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IWF President visits training camp in Jiangshan before the Asian Games in Hangzhou (CHN)

Before the start of the weightlifting competition at the Asian Games, organised in Hangzhou (CHN), the IWF President Mohammed Jalood visited this week the Weightlifting Training Camp, staged at the Jiangshan Hushan Sports Complex. On this occasion, Mr Jalood was accompanied by the Asian Weightlifting Federation General Secretary Mr Mohammed Alharbi, by the Vice-President of the Chinese Weightlifting Association Mr. Liu Chengliang, by the Mayor of Jiangshan City Mr. Xu Mingfeng, and by the Vice-Mayor Mr. Mao Shufeng. Mr Mohammed Jalood and Mr Mohammed Alharbi during their visit to the training camp The delegation visited the Hushan Sports Complex, including the training and competition venue, the accommodation facilities, the restaurant, and all related sports areas. The IWF President wished the best of luck to all athletes competing in the Asian Games, hoping that they could win some medals in the continental showcase. He also expressed his appreciation for the Sports Complex and his gratitude to the Chinese Weightlifting Association for providing free accommodation to one-third of the participants in the Training Camp. Discussions were also held regarding the promotion of weightlifting and further cooperation with the Chinese Weightlifting Association. 50 weightlifting training platforms are set in the training venue, which received its first athletes ever after its completion. Lifters from seven countries, including Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Mongolia, Oman, Qatar, and Uzbekistan came to Jiangshan to attend this Training Camp. The weightlifting competition at the Asian Games will take place from September 30 to October 7, and follows a very successful edition of the IWF World Championships, held from September 4-17 in Riyadh

Valentin (ESP) retires from weightlifting after Paris 2024 dream is thwarted by injury

Lydia Valentin, one of the most popular weightlifters of the 21st century, has announced her retirement from the platform after her hopes of qualifying for Paris 2024 were beaten by injury. Valentin, who won gold, silver and bronze medals at successive Olympic Games, suffered a hip injury before lifting at the delayed Tokyo 2020 Games, where she finished tenth. It became so serious the Spaniard has not been able to compete since. Because she never wanted to give up hope, Valentin made herself eligible to qualify for Paris by entering the IWF Grand Prix in Cuba in June, at the age of 38. She weighed in without lifting, and told insidethegames in Havana: "I came here because I didn’t want to close the doors yet. "Training is now completely different for me because when I make the normal weightlifting movements I feel pain. I will only compete again if I am 100 per cent." The hip did not improve, and when Valentin was unable to enter the IWF World Championships which recently ended in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, she became ineligible to qualify. "I love the sport," she said in formally announcing her retirement at the headquarters of the Spanish Olympic Committee (COE) in Madrid. "I am leaving happy, full and very grateful for achieving what I never imagined." Spanish Weightlifting Federation (RFEH) President Constantino Iglesias, COE chief Alejandro Blanco and Secretary of state for Sport Victor Francos were there to wish Valentin well in retirement. After a number of athletes were disqualified because of doping when stored samples were reanalysed, Valentin was promoted to second place at Beijing 2008 and gold at London 2012. She was third at Rio 2016 - all three medals in the old 75 kilograms category - and also won 10 European Championships medals, four of them gold. Valentin was widely regarded as the perfect role model for women’s weightlifting for more than 10 years of a career that began at the IWF Junior World Championships in 2001. The "beautiful story of weightlifting", as she calls it, is over for her as an athlete but Valentin may stay in the sport. She does not want to be a coach of professional athletes but said she would like to do what she can to bring in new people to weightlifting. By Brian Oliver, Inside the

2024-2032 IWF Strategic Plan, Pillar 2: Enhancing the IWF events

When you think of an international sports federation, the first idea coming to your mind is perhaps that this organisation is responsible for the staging of major events around the world in the sport it governs. While this may be a limited view of reality, it certainly corresponds to an important part of an IF work. The IWF is no exception to this rule – with quite a dense calendar, our International Federation is running three World Championships (youth, junior, and senior) on a yearly basis, plus a number of other relevant events such as the World Cup or Grand Prix competitions. These events are the showcase of the IWF activity and a privileged occasion to enhance the exposure of our Stars. That is why, after Pillar 1 of the 2024-2032 IWF Strategic Plan was devoted to Athletes, the second foundation relates to “Enhancing the IWF Events”. It focuses on many aspects surrounding the staging of IWF competitions, from the very beginning of the process until its conclusion: it has six sub-pillars related to Calendar Programming, Bidding and Hosting follow-up, Event Organisation, Innovative Events, Sports Presentation, and ITO procedures. Each of them lists a series of actions and strategies aimed at improving each of these topics in the years to come. On the Calendar side, special attention should be given to setting fixed “slots” for each of the main events, avoiding at the same time the “clash” with other world, continental or regional competitions. For marketing and TV purposes, having this “continuity” in time allows for more interest and additional commercial opportunities. Another major issue is the bidding process, which needs to be more diligent and more accompanied by the IWF during its preparation and delivery. The introduction of the athletes’ feedback in this procedure is a major step forward in ensuring that future hosts are of quality and will stage a top-level event in accordance with the IWF’s best expectations. A Bidding Code of Ethics is to be implemented, ensuring full transparency throughout the process. Moreover, mechanisms to do a proper follow-up of the event are to be developed.  On the organisation side, the establishment of a detailed “Practices and Procedures” document, setting standard conditions to be fulfilled by each of the hosts must be put into practice. A close monitoring of its implementation has to be consolidated, and post-event reports must be produced to evaluate the adequation of the bid with the effective competition that was delivered.  Still on the practical side of an IWF competition, the Sports Presentation must be reviewed: a better and more attractive introduction of the athletes is necessary; a more efficient use of the scoreboard and the ledwall is also fundamental; the look & feel of the venue has to be carefully planned; and the presence of spectators has to be always stimulated.  “We definitively need to enhance the presentation of our events. We need to be innovative and inventive – there are plenty of things to be done. The discussion, for example, on the multi-platform event is a very interesting one: this has definitively potential to become a big attraction. Our sport has many breaks, so having multiple platforms will avoid those ‘dead’ moments, for both the spectators on site, but also for the TV viewers,” considers Stian Grimseth, President of the Norwegian Weightlifting Federation and host of the 2025 IWF World Championships, to be held in Forde, a small town of 13’000 inhabitants in the southwest of the country. It will most probably be the smallest-ever city staging an IWF World Championships! “We could even imagine a 10 or eight-platform solution, where the athletes would successively lift until they fail twice in the same weight. The last valid result would then be counted,” he proposes. The Norwegian official suggests more practical innovations: “We could divide the competition and warm-up area in a different way so that spectators could see both areas at the same time. What is happening in the warm-up zone is as interesting as what is occurring in the field of play. Another good idea is to have a speaker commenting on what is happening in the warm-up area and informing on the coaches’ strategy concerning the change of weight for their lifters. We need to create some ‘drama’ around the competition!” Mr Eshaq Ebrahim Eshaq (in the middle) leading Bahrain's team Before Norway, the IWF showcase will stop in 2024 in Manama, the capital of Bahrain. Eshaq Ebrahim Eshaq is the President of the national federation and naturally leads the organising team getting ready for next year’s major rendezvous: “The event and the field of play is our product. It’s critical to improve both. As stakeholders of the IWF, we want to present this product in the best possible way. At the moment, I don’t think it’s at the level it deserves… We are a kind of sleeping giant – we need to project it in a proper way so that the world can realise and understand our full potential,” he says. The 2023 IWF World Championships in Riyadh were already highlighted by some innovation in terms of athletes’ presentation, both on the scoreboard and in the TV graphics. “This was a very good initiative, but it is only the first step. We must build on this and improve. In Manama, my intention is to definitively raise the level of TV production – have more cameras, more slow-motion, more angles… Even if the venue's look is great, what stays is what is shown on the camera. TV production is therefore essential for us,” Mr Eshaq continues.  Concerning the international technical officials (ITO), in order to guarantee the fairness of the competition, educational programmes should be created and reinforced, evaluation tools are to be established, and younger officials should be used (especially at the youth and junior World Championships). Technology and Video Playback tools are to be reinforced to facilitate the refereeing. Finally, and looking into the larger picture, the Strategic Plan is also proposing the development of new formats and models in weightlifting. This is aimed at widening the sports portfolio with different disciplines, such as mixed or teams events, or even taking the sport outside of its traditional venues. The recent initiatives concerning urban weightlifting are having a lot of success around the world: in Lausanne (SUI), La Habana (CUB), Maribor (SLO), or at the upcoming EWF Cup in Ancient Olympia (GRE) at the end of September, the idea is to bring weightlifting to the streets and closer to the general public and its fans. “This kind of initiative is fantastic. It reveals other aspects of our sport and it makes it more attractive for the youth – just remember what happened with the 3x3 basketball ‘revolution’. Every step to make weightlifting more accessible is a winning step to make our sport more popular in the five continents,” Mr Eshaq concludes.  For four weeks, every Friday, we will analyse each of the four pillars of the 2024-2032 IWF Strategic Plan. After the first one on "Safeguarding the IWF stars", we are focusing today on Pillar 2 (Enhancing the IWF events). The remaining two are Pillar 3 (Keeping the IWF safe), and Pillar 4 (Reaching beyond the IWF).  By IWF Communications Photos by Giorgio

Riyadh, Review: China comes out top at weird and wonderful World Championships

The 2023 IWF World Championships had more athletes than ever before, and more surprises too. Some days featured six sessions, with first weigh-in at 7am and the last lift after 11pm, to cope with the record entry of 719 athletes. You had to be there early to see some of the headline-makers in action, because there were so many high achievers from not just from the B Groups, but from C and D too. Weeraphon Wichuma (THA) In the men’s events, Weeraphon Wichuma from Thailand made weightlifting history by becoming the first C Group athlete to win a world title. Three other medals went to C Group lifters, and eight to those from the B Group. In the 73kg Olympic category won by Wichuma, Tojo Andriatsitohaina from Madagascar missed a medal by 1kg from the D Group. Both he and fellow D Group athlete David Sanchez from Spain finished in the top seven on total. The top 10 finishers at 73kg and 102kg, both on the Paris 2024 schedule, featured collectively two from D, two from C and four from B. A Group failures were as much a factor as B-C-D successes. Red lights for attempts five and six were commonplace in A sessions. All five super-heavyweights who totalled 450kg or better in a top-class final session of the Championships failed with their final attempt. When winner Lasha Talakhadze dropped the bar in trying to jerk 260kg it meant that not one A Group lifter in any of the five Olympic categories made six-from-six. The A Group women fared better, but two of the biggest favourites bombed out in the heaviest categories, Solfrid Koanda because of three snatch failures and Li Wenwen because she was injured in making the second of two no-lifts. Two B Group women won medals, both in the non-Olympic 64kg category, and the “outlier” female medallist in the 59kg C Group was an Olympic champion, Kuo Hsing-Chun from Chinese Taipei. For those lucky enough to be in Riyadh it was relentlessly weird and wonderful. There were a few possible reasons for athletes to skip the A Groups. Some were on the way back from injury, others preferred to focus on the Asian Games, where weightlifting starts in Hangzhou, China on September 30. The most common explanation from coaches, athletes and others was the fact that, for many, these “mandatory” World Championships were more about posting a qualifying total than winning medals. Quite a few opted to post a low entry total for tactical reasons, to escape the stress of the A Group. Thailand and Indonesia both had two athletes on the podium from B or C Groups. Rahmat Erwin (THA) “I prefer to lift in B because it’s more like a training session than a competition, you can stay calm, no rushing,” was the view of Rahmat Erwin from Indonesia. He broke a world record in Riyadh and has now set two world records, won gold medals at two World Championships, and earned an Olympic bronze from the B Group. Although Li Wenwen’s injury was a disappointment and Li Dayin’s defeat by the Iranian Mir Mostafa at 89kg was one of the biggest surprises, China still outperformed everybody else. The top female lifter award was shared by two world record breakers, Jiang Huihua at 49kg and Liao Guifang at 71kg. Chen Liju’s victory at 67kg made him the top male performer. Liao Guifang (CHN) There were other good news stories, such as Israel competing in an Olympic sport in Saudi Arabia for the first time. Madagascar and Nigeria won medals, while Don Opeloge from Samoa and Eileen Cikamatana from Australia did well for Oceania. Ireland and the Netherlands showed that weightlifting is a growing sport for them. Iraq had a successful Championships, winning its first World Championships gold medal in any sport from Qasim Hasan, and its first junior world record for Ali Rubaiawi. Qasim Hasan (IRQ) The organisation and hospitality of the Saudi Arabian hosts was outstanding, and the loaders were truly world class, deserving the hearty applause they were given at regular intervals. By Brian Oliver, Inside the Games Photos by Giorgio Scala/Deepbluemedia And THANK YOU to the

Riyadh, Final Day: Lasha “must improve” after seventh straight world title

Lasha Talakhadze had to work hard to win his seventh straight world title, and he will have to work harder yet to hold off his challengers, according to his coach. Five men in the super-heavyweight A Group, the final session of the 2023 IWF World Championships in Riyadh, made a total of 450kg or more to put Talakhadze under more pressure than usual. Lasha Talakhadze (GEO) The Georgian made 220-253-473 ahead of the Armenian Varazdat Lalayan on 212-248-460 and Gor Minasyan, lifting for Bahrain, on 213-246-459. The others on 450kg or more were Ali Davoudi from Iran and Simon Martirosyan from Armenia. Davoudi was desperately close to taking clean and jerk gold. He just failed with his final attempt at 255kg and finished 203-249-452. Martirosyan, who weighed 47kg less than Talakhadze on 130kg, made 200-250-450. All five of the 450-plus group failed with their final attempt. “I like it very much to have others who are close to me, I’m happy with that,” said Talakhadze, world record holder and double Olympic champion. When he failed with his last lift at 260kg – up 3kg, at his own request, on the number suggested by his coach Giorgi Asanidze – it made no difference to the result because Talakhadze was 13kg clear. Varazdat Lalayan (ARM) “It’s not such a big weight for me – I must do better and I will make it next time,” he said. Asanidze believes he will have to if he is to extend his winning run which started at the 2015 World Championships. “The others are closing in on Lasha. The standard he showed today will not be enough any more,” said Asanidze. “He was not at his very best here, but the only thing that mattered today was for him to be champion again. He will have to regain top form next time.” Talakhadze had slightly strained his left wrist in attempting that last lift and will have time to recover because he will weigh in without lifting at the next qualifier in Qatar in December, Asanidze said. He will return to competition in February at the European Championships. Eduard Ziaziulin from Belarus, competing as an Individual Neutral Athlete, made a respectable 201-230-431 despite failing with his last two attempts and goes straight into the top 10 in the rankings. There was glory and pain for 19-year-old Ali Rubaiawi, who also made the top 10 from the B Group. Gor Minasyan (BRN) After Qasim Hasan had won Iraq’s first World Championships gold medal in any Olympic sport in the 96kg snatch last Wednesday, Rubaiawi became the first Iraqi weightlifter to claim a junior world record. He did it with the last lift of the snatch session on 198kg, and started well in clean and jerk on 221kg. But a few minutes later Rubaiawi was on a stretcher, heading for hospital after suffering a painful quadriceps injury on his second attempt. Despite the injury, Rubaiawi improved his best qualifying total by 30kg on 198-221-419 and moved into the top 10 in the Paris rankings. The men's +109kg podium Another B Group lifter to make a big gain was Lee Jaesang from Korea. The 28-year-old missed his second clean and jerk but the last one at 241kg to finish 175-241-416 and move within 2kg of top-10 team-mate Jo Seongbin in the long list. The rankings are expected to be updated on the IWF website in the next few days. By Brian Oliver, Inside the Games Photos by Giorgio Scala/Deepbluemedia