind of dream. Every athlete trains with the ultimate goal of being at the Olympics, but given my history and the complicated circumstances I lived in, it was quite unthinkable to envisage Olympic participation. But I was there, and it was great, despite the limitations related to COVID. The competition day arrived and I did 155-195, which was a bit below my best expectations, but still quite good taking into account my injury. Moreover, in the snatch part, I had a problem with my elbow, so I couldn’t make the clean and jerk in the best possible conditions”. Competing at the Tokyo Olympic Games After Tokyo, and already with a university degree in the pocket, Cyrille starts working as a mental health nurse in the community, alternating his activities between a medical structure and home visits to patients needing his assistance. On the sports side, he continues to train and competes in the 2022 Commonwealth Games, where he lifts a very good snatch of 158kg, but then misses the clean and jerk part. At the 2023 Europeans, he is fourth (156-194-350) in the 96kg bodyweight category. “My goal is to compete at the 2026 Commonwealth Games and earn a medal there. As they are also in Glasgow, it would be a good way to close somehow the circle since 2014,” he admits. "It is important that our voice and representation became stronger" Proposed by the Chair of the IWF Athletes Commission Forrester Osei, on behalf of our International Federation, to a membership position in the WADA Athlete Council, Cyrille sincerely thinks he has the legitimacy to advocate for it: “In recent years, there was a profound change of culture in weightlifting. The dark period we endured in the past, namely related to doping cases, is now closed. Our sport became credible and our athletes feel that they can enter into an event and compete fairly with the others,” Cyrille explains. Moreover, working in the health industry, the successful lifter also believes that he can bring an added-value to the WADA Council. “The athletes’ voice and representation have become stronger over the years. This is important. With my background both in terms of mental health, and also in elite sport, I think I can combine that for the benefit of the WADA. The circumstances of my life made me a strong and resilient person, not only in competition, but also off the platform. This is important for any job or endeavour you take in your life!” Cyrille concludes. Pedro AdregaIWF Communications

IWF to partner with SBD in landmark 8-year agreement

The IWF is thrilled to announce an 8-year partnership with SBD, a leading global sports brand, designing and manufacturing technical clothing, supports and accessories. This partnership aims to elevate the profile of weightlifting on all five continents through innovative projects and initiatives designed to enhance awareness and foster a positive perception of the sport. IWF with SBD: From left to right: Forrester Osei (IWF Athletes Commission chair), Matthew Curtain (IWF EB member and British Weightlifting CEO), Mohammed Jalood (IWF President), Benjamin Banks (SBD CEO), William Islip (SBD Commercial Director) and Antonio Urso (IWF General Secretary) With a shared vision to develop weightlifting at all levels, this collaboration will focus on grassroots growth, sport development, and athlete support. The agreement also highlights a strong commitment to promoting inclusion, ensuring the sport remains accessible and welcoming to participants of all backgrounds. IWF President, Mohammed Jalood stated: "This partnership with SBD marks a significant milestone in the evolution of our sport. Together, we are committed to creating opportunities and building a sustainable future for weightlifting around the world." SBD representatives (William Islip and Benjamin Banks) presenting the IWF-SBD partnership at the IWF Congress in Manama (BRN) SBD CEO, Benjamin Banks considered: “We are delighted to enter into a long-term partnership with the IWF. This is a very exciting opportunity for us to establish our business within weightlifting, as it will enable us to enhance our offering to sponsored athletes, coaches and our customer base across the globe, whilst supporting the IWF’s long term objectives.” Further details about this transformative collaboration will be unveiled in the coming months. IWF