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Cuban Weightlifters Travel to Chicago

A team of 10 Cuban weightlifters travelled to the US city of Chicago to participate in the Pan American and Iberoamerican Championship.. The team of the Caribbean nation is comprised of eight men and two women and it is led by world multi-medallist and world champion in the clean and jerk event Sergio Alvarez (62 kg) as well as Olympians Lazaro Maykel Ruiz (62 kg) and Ivan Cambar (77 kg). The men squad is completed by Bredny Roque (69 kg), Elio Osdani Guerra (85 kg), Javier Vanegas (94 kg), Lazaro Lopez (105 kg) and Sertanis Teran (+ 105 kg). Meanwhile, the women team is made up of Tamara Hernandez (75 kg) and Indira Salinas (+75 kg). A few hours before the departure, Rafael Pacho, national commissioner of the sport, announced the absence of Edilia Amoros (69 kg) due to an injury. Pacho, who is also the vice president of the Pan American Weightlifting Confederation, stressed that the main goal of the Cuban athletes is to win the tournament but also to accumulate points and to qualify for the Pan American Games of Guadalajara in 2011.(the newspaper of Cuban

Lyn Jones – Section Manager, Delhi 2010 Commonwealth Games

In accordance with the published selection criteria, the Australian Weightlifting Federation (AWF) has nominated to the Australian Commonwealth Games Association (ACGA) Mr. Lyn Jones to serve as the Weightlifting Section Manager for the 2010 Delhi Commonwealth Games. This significant role also includes the organisational portfolio of ‘National Team Manager' for the following events in prior to the Commonwealth Games: 2009 World Senior Championships2009 Commonwealth Senior & Junior Championships2010 Oceania Senior Championships2010 World Senior Championships This determination was recommended by the Team Officials Nomination Panel, comprising of Robert Kabbas, Martin Leach and Michael Noonan and confirmed by the Board of

Chicago is excited

Two-hundred-eighty athletes from 22 countries are preparing to compete in the Pan-Am weightlifting championship at the UIC forum. Among them, the Cuban women's team, which is competing for the first time in the United States. Tickets are free with the hope that enthusiastic crowds will send the message that Chicago is excited about hosting an Olympic-caliber competition. The weightlifting tournament is among several events Chicago's Olympic bid team will be hosting this summer. Currently, 22 countries are attending the event:Argentina, Aruba, Barbados, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Peru, Puerto Rico, Spain, The United States, and

Last call to National Federations to settle 2009 membership fees with IWF

As per the IWF Constitution, the annual membership fee for the affiliated National Federations is due in January of the year.This is the last call to those National Federations which have still not paid their 2009 membership fee of USD500 to the IWF to do so immediately, but latest before the IWF Congress on 14 June in Bucharest. Federations failing to settle the fees are not allowed to participate in IWF Calendar events.

Ingrid Marcum pushing to be an Olympian

If the Olympics had a triathlon event that included balance beam, clean-and-jerk and sled push, Ingrid Marcum would be a lock to make the U.S. team. Marcum was an accomplished gymnast and still is an elite athlete in weightlifting and bobsled, a singular combination of athletic excellence yet one that so far has left her short of the Olympic team standard in any of the sports. "And the Olympic Games is something I have sought after forever," Marcum said. She will try again this year, going after the 2010 Winter Olympics in bobsled, with her hopes depending in part on whether the U.S. qualifies three sleds rather than two for Vancouver. "Ingrid is definitely among our top five pushers, and if she continues to improve like she did last year, anything is possible," said USA bobsled head coach Sepp Plozza. The 33-year-old from Elmhurst plans to concentrate most of her energy on sled push training as soon as she takes another shot at winning a championships in weightlifting, which could be determined at the national championships beginning Thursday at the University of Illinois-Chicago. The four-day weightlifting meet is a three-in-one event, with simultaneous competition for national titles, Pan American titles and Ibero-American titles. Some 300 athletes from 20 countries are entered. Marcum lifts Saturday in the 165-pound class, where she took second in 2006 and 2007. She had dropped to 152 in an unsuccessful effort to make the 2008 Olympic weightlifting team. "Any time I also am doing bobsled, I try to stay heavier," she said. Marcum, dressed in a pink T-shirt with the tongue-in-cheek message, "Lift like a girl," laughs when she recalls having been a little club gymnast at Illinois Gymnastics Institute when she entered York High School. An instructor at a lifting certification course introduced Marcum to Olympic-style weightlifting, which she began in 2000. Two U.S. bobsled coaches encouraged her to try their sport in 2003 after seeing her lift at a strength and conditioning convention. "In all of them, you need balance, agility, a good strength-to-body weight ratio and flexibility," said Roger Nielsen of West Dundee, U.S. Olympic weightlifting head coach in 2008 and 1992. What Marcum lacked most for bobsled was pure speed. She worked on it last summer with Martin Rooney, a former bobsledder who trained Rams defensive end Chris Long for the 2008 NFL combine. Olympic team selection will depend on push times in September and October competitions and results on the World Cup circuit. There also is an element of subjectivity, based on the coaches' input. It is all about being in sync, especially in running and jumping into the sled together, and Marcum has learned that requires as delicate a balance as walking a 4-inch gymnastics beam.