Weightlifting at the 2020 Summer Olympics – Men's +109 kg

The Men's +109 kg weightlifting competitions at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo took place on 4 August at the Tokyo International Forum.[1][2]

Men's +109 kg
at the Games of the XXXII Olympiad
VenueTokyo International Forum
Date4 August 2021
Competitors13 from 13 nations
Winning total488 kg WR
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Lasha Talakhadze  Georgia
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Ali Davoudi  Iran
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Man Asaad  Syria
← 2016
2024 →

Fernando Reis of Brazil was on the start list, but he was ejected from the Games after being suspended following a positive drug test for human growth hormone.[3] He was replaced by David Litvinov from Israel.[4] Meanwhile, Algeria's Walid Bidani tested positive for COVID-19, forcing him to withdrawn from the event.

The event was won by Georgia's Lasha Talakhadze, who also set a new record and defending his gold medal. Iran and Syria brought home the silver and bronze medals through Ali Davoudi and Man Asaad, respectively. In group B, Hungarian Péter Nagy, Spanish Marcos Ruiz, American Caine Wilkes, Austrian Sargis Martirosjan, Israeli David Litvinov, and Chinese Taipei's Hsieh Yun-ting earn their place in total lifting.

Background

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The lifters from Rio 2016 - Talakhadze (gold medallist), Asaad, Bidani, Nagy, Reis, Czech's Jiří Orság and Turkmenistan's Hojamuhammet Toýçyýew - returns to paticipate in the event. They were splitted into two groups (A and B). Trained by 2004 Olympics champion in weightlifting, Giorgi Asanidze, Talakhadze aims to defend the gold medal he won at Rio.

In group A, during the snatch, New Zealand's David Liti, Orság and Netherlands' Enzo Kuworge were all well. On the second attempt, Liti and Orság passes while Kuworge fails, thus the Dutch would ending his snatch with just one lifting (175 kg). By the third attempt, the latter two also failed to pass, finishing with 178 kg and 180 kg, respectively. Toýçyýew could pass with just one lifting (184 kg) after the last two attempts were cancelled (first due to elbow movement and second to the Turkmen's inability to lift on the third attempt). Asaad, like the three aforementioned lifters on the earlier part, passed with two lifts and earns total (190 kg). His coaches had once handing challenge card to jury to challenging his no lift decision due to elbow press-out, which ultimately retained, earning him just two lifts. Davoudi and Talakhadze would eventually passing all attempts of snatch, and the trio leads up on the first section. Meanwhile, Bidani was tested positive for COVID-19 and withdraws from the event. Reis was named for the first attempt, but his participation was immediately removed after tested positive for human growth hormone, which was prohibited in any sports tournament, including the Olympics. He was later replaced with Litvinov and participated in group B. In that group, during the snatch, Nagy passes all attempts, leads up the group. He was followed by other lifters.

In the clean and jerk, Kuworge finishes the first and last attempts (225 kg and 234 kg), missed out on second attempt, earning him the total (409 kg). Liti and Toýçyýew's lifting totals were tied together (414 kg; missed one lift for the Kiwi (241 kg) and two for the Turkmen (235 and 241 kg)). The rest followed the suit, with only Talakhadze and Nagy cleans in all three attempts, with the Georgian later claims the gold, totalling 488 kg, thus breaking the world record for heaviest lifting ever by a human. The worst being Orság, failing all three attempts in clean and jerk, thus the Czech was eliminated from the event. On the other hand, Davoudi's 441 kg and Asaad's 424 kg totals earns them silver and bronze, only misses out their second and final attempts (240 kg for the Iranian and 242 kg for the Syrian).

During the Victory Ceremony, Talakhadze, Davoudi and Asaad were awarded medal by Ryu Seung-min, IOC member, South Korean table tennis player and champion of the event in 2004, and Mohammed Hasan Jalood, IWF secretary general, Iraq.

Records

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Prior to this competition, the existing world and Olympic records were as follows.

World Record Snatch   Lasha Talakhadze (GEO) 222 kg Moscow, Russia 11 April 2021
Clean & Jerk   Lasha Talakhadze (GEO) 264 kg Pattaya, Thailand 27 September 2019
Total   Lasha Talakhadze (GEO) 485 kg Moscow, Russia 11 April 2021
Olympic Record Snatch Olympic Standard 204 kg 1 November 2018
Clean & Jerk Olympic Standard 250 kg 1 November 2018
Total Olympic Standard 449 kg 1 November 2018

Results

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Rank Athlete Nation Group Body
weight[5]
Snatch (kg) Clean & Jerk (kg) Total[6]
1 2 3 Result 1 2 3 Result
  Lasha Talakhadze   Georgia A 177.00 208 215 223 223 WR 245 255 265 265 WR 488 WR
  Ali Davoudi   Iran A 168.25 191 196 200 200 234 240 241 241 441
  Man Asaad   Syria A 147.55 185 190 197 190 228 234 242 234 424
4 Hojamuhammet Toýçyýew   Turkmenistan A 141.85 184 188 190 184 230 235 241 230 414
5 David Liti   New Zealand A 176.55 173 178 183 178 229 236 241 236 414
6 Enzo Kuworge   Netherlands A 161.10 175 180 180 175 225 233 234 234 409
7 Péter Nagy   Hungary B 160.30 165 173 178 178 206 214 218 218 396
8 Marcos Ruiz   Spain B 109.90 175 180 185 180 210 215 215 215 395
9 Caine Wilkes   United States B 151.15 173 178 180 173 212 217 224 217 390
10 Sargis Martirosjan   Austria B 114.35 175 180 180 180 190 201 205 201 381
11 David Litvinov   Israel B 128.30 176 181 181 176 205 210 210 205 381
12 Hsieh Yun-ting   Chinese Taipei B 126.05 165 172 179 172 206 206 214 206 378
Jiří Orság   Czech Republic A 140.90 175 180 184 180 232 235 235
Walid Bidani   Algeria A Did not start[7]

New records

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Snatch 208 kg   Lasha Talakhadze (GEO) OR
215 kg OR
223 kg WR, OR
Clean & Jerk 255 kg OR
265 kg WR, OR
Total 468 kg OR
478 kg OR
488 kg WR, OR

References

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  1. ^ "Weightlifting Competition Schedule". Tokyo 2020. Retrieved 17 March 2020.
  2. ^ "Schedule - Weightlifting Tokyo 2020 Olympics". Olympian Database. Retrieved 17 March 2020.
  3. ^ Oliver, Brian (17 July 2021). "Brazilian weightlifter removed from Tokyo 2020 team after positive test for human growth hormone". Inside the Games. Retrieved 17 July 2021.
  4. ^ Oliver, Brian (19 July 2021). "European weightlifting champion Toma fails with legal challenge against Olympic ban". Inside the Games. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  5. ^ "Weightlifting | Men's +109kg | Group A Competition Sheet" (PDF). TOCOG. 4 August 2021. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 August 2021. Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  6. ^ "Weightlifting | Men's +109kg | Results" (PDF). olympics.com. TOCOG. 4 August 2021. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 August 2021. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  7. ^ Oliver, Brian (3 August 2021). "COVID-19 positive costs Algerian weightlifter Bidani chance of Olympic medal". Inside the Games. Retrieved 4 August 2021.