Phuket, Day 9: World records put China’s Liu Huanhua clear in Paris rankings– and B Group lifter jumps 18 places to qualify

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Phuket, Day 9: World records put China’s Liu Huanhua clear in Paris rankings– and B Group lifter jumps 18 places to qualify

Liu Huanhua from China broke two world records and built a big lead in the Olympic rankings with the final lift of a memorable day at the IWF World Cup in Phuket, Thailand. Another highlight was a jump of 18 places by Davranbek Hasanbayev from Turkmenistan in a B Group that produced four medallists. There was good news for the United States too, when results went right for Wes Kitts to qualify with the continental slot. Before today, nobody had beaten the 102kg world standards set in 2018 when new weight categories were introduced. Liu made a 7kg jump to 232kg for his last attempt and made it to claim world records in clean and jerk and total on 181-232-413. Liu Huanhua (CHN) That gives him the biggest lead over his nearest challenger in all five men’s categories for Paris 2024. After a day of many ranking changes the nearest challenger is 20-year-old Garik Karapetyan from Armenia. Karapetyan was not in the simplified lists – one athlete per nation – when the four 102kg sessions started here. In making 185-216-401 before declining his final attempt, the triple junior world champion knocked out his older team-mate Samvel Gasparyan. Garik Karapetyan (ARM) Lesman Paredes made a successful return to the platform after an absence of 483 days. “I’m very pleased with that,” he said after making 186-212-398 in fourth place, improving his best total by 1kg. The Bahrain lifter made three lifts and declined three. “I had two elbow surgeries last year, in March and July, so this was a good comeback, especially as I didn’t want to take any risks before Paris,” he said. Half of the top 10 finishers came from the B Group, which was won by Yauheni Tsikhantsou. The Individual Neutral Athlete from Belarus made 183-214-400 for third place, up 2kg on his previous best, but he was not happy. “I wanted more, I know I have more in me,” he said after failing with a final attempt at 225kg. “I will do better in Paris.” Lesman Paredes (BRN) Don Opeloge from Samoa took silver in clean and jerk and moved up to qualify in 10th place, the best effort by a male lifter from Oceania in all categories. He made 170-221-391. Bekdoolot Rasulbekov from Kyrgyzstan won clean and jerk bronze on 220kg but did not qualify. He made only one snatch of 165kg. Others who failed to make it included Reza Dehdar from Iran and Tudor Bratu from Moldova, who had started the day in the top 10. The Olympic 96kg gold medallist Meso Hassona from Qatar, who ended the day third in the rankings, withdrew after weigh-in. He suffered an abductor injury in training here last week and expects to be out of action for two to three weeks. Davranbek Hasanbayev (TKM) The top 10 in ranking order were: Liu, Karapetyan, Meso, Akbar Djuraev from Uzbekistan, who lifts at 109kg here on Wednesday, Tsikhantsou, Jang Yeonhak from Korea, Paredes, Hasanbayev, Irakli Chkheidze from Georgia and Opeloge. Kitts did not lift because of a hip injury. He could have been overtaken by Jhonatan Rivas, who has also had injury problems, but the Colombian bombed out in clean and jerk, leaving Kitts 14th in the rankings. When Opeloge made the top 10, the continental place went to Kitts as the highest-ranked Pan American lifter. Hasanbayev made the biggest rankings move to date in the World Cup, which ends on Thursday. He punched the air, screamed and kissed the barbell after jumping from 26th place to eighth on 187-205-392. He won gold in snatch. “It’s a great feeling, not just for me but for everybody in the team,” Hasanbayev said. He was full of praise for his coaches for their strategy in bringing about a 19kg improvement on his best total. In the two months since the Asian Championships, where he was 27kg lower on 365kg, Hasanbayev had “trained very hard without a break, keeping to a very strict daily schedule of when I train, sleep, eat”. The biggest factor, he said, was putting on weight. “I had always trained at 99 to 100 kilos because I had trouble getting up to 102. The coaches said I had to be heavier. I went up to 104-105 kilos, I stayed there and I trained much better. “Inshallah now I can win a medal in Paris. If I keep training like I did for the last two months I really believe it”. Jong Chun Hui (PRK) DPR Korea had its eighth winner of the week when the Asian Games silver medallist Jong Chun Hui had her third straight success at 76kg. Jong missed her first and last attempts in making 114-145-259, a very respectable total given her weight. Although she competes at 76kg, Jong weighed less than 70kg at the Asian Games, where there was no 71kg category. She was only a few grams over 71kg when she won the Qatar Grand Prix and the Asian title, and again today. Marie Fegue, France’s top hope for the Olympics who is ranked in the top 10 at 71kg and 81kg, was second on 115-130-245. Fegue appeared to start her third snatch after the clock had run down but there was no jury review. Miyareth Mendoza took bronze for Colombia on 106-134-240. Shania Bedward from Canada made a career-best 102-132-234 in fourth. By Brian Oliver Photos by Giorgio

Phuket, Day 8: USA’s Olivia Reeves turns tables on China and PRK with sensational World Cup victory

Olivia Reeves from the United States achieved the best result of her career when she defeated all three world record holders in the women’s 71kg at the IWF World Cup in Phuket, Thailand. At the final qualifier for Paris 2024, Reeves made all six lifts for career bests across the board on 118-150-268. That put her on top of the podium ahead of the best lifters from China and DPR Korea. The Stars and Stripes sat above the flags of China and PRK at the medal ceremony. When Mike Gattone, USA Weightlifting’s head of performance and coaching, was asked when that had last happened he said it was a question of if, not when. “I can’t recall it ever happening,” he said. Olivia Reeves (USA) Between them, China and PRK hold all but two of the current women’s world records. While 20-year-old Reeves improved her best Olympic ranking total by 6kg in second place, the athletes standing first, third and fourth were collectively 46kg down on their best. Reeves has put 23kg on her total since qualifying began 16 months ago and is a genuine gold medal contender for Paris. The rankings leader Liao Guifang from China holds the world record on total, Song Kuk Hyang from DPR Korea set the clean and jerk mark at the Asian Championships two months ago, and snatch specialist Angie Palacios from Ecuador remains the only non-Asian holder of a current women’s world record. Liao Guifang (CHN) Liao was second on 115-149-264, Song third on 115-146-261 and Palacios sixth on 113-132-245. All three of them made only two good lifts. The only other athlete in the top 10 to improve her total was the Tokyo 64kg bronze medallist Chen Wen-Huei from Chinese Taipei, fourth here on 105-141-246. Reeves, youngest of 11 athletes in the A Group, had said before the competition, “My goal is to get as close as I can to China, see what I can push there.” After finishing 4kg ahead of Liao she said, “It certainly went to plan. I couldn’t have asked for better, especially after a short turnaround from Bulgaria (the last qualifier in February). It’s as good as it gets. “I can’t quite believe I got 150 – I’m going to have to watch that again.” Reeves had finished behind Liao and Song at the Qatar Grand Prix in December. Asked how she had turned third place into first, she said: “I lifted more weight, that’s all there is to it.  Nothing else changed, I just have confidence in my lifts.” Besides Liao, Reeves, Palacios and Chen, the others ranked in the top 10 are Loredana Toma from Romania, Vanessa Sarno from the Philippines, Neama Said from Egypt, who weighed in without lifting here, Mari Leivis Sanchez from Colombia, the Individual Neutral Athlete Siuzanna Valodzka from Belarus, and Marie Fegue from France, who lifts at 76kg on Monday. Sarno and Valodzka both opted to lift in the B Group. There was heartbreak in the final half-hour of that tense session. Four lifters had two tries each to earn a place in Paris, including one who started the day in 20th place. All eight attempts were no-lifts. Yeniuska Mirabal from Cuba had made her first four when she failed twice at 133kg. She would have moved up 10 places to tenth if she had done it. Mun Minhee from Korea missed twice at 134kg, again after four good lifts, and Pham Thi Hong Thanh from Vietnam failed both times at 135kg. Eyglo Sturludottir (ISL) Eyglo Sturludottir from Iceland was “really happy and positive” despite missing attempts at 134kg that would have earned qualification. Sturlodottir, a 22-year-old medical student whose big aims are to become a doctor and lift at the Olympic Games, competed in all seven qualifiers. She improved from 94-119-213 in the first to 106-130-236 in the last. “I’ll keep training, keep competing and hopefully in the next qualification for Los Angeles I will be more secure in the rankings,” she said. “I’ll graduate in 2027, then I’ll have a year of no school, just train for the 2028 Games. I’m not done. I’ll be a doctor at the next Olympics. See you there.” There is still a chance that Sturludottir will be in Paris. Iceland has applied for a universality place on her behalf. The International Olympic Committee Tripartite Commission will assess the 32 applications and send invitations to six athletes – three men and three women - in mid-June. Joy Eze from Nigeria was another athlete who failed with a final attempt that would have put her in the top 10. It happened in the previous day’s C Group, where Eze totalled 239kg and moved up to 11th place. That might be enough to qualify depending on the reallocation of France’s host nation places. Amanda Schott from Brazil is 12th and, despite being unable to lift here because of injury, is not without hope. If China opts not to compete in this category in Paris – it can select a maximum three women from the five who have qualified – Schott could move up. The men's 96kg podium Won Jongbeom won the non-Olympic men’s 96kg by a wide margin. He declined his final attempt after making 170-219-389 to finish clear of Karim Abokahla from Egypt – who declined his last two – on 165-205-370. Braydon Kennedy from Canada was third on 165-193-358. By Brian Oliver Photos by Giorgio

Phuket, Day 7: World records help Nasar and Lopez to dominate while challengers drop away

The European and Pan American 89kg champions Karlos Nasar and Yeison Lopez were in world record form as they finished well clear of Asia’s contenders on another day of excitement at the IWF World Cup in Phuket, Thailand. Between them Nasar, from Bulgaria, and Colombian Lopez made six senior record attempts, two of which were successful. Nasar, the world’s top teenage weightlifter, also claimed two junior world records. At the end of a messy session in which only four of the 11 athletes made a total, Nasar had joined Li Dayin from China at the top of the Olympic rankings on 396kg. Lopez, second on the night and third in the rankings, improved his best total to 392kg. Karlos Nasar (BUL) Li made only two good lifts, finishing 13kg down on his best total in third place here, ahead of the Italian Nino Pizzolato. These four were joined in the Paris top 10 by five who were already there before today – Keydomar Vallenilla from Venezuela, Mir Mostafa from Iran, Karim Abokahla from Egypt, Marin Robu from Moldova and Andranik Karapetyan from Armenia. Tenth place changed hands. Petr Asayonak, the Individual Neutral Athlete from Belarus, dropped to 11th after Yu Dongju from Korea made a big move from the B Group. Asayonak might still make it to Paris if China opts not to contest this category. China has four athletes ranked high enough but nations can take a maximum of three per gender to the Olympic Games. Three of the first six athletes on to the platform bombed out in snatch and a fourth, world champion Mir Mostafa, declined his second two attempts after making 160kg. They were Asayonak, Boady Santavy from Canada, who has had knee problems, and Nathan Damron from the United States. Yeison Lopez Lopez (COL) The real excitement started in the last few minutes of the snatch contest. Lopez went for a world record on 181kg and failed. Nasar made the same weight to set junior and senior world records, improving his career best by 5kg. His senior record lasted for one minute before Lopez came out to make 182kg, earning huge cheers from a noisy and appreciative audience. In clean and jerk Nasar made 215kg for a junior world record on total, then went close but failed twice at 224kg, which would have given him senior records in clean and jerk and total. Lopez tried and failed once. “I trained specifically to improve my snatch for this. That was my goal and it went well,” said Lopez. “Now I will return to Colombia, then I’ll go to Madrid and prepare for the Olympics in Europe." The last man to bomb out, after Nasar and Lopez had finished, was China’s second contender Tian Tao. He was faced with the impossible task of making 226kg to overtake Li. Tian Tao announced his retirement from international competition afterwards, although he will continue at national level. Nasar finished 181-215-396, Lopez 182-210-392 and Li 172-210-382. Yu’s move from 17th place to 10th was the best effort by a B Group lifter in the first week of the World Cup, which ends on April 11. He qualified for his third Olympic Games. His eight rivals made a total of five snatches and three clean and jerks between them. Only three made a total. Yu had two attempts at a career-best 209kg. He missed the first, then sat on the steps of the platform for a minute and a half to compose himself. He calmly went out and made his final attempt, finishing 166-209-375. “That was unbelievable. I’m so, so happy,” he said. Ri Chong Song (PRK) In the earlier 81kg Ri Chong Song from DPR Korea had two more attempts at taking Rahmat Erwin’s clean and jerk world record. Just as he had done at the Asian Championships in February, Ri failed both times on 210kg. Ri, PRK’s seventh winner here, made 166-200-366 ahead of Maksad Meredov from Turkmenistan on 146-182-328 and Samuel Guertin from Canada on 140-175-315. The two oldest competitors at the World Cup, both from South Africa, teamed up for the second successive day. Chantelle Burger, 41, lifted at 64kg on Friday with Andre Gadney, who will be 44 next month, as her coach. Andre Gadney (RSA) Today Burger was coach when Gadney finished four places and 115kg behind Ri. Gadney said he enjoyed himself even though he knew his numbers would be uncompetitive here. “What a fantastic competition. It’s inspiring for the young lifters I coach when they see I’m at an event like this. Some of them are making good numbers and I want to be coaching them at big competitions. It’s for the future.” It was a big day for Jose Garcia, the only international weightlifter from Timor Leste. He desperately needed to make a total to support his application for a Universality place in Paris. Six of these will be awarded to weightlifters by the International Olympic Committee. He finished last but Garcia did what he needed to do by making a 205kg total. Australia is all but certain to claim another place in Paris after Jacqueline Nichele finished ahead of her team-mate Sarah Cochrane and Maximina Uepa from Nauru in the early sessions of the women’s 71kg. That should give 23-year-old Nichele the continental slot because all other continents have athletes in the top 10, a situation that is highly unlikely to change in Sunday’s A and B Groups.  By Brian Oliver Photos by Giorgio