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Tuesday, September 26
Super heavyweights battle to the end


SYDNEY, Australia -- The silver medalist didn't know his name even after losing to him. Asked beforehand what his own expectations were, he was pessimistic about winning a medal.

So imagine Hossein Rezazadeh's surprise when he outlifted the world's strongest men to win the gold medal in Olympic super heavyweight weightlifting -- even if he didn't win instant recognition.

"I still don't know his name and I can't even quite tell you what he looks like," two-time silver medalist Ronny Weller of Germany said. "But he is a very surprising competitor."

Rezazadeh watched as one world record, then another fell Tuesday. Then he calmly stepped to bar, looked to the heavens for help and set two records of his own to earn Iran's second weightlifting gold medal by a man named Hossein in as many days.

Hossein Tavakoli won Monday at 231¼ pounds (105 kg).

Rezazadeh lifted 1,040 pounds (472.5 kg) -- the equivalent of three Cheryl Haworths, plus more than 100 pounds to spare -- to overtake Weller of Germany and bronze medalist Ashot Danielyan of Armenia.

"They're the best in the world, but my preparation was very good," the 22-year-old Rezazadeh said. "The level was very high. I did not expect to win a medal."

At different points of a competition that had the sellout crowd cheering as if it were a down-to-the-wire basketball game, each of the top three held a world record.

But Rezazadeh, whose hobby is listening to Turkish music, had the biggest lifts of all. He set a world record of 468¼ pounds (212.5 kg) in the snatch, then raised 573 pounds (260 kg) on a single lift in the clean and jerk to break Weller's overall record of 1,025¼ pounds (465 kg).

"The way the weights kept going up ... it was like a lottery," Weller said.

Just as in Atlanta in 1996, Weller (1,030½ pounds, 467.5 kg), who raised 567½ pounds (257.5 kg) in the clean and jerk, was beaten out by a record lift by the gold medalist. And, just as in Atlanta, Russia's Andrei Chemerkin had the final lift.

However, Chemerkin, who made a record lift to win in Atlanta, trailed by 22 pounds after the snatch. That forced him to try to raise 600¾ pounds (272.5 kg) on his final attempt in the clean and jerk -- or 27½ pounds more than any other lifter converted. He barely got the bar to his waist before dropping it, and finished fourth.

"It was Chemerkin in '96," Weller said. "And it was tough again this time."

The 385-pound Chemerkin -- Russia's Andrei the Giant -- essentially lost his gold when his best lift of 446¼ pounds (202.5 kg) trailed Rezazadeh by 22 pounds (10 kg) going into the clean and jerk.

During the snatch, it quickly became clear that it would take a world record to take the lead -- and it did. Three times in the snatch alone.

Rezazadeh set the record of 468¼ pounds (212.5 kg), but only after Danielyan (457¼ pounds, 207.5 kg) and Weller (462¾ pounds, 210 kg) broke it before him.

"When you realize what the weights are ... it's like I'm lifting on a different planet," Weller said.

Before Tuesday, Rezazadeh owned the snatch record of 453¾ pounds (206 kg) set in November 1999.

Weller now has three Olympic medals since he was seriously injured and his wife was killed in a car accident in 1989. He got the gold at 242½ pounds (110 kg) in 1992.

U.S. champion Shane Hamman set national records for the snatch and total lift while finishing 11th.

Hamman broke his U.S. record in the snatch, lifting 429¾ pounds (195 kg) -- or 16½ pounds more than the record 413¼ pounds (187.5) he raised during the Olympic trials in July.

However, Hamman could not break his record of 507 pounds (230 kg) in the clean and jerk set during the trials, raising 496 pounds (225 pounds) before missing twice at 512½ pounds (232.5 kg).

Hamman's total lift of 925¾ pounds (420 kg) broke his U.S. record of 920¼ pounds (417.5 kg), also set during the trials.



 

ALSO SEE
Iranian hoists gold; Bulgaria gets silver after appeal

A day after Dimas' trey, Kakiasvilis clinches third gold

Greece's Dimas collects third weightlifting gold




   
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