Barbell Heavyweight World Record. World push on Sakhalin

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Alexey Lovchev this night updated two world records and became the strongest man on the planet

"I did it! Friends, thanks to everyone who believed and supported me! Russia is the greatest power, and we are confirmation of this! "- wrote Alexey Lovchev on his page a few hours after he became the world champion and updated two legendary world records.

World records in the men's heavyweight category are so rare that last time it happened back in the last century (2000 is the last century, right?). Then the colorful Iranian (and who is not colorful in this weight?) Hossein Rezazade lifted 472 kg (the result for weightlifters is the sum of two attempts - in snatch and clean and jerk) and won the Sydney Olympics.

Yesterday, in Houston, America, that seemingly eternal record was broken by a simple Russian guy from Karabanovo, a town at the junction of the Moscow and Vladimir regions. So simple that when asked about his main after-sport dream, he always answered - to open a car service in his city and deal with cars.

“I've never lifted this kind of weight before - I'm overwhelmed. This proves that Russia is the strongest nation. I could not have done this without the support of my parents. My father is a coach, he brought me to weightlifting... My mother died in 2012, and I dedicate this victory and these records to her ", - Lovchev was in weightlifting from the age of nine, and he lifted his first weights in the gym that his father built.

Lovchev's record attempt at 264 kg is an excellent motivational video for those who are used to giving up when it's hard.

Most likely, you have not watched this - the second hour of Saturday night is not customary for us to spend on weightlifting. Therefore, you will not see how, after a successful approach of 248 kg (the second attempt, which actually provided Lovchev with gold), the coaches threw Lovchev, who was leaving the platform - shall we go to 64? He did not even answer - so, nodded his chin. What, they say, questions, of course we are going ...

We celebrate the victory of our team with my friends!

“When I was little, I often watched on TV performances of Rezazade lifting huge weights. He was an example for me, I never could have imagined that one day I would surpass his record ", - that night, 26-year-old Lovchev did what he could not believe - became the strongest man on the planet.

With the Minister of Sports VitalyMutkoand my friendAlexanderIvanov

One caveat is worth making here.

Officially, Lovchev now has two world records - the most important in the combined event and a separate one in the clean and jerk (he also previously belonged to Rezazade, but held on a little less - from the 2004 Olympics in Athens). The record in the snatch is still held by another Iranian, Behdad Salimi - up to 214 kg he took four years ago, Lovchev lacked three kilograms yesterday.

But in reality, Lovchev has so far only repeated the best amount in the history of weightlifting, and in the clean and jerk his result is only the third. Why is that?

The thing is that world records in weightlifting were reset to zero three times - in 1993 and 1998, the International Federation reshaped weight categories, and the countdown of new achievements began from the beginning.

Therefore, all the results tortured by weightlifters before 1998 are probably undeservedly forgotten. Just remember - in 1988, when the heavyweight category began not with 105 kg, as it is now, but with 110 kg (is there a fundamental difference in the lower limit of absolute weight?), Leonid Taranenko pushed the barbell by 266 kg (four years earlier, 265 kg pushed by Anatoly Pisarenko) and gained a total of 475 kg.

Not a bad benchmark for Lovchev, who two years after his international debut (bronze World Cup 2013 - the first big start in Alexei's career) added 11 kg in the snatch and 34 kg in the clean and jerk. Then another Russian Ruslan Albegov won, just like a year ago in Alma-Ata, where Lovchev “hit” a spurt, having no result at all.

“We have good relations with Ruslan. There is no tension, let alone enmity, we regularly communicate in the hall ", - let's save the confrontation between Lovchev and Albegov for the next Olympic year.

“The decision not to take Albegov to Houston is strategic. He and Lovchev were ready to work on world records and did not want to wear them out with this confrontation. ", — head coach national team Alexander Venkov explained Albegov's sudden exclusion from the national team's application.

As for Alexei, he could have set the world record in the snatch as well, but we made a common decision to simply provide an advantage over the rivals before the clean and jerk. And only when, after two attempts in the clean and jerk, it became clear that Alexei won gold, he agreed with personal trainers and coaching staff the national team went to the world record. And brought back the highest world achievement heavyweight weight category to Russia - after two decades of leadership by Iranian weightlifters.

All world record holders in the heavyweight category in history (the latest set records are indicated):

Hristo Plachkov (Bulgaria) - 442.5 kg; Vasily Alekseev (USSR) - 445 kg; Anatoly Pisarenko (USSR) - 457.5 kg; Alexander Gunyashev (USSR) - 465 kg; Antonio Krastev (Bulgaria) - 467.5 kg; Alexander Kurlovich (USSR / Belarus) - 472.5 kg; Leonid Taranenko (USSR) - 475 kg; Andrey Chemerkin (Russia) - 462.5 kg (after the results were reset to zero in 1993); Ronnie Weller (Germany) - 465 kg; Hossein Rezazade (Iran) - 472.5 kg; Alexey Lovchev (Russia) - 475 kg.

With my coach Sergei Ivanov and two-time Olympic champion, four-time world championAlexanderKurlovich

World championship

Houston, USA

Men

Over 105 kg

1.Alexey Lovchev (Russia) - 475 kg (211 kg + 264 kg) - world record

2. Lasha Talakhadze (Georgia) - 454 (207 + 247)

Quotes: Inside The Games, WodLoft, All Sports

At the end of the 2014 World Weightlifting Championship in Almaty, our site has compiled a rating of weightlifting stars.

1. Vasily Alekseev, USSR (1942 - 2011)



The only eight-time world champion in the history of world weightlifting, winner of two Olympics - Munich (1972) and Montreal (1976). Set 80 world records, 81 USSR records.

"Alekseev is fantastic. He breaks records when he wants to. He has no problem with that," the president admired the Soviet hero International Federation weightlifting Austrian Gottfried Schedl.

Vasily Alekseev is the holder of the current world record for the sum of three exercises - 645 kg (currently official competitions weightlifting is not held, therefore Alekseev's record cannot be repeated and beaten.

He opened the era of "six hundred", the first to conquer the six hundred kilogram peak.

At the 1970 World Cup in the United States, he replaced the main rival of the American, Joseph Dube, who promised to "defeat the communists." Alekseev lifted a 500-pound barbell, the six-thousandth American gym stood up and gave the Soviet athlete a standing ovation! They hugged and rejoiced as if their athlete had won!

After leaving active athletes, Alekseev continued his career as the head coach of the USSR national team. He installed another one absolute record- with him, not a single member of the national team received a single injury, and no one received a zero mark in the competition.

2. Paul Edward Anderson, USA (1932 -1994).



Olympic champion (Melbourne-1956) and world champion (1955). Last American to Win olympic gold in weightlifting in the weight category (over 90 kg).

3. Waldemar Bashanovsky, Poland (1935 - 2011)



2-fold Olympic champion v lightweight(Tokyo 1964, Mexico City 1968). 5-time world champion (1961, 1964, 1965, 1968, 1969).

4. Kakhi Kakhiashvili, USSR, Greece (1969)


3-time Olympic champion (Barcelona - 1992, Atlanta - 1996, Sydney - 2000), three-time world champion (1995, 1998, 1999).

During sports career set 7 world records. The snatch record of 188 kg has been in effect since 1999. The record in total double-event - 412 kg, set at the same time, lasted more than 12 years and was improved by Ilya Ilyin at the 2012 Olympic Games in London.

5. Tommy Kono, US (1930)


The Iron Hawaiian did not release the lightweight title in the 1950s. Two-time Olympic champion (Helsinki-1952, Melbourne-1956). World champion (1953, 1954, 1955, 1957, 1958, 1959). 26 world and 7 Olympic records.

6.Alexander Kurlovich, USSR-Belarus (1961)

2-time Olympic champion (Seoul-1988, Barcelona-1992). World Champion (1987, 1989, 1991, 1994). Set 12 world records.

7.Khalil Mutlu, Turkey (1973)


3-time Olympic champion (Atlanta 1996, Sydney 2000, Athens 2004). 5-time world champion (1994, 1998, 1999,2001, 2003).

8. Naim Suleimanoglu, Bulgaria - Turkey (1967)


The first three-time Olympic champion in the history of weightlifting (Seoul-1988, Barcelona-1992, Atlanta-1996), seven-time world champion (1989, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995 -Turkey, 1985, 1986-Bulgaria). Set 46 world records.

9.David Rigert, USSR (1947)


Olympic champion (Montreal 1976). 6-time world champion (1971, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1978).

I come from Northern Kazakhstan, - says David Adamovich in an interview. - At the beginning of the war, people were evacuated there in bulk, like my parents. In 1964, when all restrictions had already been lifted by one hundred percent, we returned to our former location of residence, to the Kuban.

10.Yuri Vlasov, USSR-Russia (1935)


Olympic champion (1960), 4-time world champion (1959, 1961-1963).

11.Yuri Vardanyan, USSR-Armenia (1956)


Olympic champion (Moscow-1980). 7-time world champion (1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1983, 1985). 43 times world record holder.

12. Leonid Zhabotinsky, USSR-Ukraine (1938)


Two-time Olympic champion (Tokyo-1964, Mexico-1968). 4-time world champion (1964, 1965, 1966, 1968). Zhabotinsky, like Yuri Vlasov, Vasily Alekseev was the idol of Arnold Schwarzenegger. During Jabotinsky's visit to the United States at the invitation of Schwarzenegger, Arnold told him: “Since childhood, I have been rooting for you. Even during the Tokyo Olympics, although Shemansky and Gubner performed there. Of course, I worried about them too, but for some reason I wanted you to win. "

What do those who are big look like muscle mass it is necessary, first of all, for beauty, we show often, but about those who are interested in muscles purely from the point of view of strength - rarely. Today at Zozhnik is the day of weightlifters, who have set a world record in this difficult sport in every sense.

Andrey Aryamnov

Andrey was born on April 17, 1988 in Borisov. He is a serviceman of the internal troops of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Belarus and an Honored Master of Sports of the Republic of Belarus. At the 2008 Beijing Olympics, won gold medal in the category up to 105 kg, setting world records in the snatch - 200 kg, and in the amount of snatch and clean and jerk - 436 kg. This hero weighs 105kg with a height of 173cm.

Ilya Ilyin

Ilya is a weightlifter from Kazakhstan with a height of 174cm and a weight of 94kg. Two-time Olympic champion (Beijing 2008 and London 2012), four-time champion the world, two-time champion world among juniors, two-time champion of the Asian Games. World record holder in clean and jerk (233 kg) and total combined (418 kg) in 94 kg category, in clean and jerk (242 kg) in 105 kg category and an absolute world record holder among juniors in 85 kg category in snatch (170 kg), clean and jerk ( 216 kg) and in the combined event (386 kg). In total, he set 3 world records for juniors and 3 world records for adults. Ilyin became the best weightlifter in the world 3 times (2005, 2006 and 2014).

Kakhi Kakhiashvili

Kakhi was born on July 13, 1969. His height is 178cm, and we could not find out the weight. A Georgian from Tskhinvali played for Greece for a long time under the name Akakios Kakiashvili. Wikipedia says that he is an outstanding Soviet, Georgian and Greek weightlifter, three-time Olympic champion, three-time world champion. During his sports career, he set 7 world records. The snatch record of 188 kg has been in effect since 1999. The record in total double-event - 412 kg, set at the same time, lasted more than 12 years and was improved by Ilya Ilyin at the 2012 Olympic Games in London.


Kim is a North Korean weightlifter, champion of the 2012 Olympic Games in the category up to 62 kg (height 158 ​​cm). Kim has set several world records: at the 2012 UK Olympics - 327 kg in total. In 2014 at Asian Games in Korea, he improved his achievement to 332 kg and set a record in the snatch - 154 kg.



Lu Xiaojun was born in 1984 in Qianjiang, Hubei Province. In 1998 he entered the Qianjiang Sports School. In 2002 he entered the Tianjin national team. Liu is 172cm tall and weighs 77kg. In 2009, at the World Championships in Goyang ( South Korea), Lu Xiaojun won the gold medal, setting the world record in snatch and in the amount of snatch and clean and jerk - 174 kg and 378 kg, respectively. And at the 2012 Olympics, Lu Xiaojun won the gold medal, improving the world records to 175 kg (snatch) and 379 kg (amount of exercises). At the World Championships, he took 176 kg (snatch) and 380 kg (total).



Liao Hui joined the China National Weightlifting Team in early 2007. At the sixth Chinese city games in 2007, Liao (168cm tall) set two world records among juniors in the 69kg weight category and won a gold medal. On September 21, 2010, at the World Championships in Antalya, the athlete set world records in clean and jerk and in total exercises - 198 and 358 kg, respectively. A year later, it became known about the weightlifter's positive doping test. He was stripped of his gold medal and disqualified until September 30, 2012. On November 10, 2014, at the World Championships in Alma-Ata, the athlete set a world record in snatch - 166 kg. The previous record, set by Georgi Markov from Bulgaria, lasted 14 years.

Khalil Mutlu

Khalil Mutlu is an ethnic Turk who was born on the territory of Bulgaria, but at an early age he returned to his historical homeland. His height is 150cm, and his weight is 55kg. Between 1993 and 2005 (excluding 2002), Khalil Mutlu won at least one gold award from a major world or European tournament... Mutlu won the Olympic Games with a large margin, ahead of his closest rivals by at least 7.5 kg. Mutlu is one of only four weightlifters in the history of the Games to become three-time Olympic champions.



North Korean weightlifter, champion of the 2012 Olympic Games in the category up to 56 kg (Om Yun Chol's height is 152cm), world champion in 2014. On September 13, 2013, at a competition in Pyongyang, he set a world record in clean and jerk - 169 kg. On September 20, 2014 at the Asian Games in Incheon, he improved the record to 170 kg.

Oleg Perepechenov

Oleg's height is 167cm, and his weight is 77kg. Was born on September 6, 1975 in Uzbekistan. In the international arena, he achieved his first great success in 2001, having won a gold medal at the 2001 European Championships and a silver medal at the 2001 World Championships in the up to 77 kg weight category.

12 February 2013 International Olympic Committee disqualified the weightlifter's performance at the 2004 Olympic Games and stripped him of the bronze medal. The basis was positive results re-testing of Perepechenov's doping test (the presence of traces of clenbuterol is a drug for the treatment of asthma, which athletes use as a fat burner). Oleg Aleksandrovich holds the world record in the category up to 77 kg in clean and jerk - 210 kg.

Andrey Rybakov

Andrey was born on March 4, 1982 in Belarus. Rybakov is a two-time world champion in 2006 and 2007, a European champion in 2006, and a two-time silver medalist at the 2004 and 2008 Olympic Games. Performs in the weight category up to 85 kilograms, his height is 172 cm. He owns world records in the category up to 85 kg: in the snatch - 187 kg and in the sum of the snatch and jerk - 394 kg.

Behdad Salimi

Salimi was born on December 8, 1989 in Iran, his height is 197, and his weight is 165kg. He is an Olympic champion, world champion in 2010 and 2011, set a world record in snatch - 214 kg in his weight category. After the 2012 Olympics, a scandal erupted in the Iranian weightlifting team. Behdad Salimi and other team members protested against head coach Kurosh Bagheri, who used profanity during training. After disputes in live Salimi and Bagheri, Iranian Weightlifting Federation has banned the athlete from participating in the 2013 World and Asian Championships. Bagheri was later admitted to the hospital with a nervous breakdown and Salimi visited him and made up, but upon leaving the hospital Salimi was hit on the head by a supporter of the national team coach. These are the passions that reign in the world of weightlifting.

1. Max Duton (England) performed 34 kg barbell press 845 times in 1891.

2. Georg Gakkenschmidt (Russia) spread his arms horizontally to the sides with 32 kg kettlebells upside down 5 times in 1899.

3. Emil Voss (Germany) pushed a barbell weighing 110 kg in his right hand, and juggled a 49 kg kettlebell with his left in 1903.

4. Sandow (Germany) performed a press with a lift with his left hand, lay on his back, rose, holding a barbell weighing 115 kg in his hand in 1896.

5. Arthur Hennig (Germany) lifting a barbell weighing 154 kg to his chest, performed a bench press right hand in 1902.

6. Ivan Selykh (Russia) performed a bench press with the rise of 3 weights of 32 kg in 1907.

7. Znamensky (Russia) performed a press with the left hand of two 32 kg kettlebells, placed one on top of the other in 1899.

8. Franz Staer (Austria) performed 50 kg right-arm bench press without leaning the body and bending the knees 25 times in 1897.

9. Karl Svoboda (Austria) performed a right-hand rack press without leaning the body and bending the knees 101 kg in 1912.

10. Peter Krylov (Russia) performed a 32 kg kettlebell bench press with his left hand in a rack without leaning the body and bending the knees 86 times in 1909.

11. Paris (France) ripped an unopened deck of cards in 55 seconds in 1912.

12. John Grün (Germany) broke a horseshoe in 23 seconds in 1907.

13. Tom Walter Kennedy (USA) performed deadlift with the straightening of the legs and back with a core of 36 pounds in 1893.

14. Louis Cyr (Canada) performed a deadlift, with legs and back straightened, on a ball barbell weighing 669 kg in 1894.

15. Hermann Gessler (Germany) lay down and stood with a bag of metal on his back weighing 250 kg in 1912.

16. Hans Beck (Germany) lifted a keg of beer from the floor without tools in 1890.

17. Anton Riha (Czechoslovakia) weighed 854 kg in 1891.

18. Louis Cyr (Canada) lifted a platform weighing 1867 kg on his back from the stands in 1892.

19. Louis Cyr (Canada) lifted the ball bar with his right hand to the knees of 440 kg in 1892.

20. Sandow (Germany) made a back somersault, holding 1.5 pounds in each hand in 1891.

21. Paul Anderson (USA) performed a 425kg barbell squat in 1955.

22. Paul Anderson (USA) performed a semi-squat with a 900 kg wagon ramp in 1955.

23. Ludwig Chaplinsky (Russia) jumped over the dining table with a ram in his hands weighing 40 kg in 1911.

24. Nikolay Vakhturov (Russia) threw a 32 kg weight over a railway carriage in 1912.

25. Willy Kutter (Germany) performed a right hand upper grip chin-up on the bar with a body weight of 95 kg 12 times in 1900.

26. Ivan Zaikin (Russia) lifted a 40-bucket barrel of water on his back and carried it across the stage in 1913.

27. Sergei Eliseev (Russia) held a 61 kg weight in a horizontal position with his right hand in 1903.

28. Peter Yankovsky (Russia) performed a 3-pound kettlebell bench press, holding it in the palm of his hand and sitting on the floor in 1905.

29. Henri Stiernon (France) carried two guns weighing 456 kg on his back in 1876.

30. Grigory Kashcheev (Russia) carried a live horse on his back in 1908.

31. Karl Svoboda (Austria) performed a two-handed bench press in a rack without leaning the body and bending the knees 165 kg with a dead weight of 70 kg in 1911.

32. Yuri Vlasov (USSR) performed 185 kg straight stance bench press with 135 kg dead weight in 1967.

33. Oskar Walund (Sweden) lifted 2105 kg with his back using straps from a platform in 1912.

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