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Home  » Sports » Golden night for Kazakhstan: Balandin, Rahimov take gold

Golden night for Kazakhstan: Balandin, Rahimov take gold

August 11, 2016 07:53 IST
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Dmitry Balandin

IMAGE: Dmitriy Balandin of Kazakhstan reacts after winning the gold medal in the Men's 200m Breaststroke Final on Day 5 of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games. Photograph: Jamie Squire/Getty Images.

Dmitry Balandin of Kazakhstan snatched a shock victory in the men's 200 meters breaststroke on Wednesday as the Central Asian country grabbed two Olympic gold medals in the space of an hour.

Balandin, swimming in an outside lane after qualifying as the slowest of the eight finalists, touched the wall in two minutes, 7.46 seconds, just 0.07 seconds ahead of Josh Prenot of the United States.

Russia's Anton Chupkov took the bronze, with 0.24 seconds separating the top three.Japan's Yasuhiro Koseki had seized control of the race from the outset leading until the 150-metre mark and well under world record pace before he tied up over the final lap.

Koseki finished fifth, behind Briton Andrew Willis, who was unable to overhaul the leading trio.

Doping questions raised as record-breaker Rahimov takes gold

Nijat Rahimov

IMAGE: Nijat Rahimov of Kazakhstan lifts during the Men's 77kg Group A weightlifting contest on Day 5 of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games. Photograph: Julian Finney/Getty Images.

Kazakhstan, who lost five Olympic titles from 2008 and 2012 through retrospective doping positives, won their first gold of the 2016 Games when Nijat Rahimov broke the clean and jerk world record in the men’s 77kg category.

Rahimov, who served a two-year doping ban after testing positive at the 2013 Universiade, when he competed for his native Azerbaijan, was 12kg behind when the favorite Lu Xiaojun of China finished his lifts.
Rahimov had to lift 214kg to win, 4kg more than Lu’s clean and jerk world record, which he set three years ago.

When Rahimov made the lift the Kazakhstan national coach, Aleksey Ni, ran on to the platform to hoist his hero off the ground. Ni then fell on to his back and kicked at the air.

During Ni’s reign as head coach Kazakhstan has amassed the worst doping record in world weightlifting, with 32 positives since the 2008 Olympics.

Their four champions at the 2012 Games and their one from 2008 have all tested positive retrospectively.

On the basis of that record Rahimov was asked, “What would you say to Olympic fans who doubt the validity of your medal?”

His reply was, “I am not aware of the problem so that is what I would tell them.”

Lu, who had broken his own snatch world record with a lift of 177kg, said of Rahimov: “I met a stronger competitor. I admire him.” Both men finished on 379kg, Rahimov winning by virtue of his lighter bodyweight.

The bronze medalist, Egypt’s Ihab Mohamed, said, “There are Egyptian athletes waiting to be promoted into medal positions because of the doping (at 2008 and 2012 Games). I hope this was a 100 percent clean competition.”

Ihab, from Al-Fayoum, is one of six brothers, all weightlifters. He is the only one competing at this level and he is assured of a hero’s welcome after the Games, he said, because he is the first Egyptian to win a medal in men’s weightlifting since 1948.

Earlier in the day, Sara Ahmed had finished third in the women’s 69kg, becoming the first Egyptian woman to stand on the Olympic podium in any sport. “Egyptian weightlifting is born again,” said Ihab. “In Tokyo 2020, Egypt’s position in world weightlifting will be different.”

Lu wore a pair of specially made gold shoes in the expectation of retaining his Olympic title. After he made his sixth and final lift he clearly thought he had done enough to win, as he stripped off his top and screamed in triumph.

But Rahimov had the final say.

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