The post Rostami nominated for ‘Best Lifter of 2016’ appeared first on IRAN This Way.
]]>Rostami, who is a world and Olympic champion, has been placed among the candidates for the ‘Jenő Boskovics Lifter of the Year Trophies for 2016’ by IWF.
International Weightlifting Federation has announced names of six men and six women lifters as nominees for the trophy.
The voting is now underway on the official website of IWF and the deadline set is 31 January, 2017.
ranian weightlifter Kianoush Rostami won the gold medal in the men’s 85-kg category at the Rio 2016 Olympics Games on August 12, 2016.
Kianoush Rostami won Iran’s first medal of the Rio 2016 Olympics Games in the men’s 85-kilogram category and broke his own world record after lifting a total of 396 kilograms.
The Iranian athlete also won silver medals in 2011 and 2012 Asian Weightlifting Championships, gold in 2011 World Championships and silver 2012 in London Olympics.
Through online voting the official IWF magazine ‘World weightlifting’ will determined the best male and female lifters.
The Lifter of the Year election was initiated by the late Jenő Boskovics, the founding Editor-in-Chief of the magazine. In Mr. Boskovics’ memory World Weightlifting created a Challenge Trophy. The Trophy is awarded annually to the best male and best female weightlifters of the world. Every year, the new names are engraved on the Trophies.
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]]>The post Iranian Para archer girl makes Olympic history appeared first on IRAN This Way.
]]>The scene opened the eyes of many, bringing greater awareness to Para athletes and continuing to inspire a generation of not only Muslim women but people in her country with an impairment, paralympic.org reported.
Nemati became the first Para athlete to carry her nation’s flag during the Olympics, and Iran’s second female flag bearer after Lida Fariman did so in 1996.
The scene of Nemati carrying the Iranian flag had great significance, and that is why it marks at No. 11 in the International Paralympic Committee’s Top 50 Moments of 2016.
“It was my honor as I was the only Paralympian participating in the Olympic Games as the flag bearer,” Nemati told Paralympic.org. “This matter led to change so many minds and people around the world that in spite of many severe challenges, we can make everything possible.”
Nemati added that not many expected to see a woman in a wheelchair carrying the Iranian flag during the Olympics Opening Ceremony.
“That moment was a surprise for the world; I always enjoy surprising the people,” she said.
The two-time Paralympian strongly believed that she raised the profile of the Paralympics when competing in the Olympics.
“Certainly,” she said. “Representing as a Paralympian sent an essential message to the world. That’s an important message that a Paralympian can qualify for Olympics to compete with elite [able-bodied] athletes and also act as a flag bearer for the country. I was so glad to forward this message with my presence in the Rio Olympic Games.”
Nemati made her name known four years ago, when she won the individual recurve W1/W2 at London 2012. That moment marked the first time an Iranian woman won Olympic or Paralympic gold, and she has continued to make history since then.
In November 2015, Nemati secured a historic qualifying spot for her nation at the Rio Olympics after her performance at the Asian Archery Championships.
She was one of the few Paralympians to compete at the 2016 Olympics, with Para table tennis players Natalia Partyka of Poland and Melissa Tapper of Australia among the other notable Paralympians.
During archery events at the Rio Olympics, Nemati put together a 28 in the second set to get on the scoreboard — but could not produce in the closing series, and ultimately fell out of the competition, 6-2.
She came back to the Sambodromo to compete in the Paralympics, where she successfully defended her title.
“Every edition has its own conditions and features, but as I was the only Paralympian in the Olympics; I had a peculiar feeling in the Games,” Nemati said. “The atmosphere was so competitive and all athletes aimed to stand on the podium. The Paralympic Games had another different experience. Since I always consider it like my home, I found the Paralympics more of a friendly Games.”
Nemati also noted that her stay in the Athletes’ Village during the Olympic Games was another different experience than her stay during the Paralympics.
“Although most of people were amazed, their reaction was so nice,” she recalled. “I was welcomed by the people and all tried to communicate with me since this matter was so unfamiliar for them; especially for the Brazilians who treated me so well.”
Just two years after a car accident in 2004 left her with spinal cord injuries, Nemati took up the sport that would lead her to become a national treasure.
Within six months she was beating able-bodied athletes at a national level and in 2010 broke her first world record.
After a hectic past few months following the Games, Nemati said all the receptions and ceremonies are done at the moment and she is enjoying downtime in her hometown Kerman. But she wanted to leave one more message: “I ask again all people with disabilities; never surrender in your disability. Be informed that sport is one of the best ways to overcome disability.”
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]]>The post Kimia’s bronze shines golden in Iranian women’s eyes appeared first on IRAN This Way.
]]>The flame of Rio Olympics 2016 went out on Sunday, Aug. 21, with the Iranian squad packing up 8 medals as they returned home from the 16-day extravaganza in the Brazilian seaside city. With two gold medals in weightlifting, one gold, one silver and three bronze in wrestling and one landmark bronze in taekwondo, Iran finished 25th, which was an eight-step drop from its previous performance in London Olympics 2012.
Admittedly, Iran’s national freestyle wrestling team achieved its best result since Melbourne Olympics 1956, but more gold medals were expected of them and somehow, the one gold medal in this category won by Hassan Yazdani, even though after 16 years, still left much to be desired.
Although the end results showed a disappointing performance as compared to the previous Olympic Games where Iran finished 17th with a total of 12 medals, this year’s Olympics was not completely disappointing or devoid of any dramatic merit in certain categories for the Iranian athletes.
One such dramatic event that took the social media in Iran by storm was the match between Iranian wrestler Komeil Ghasemi and American opponent Tervel Dlagnev in the semifinal of 125kg freestyle wrestling where Ghasemi crushed Dlagnev in only 33 seconds. ‘You can’t put on your socks in 33 seconds, let alone do five wrestling throws,’ an Iranian tweeted following the surprisingly short match. Unfortunately, Ghasemi’s bout of good luck did not accompany him to the final where he was stripped of an Olympic gold as he lost against his Turkish opponent Taha Akgul.
Weightlifter Kianoush Rostami made another highlight during the Olympic Games, as he won Iran’s first medal at Rio Olympics following days of disappointing performances. Eclipsing his own world record set in May by one kilogram, Rostami grabbed gold in the men’s 85-kilogram category with a world record after lifting a total of 396 kilograms.
But perhaps more drama-laced and this time, highly frustrating, story happened in Men’s over 105kg weightlifting division, where Iran’s super heavyweight weightlifter and London Olympics champion Behdad Salimi, while beating the world record in snatch, was later disqualified in the clean and jerk by a controversial decision by the jury. Once again, the biased judgment infuriated Iranians’ nationalistic sensibilities to the extent where the website of International Weightlifting Federation was hacked by an anonymous hacker and its Instagram page flooded with over 285,000 comments in support of Salimi as social network users expressed their objections over the unfair refereeing.
Head of Iran’s National Olympics Committee Kiyoumars Hashemi retold the story as this; “all experts of weightlifting saw on night of August 16 the scope of bias and partiality of the juries under the illegal influence by the head of Asian Weightlifting Federation who had been sitting just behind the jury members; after all 3 lights were white, thus approving Salimi’s second attempt in clean and Jerk sub-category, the jury members renounced their initial decision effectively to deprive a champion of his gold medal which was inevitable.” He went on to add, “incontrovertible evidence is the list of jury members where the name of notorious Mohamed Hassan Jaloud is missing, but who, along with his wife, exerted undue influence on the final decision.”
But biased refereeing did not end there for Iranian wrestlers. During the match between Iran’s Reza Yazdani and Azerbaijan’s Khetag Gazyumov, the Russian judge Sergey Novakovskiy did not give Yazdani’s deserving two points. The Russian judge, along with two others, was later suspended by United World Wrestling due to ‘suspicious manner of judging’ during the controversial refereeing in the match for the bronze medal in the weight category +65kg among men, in which the Mongolian Mandhara Gantrisin lost to Uzbek Ataru Matrosovu.
But all drama aside, this year’s Olympics had one memorable moment for the Iranian nation to savor, and that was thanks to Kimia Alizadeh’s inspiring achievement of becoming the first Iranian women to ever win an Olympic medal. She took the bronze in the -57kg class of taekwondo, beating Sweden’s Nikita Glasnovic 5-1, after defeating opponents from Croatia and Thailand and narrowly losing against Spain’s Eva Gomez who finished with silver against gold medalist Jade Jones of Britain.
This was a great moment in history for Iranian women, athletes or otherwise, for whom Kimia’s victory touched every corner of their hearts and rekindled the flames of hope for triumph in the face of limitations and hardship.
The 18-year-old taekwondo practitioner, affectionately knowns as the Iranian “Tsunami”, had already won a gold and bronze medal at the 2014 and 2015 Taekwondo World Championship, respectively, and went on to win gold at the World Taekwondo Grand Prix in August 2015 in Russia.
The historic bronze that she won at Rio Olympics did not weigh any less than a gold in the eyes of Iranian nation. In fact, many called her medal ‘the goldest bronze in the history of Iran’s sports’ and there were many tweets with a wordplay on Kimia’s name which means ‘alchemy’ in Persian, saying that Kimia had in a sense turned her bronze medal into gold. But this trend did not stop at metaphors. Kimia, whose bronze medal was worth gold, was promised to receive $10,000 as cash prize, the same amount for a gold medalist.
Kimia, who did not just win against her opponents but against limitations and lack of opportunities on her way to victory, was the only Iranian athlete at Rio Olympics to receive a tweet from the President himself: “My dear girl Kimia, you have brought happiness to all the Iranians, and particularly to the women. I wish you eternal happiness,” President Rouhani said on Friday, the day after Kimia’s historic win.
The message of Ayatollah Khamenei, Leader of the Islamic Revolution, came on Aug. 23 wherein he hailed Iran’s Rio Olympic delegation for their efforts and victories, and directed a part of his message especially at female athletes “who displayed an honorable form of hijab as an Iranian code for all.”
Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Jaberi Ansari also congratulated Alizadeh as well Hedaya Malak of Egypt, who landed the other women’s bronze in taekwondo, in a post on his Instagram page: “The presence of Kimia and another veiled woman from Egypt on the podium is the symbol of unity and efforts of Muslim women, who shine in new arenas while respecting their values.”
Shahindokht Molaverdi, Vice-President for Women and Family Affairs, also lauded Kimia for her exemplary hard work, courage and self-confidence; “no doubt this victory will forever stay in the history of this land and the memory of our people, especially the women, and open up brighter horizons for women’s sports during the term of a government that promises ‘prudence’ and ‘hope’,” she said in a message.
The United Nations mission in Iran also commended Alizadeh for her great success, saying such a victory would pave the way for other Iranian female athletes to pursue their dreams in sports.
Popular Iranian actress Taraneh Alidoosti, known for her role in Asghar Farhadi’s award-winning film ‘The Salesman’ and ‘About Elly’, was also among the figures who found Kimia’s victory as the stepping stones for her other compatriots; “The future will tell what you have achieved for your peers,” tweeted Alidoosti, “You gave them self-confidence and showed them that (sports) belongs to them as well.”
Kimia, at the tender age of 18, might have been surprised and perhaps a little overwhelmed at the tremendous outpouring of support from such high-ranking officials and the public (her Instagram post after her victory received more 25,000 congratulatory comments), but she was not surprised that she had won a medal. In fact, she was disappointed that it was not a gold one.
“I was technically and psychologically ready, in fact I had never felt more prepared in my life,” Kimia told Mehr News reporter in Rio, “with this level of readiness, I expected of myself nothing short of a gold medal. Some people find it hard to believe when they achieve success, but I had faith in myself for coming this far. What I still can’t believe is that I lost to the Spanish athlete.”
Her frustration is understandable, especially when one realizes that the Olympic Games are not only a sphere to prove your skills and capabilities to yourself and the world, but in many cases, as the athlete is elevated to the level of ‘ambassador’, they become a challenge, an opportunity, to prove your whole nation to the world, and to give your peers hope that if it had been possible for you to get this far, it would be possible for them to get further.
And Kimia definitely did that. The situation of women’s sports in Iran and Iranian women athletes is far from ideal, yet far from stagnant and deteriorating. It is true that women’s sports have been going through a rough patch mostly due to economic difficulties that slash budgets, but the situation is improving, and each year, a higher number of women participate in international games.
The share of female participants in the Olympic Games reached 45 per cent this year. This is while only 16 per cent (9 out of 63) of the Iranian Olympic squad were female. On the other hand, the share of Iranian women athletes has never been this much in any previous Olympics, and the increased share definitely worked in Iran’s favor. With more female participation in the Olympics, one could expect more victories achieved by them, and perhaps this is exactly the kind of jolt women’s sports in Iran need in their ongoing battle to win more recognition and financial and emotional support.
Kimia’s winning of the first Olympic medal in female sports made many hopeful that the problems currently facing the Iranian athletes would be solved in part.
It was only last year that Iran women’s national futsal team were on the verge of losing their chance at the 2015 Women’s Futsal World Tournament in Guatemala, due to ‘budget problems’ and ‘not enough time to obtain visas’. The decision made by the head of Iranian Football Federation, Ali Kafashian, came under heavy criticism in various media outlets, until President Rouhani became directly involved and the Ministry of Sports and Ministry of Foreign Affairs followed up on the issue so that the problems would be solved and the women’s team could participate in the international event. The team, although did not manage to make it to the quarterfinals at Guatemala games, became a champion in the 2015 AFC Women’s Futsal Championship in Malaysia, as well as the 2012 and 2008 WAFF Women’s Futsal Championship in Bahrain and Jordan.
Another more recent example of how women’s sports in Iran receive less budget and recognition was the dissolution of one of the most active women’s football team called Malavan (Sailor) due to, once again, ‘financial problems’. What made the matters worse was a quote by the club CEO Rezaeian in ‘defense’ of his decision to dissolve the team; “we have many mouths to feed. When a storm-lashed ship is sinking, it starts unloading extra burdens,” the quote went viral on social media and a great number of fans, activists, and female athletes lashed out at what was so obviously a gender discrimination.
Maryam Irandoost, previous head coach of the team, was completely scandalized by the news of the dissolution of the most decorated team in history of women’s football; “this will definitely dampen motivation among female athletes,” she said in an interview, while noting that she had been forced to resign from her position as a coach and leave football behind because of the existing problems.
“I kept telling myself that better days were on their way and our efforts would be seen through championships,” she lamented. “I do believe that such maltreatments and discriminations will have adverse effects on women’s sports community and create a great chasm of despair.”
‘The better days’ that Irandoost was hoping to see did come, this time in the form of the first Olympic medal achieved by an Iranian women athlete, and it made many hopeful for more inspiriting achievements to come. There is no questioning the fact that the budget allocated to women’s sports must be equal to that of men, and that any financial limitation will hinder the women’s progress in society. But Kimia’s medal radiated beams of hope on the hearts of all who need that little spark of motivation and confidence to take greater steps toward victory.
Iranian medalists at Rio Olympic Games 2016:
Gold | Kianoush Rostami | Weightlifting | Men’s 85 kg |
Gold | Sohrab Moradi | Weightlifting | Men’s 94 kg |
Gold | Hassan Yazdani | Wrestling | Men’s freestyle 74 kg |
Silver | Komeil Ghasemi | Wrestling | Men’s freestyle 125 kg |
Bronze | Saeid Abdevali | Wrestling | Men’s Greco-Roman 75 kg |
Bronze | Ghasem Rezaei | Wrestling | Men’s Greco-Roman 98 kg |
Bronze | Kimia Alizadeh | Taekwondo | Women’s 57 kg |
Bronze | Hassan Rahimi | Wrestling | Men’s freestyle 57 kg |
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]]>Iran’s Sajjad Mardani was victorious over his Tongan rival Pita Taufatofua 16-1 in +80kg category in round of 16 to complete chain of good news on Saturday for Iranian camp. His match in quarterfinals was Saturday night 11:45 Tehran time versus Mahama Cho from the United Kingdom.
Video: Sajjad Mardani Vs Mahama Cho
Cho was leading 3-1 in first round and Mardani gained another point before ending second round 3-2. In third round, Mardani managed to end the normal time 3-3 to go for a golden point round. In the sudden-death stage Sajjad Mardani appeared more aggressive and controlled the match for almost two minutes before he finally gave up all of a sudden to Cho’s kick which gained the British fighter one point and led him to the semi-finals.
Mardani needs to wait to see if Mohama Cho can ascend to final match so that he would be given a second chance for bronze medal./MNA
Photo Report: Sajjad Mardai in Rio 2016 Olympics
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]]>Alizadeh, who is only 18 years old, defeated Sweden Nikita Glasnovic 5-1 on Thursday after winning the repechage match with her Thai rival, Phannapa Harnsujin 14-10.
Iranian athlete was defeated by Eva Calvo Gomez of Spain in quarter-finals 8-7, however, she could compete a repechage once the Spanish Gomez reached the final.
UK’s Fade Jones won the gold medal of the class after beating Gomez 16-7.
The Iranian Olympians have so far won five medals in the Rio games.
Alizadeh is the first iranian women Olympic medalist.
Alizadeh and Nikita Glasnovic,Sweden
Medal ceremony
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]]>The post Ashourzadeh Iranian Taekwondo gold hopeful eliminated in surprise / Photo appeared first on IRAN This Way.
]]>Iran’s taekwondo would have been source of hope for the delegation for possible medals; however, on Wednesday, the first section of this hope was squandered only by defeat Farzan Ashourzadeh conceded to his average rival Omar Hajjami in -58kg category. Ashourzadeh is the world first seed and was drawn to meet a lower seed, but was surprised when he lost to this underestimated rival 4-0. Ashourzadeh was cautious at the beginning, but his rival was no less cautious as well, and thus the scoreboard indicated no scores for either of the athletes in the first round.
In the second, Ashourzadeh proved more active and agile, but the juries denied him his possible efforts which otherwise could have been rewarded as points. A challenge was requested which changed the points 3-0 for Iranian side. The third round was a round for Hajjami, since, having nothing to lose, he proved aggressive enough to grab points from his formidable rival.
Ashourzadeh was cautious to keep the result except for the ending seconds when the Moroccan stole his attention and got 4 points to shock Ashourzadeh and the rest of the nation.
This was a painful surprise when a champion came short of fulfilling national expectation for a gold medal he so badly deserved. The nation grieved, as it did on Tuesday night when one of his champions in weightlifting was denied his points and with it they deprived him of the colorful medals.
In a related story in canoeing, Iran’s representative Adel Mojallali succeeded in standing in fourth place in the first round and advancing to semifinals in men’s 200m. Mojallali crossed the finish line in 41.65 seconds. He will compete in the semifinals on Thursday. This was an event providing some solace for Iranian camp and would alleviate the difficulties and the grief striking the nation./ MNA
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]]>The post Rezaei bags bronze medal in 2016 Olympic / Photo appeared first on IRAN This Way.
]]>Ghasem Rezaei who had an Olympics title as a gold medalist in 2012 London games had an off draw in first round. In second round he faced Luillys Pérez from Venezuela who was an easy job for him and Rezaei won the match 8-0. In his second match, however, Ghasem Rezaei couldn’t defeat Cuban wrestler Yasmany Daniel Lugo Cabrera and conceded a 4-0 loss.
With his Cuban rival managing to ascend to final game, Rezaei was given another chance to fight for a bronze medal. In this level he stood against Xiao Di from China and defeating him 7-0 opened his way to fight for third place.
Ghasem Rezaei in his last game stood in front of Carl Fredrik Stefan Schoen from Sweden. Schoen went up 4-0 after a takedown and gut wrench in the first period. The Iranian battled back in the second period, scoring with back-to-back gut wrenches to make the score 4-4 and ultimately give him the victory on criteria.
Ghasem Rezaei’s bronze medal brought fourth medal to the Iranian camp after weightlifting champions Kiyanoush Rostami and Sohrab Moradi’s gold medals and a bronze which was grabbed by Saeid Abdevali in freestyle wrestling. /MNA
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]]>The post Abedini Iranian fencer jumps places in world ranking appeared first on IRAN This Way.
]]>Following the fencing event of the 2016 Rio Summer Olympic Games, the latest ranking was released by the Fédération Internationale d’Escrime (FIE).
Accordingly, Iran’s top sabre fencer Mojtab Abedini, who overcame world’s great figures in preliminary rounds of Rio sabre event, has moved up to sixth place in fencing sport after receiving 149 points.
Abedini offered great sportive skills in Rio Olympics when he defeated his French, German, and South Korean rivals in the preliminaries though he lost to his US rival Daryl Homer in the semifinals before a second defeat by South Korean Kim Young-Hwan 15-8.
The Iranian fencer was very close to final of the Rio competitions, but a mistake by the referee put him in the fourth place.
Currently, Junghwan Kim of South Korea stands atop FIE world rankings followed by Hungary’s Arson Szilagyi and France’s Vincent Anstett who are placed in the second and third positions, respectively.
The sabre is one of the three weapons of modern fencing and it differs from the other modern fencing weapons, the épée and foil, in that it is possible to score with the edge of the blade; for this reason, sabreur movements and attacks are very fast.
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]]>The post Rostami grabs Iran’s first medal in Rio 2016 Olympics /Photo+Video appeared first on IRAN This Way.
]]>Kianoush Rostami won Iran’s first medal of the Rio 2016 Olympics Games in the men’s 85-kilogram category and broke his own world record after lifting a total of 396 kilograms.
Rostami, 25, a bronze medalist in the same category in London four years ago, made 217kg with his final clean and jerk for a total of 396kg, beating his world record by one kilogram.
China’s Tian Tao claimed silver on 395kg while Romanian Gabriel Sincraian took bronze with a lift of 390 kilograms.
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]]>The post IRANIAN women athletes in action at Rio 2016 Olympics appeared first on IRAN This Way.
]]>IRAN with 63 athletes participated in Rio 2016 Olympic Games in Archery, Athletics, Boxing, Canoeing,Cycling ,Fencing ,Judo, Rowing, Shooting, Swimming, Table tennis, Taekwondo, Volleyball, Weightlifting, Wrestling.
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