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Olympic weightlifting

Weightlifting (often known as Olympic weightlifting), is a sport in which athletes compete in lifting a barbell loaded with weight plates from the ground to overhead, with each athlete trying to successfully lift the heaviest weights. Athletes compete in two specific ways of lifting the barbell overhead: these are the snatch and the clean and jerk. The snatch is a wide-grip lift, in which the weighted barbell is lifted overhead in one motion. The clean and jerk is a combination lift, in which the weight is first taken from the ground to the front of the shoulders (the clean), and then from the shoulders to overhead (the jerk).

Weightlifting
Olympic lifter Lasha Talakhadze lifting 258 kg at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio, Brazil
Highest governing bodyInternational Weightlifting Federation
First developedAncient Greece, Egypt, China, India
Characteristics
ContactNo
Mixed-sexNo
TypeStrength sport
EquipmentBarbells, weight plates, collars, chalk, tape, shoes, belt
Presence
Country or regionWorldwide
OlympicMen: 1896, 1904, 1920–present; Women: 2000–present
World GamesWomen: 1997

Each weightlifter gets three attempts at both the snatch and the clean and jerk, with the snatch attempts being done first. An athlete's score is the combined total of the highest successfully-lifted weight in kilograms for each lift. Athletes compete in various weight classes, which are different for each sex and have changed over time.

Weightlifting is an olympic sport, and has been contested in every Summer Olympic Games since 1920. Whilst the sport is officially named "weightlifting", the terms "olympic weightlifting" and "olympic-style weightlifting" are often used to distinguish it from the other sports and events that involve the lifting of weights, such as powerlifting, weight training, and strongman events. Similarly, the snatch and clean-and-jerk are known as the "olympic lifts".

While other strength sports test limit strength, olympic-style weightlifting also tests aspects of human ballistic limits (explosive strength): the olympic lifts are executed faster, and with more mobility and a greater range of motion during their execution, than other barbell lifts. The olympic lifts, and their component lifts (e.g., cleans, squats) and their variations (e.g., power snatch, power clean) are used by elite athletes in other sports to train for both explosive and functional strength.

Competition

The sport is competed at local, national, and international levels. The sport is governed internationally by the International Weightlifting Federation (IWF), which runs the World Weightlifting Championships each year.[1]

Component lifts

 
Mohammad Reza Barari, an Iranian lifter, snatching at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio, Brazil

The snatch is a lift wherein an athlete sweeps the barbell up and overhead in one fluid action: the lifter takes a wide-grip on the bar and pulls the barbell off the floor before rapidly re-bending their knees to get themself under the barbell (usually bringing themself into a deep overhead squat position), so that the barbell is supported over their head with arms outstretched. The snatch is then completed by the lifter rising to a standing position whilst holding the barbell overhead. The snatch demands precise balance.

 
Lidia Valentín of Spain performing a clean at the 2012 Olympic Games in London

The clean and jerk is a combination lift, in which the athlete gets the barbell overhead in two stages: first by lifting the barbell into support on the front of the shoulders (the clean), and then lifting it from shoulders to overhead (the jerk). To perform the clean, the lifter takes a shoulder-width grip on the bar and pulls it off the floor, and then rapidly re-bends their knees (and bends their arms) to get their body under the barbell and "catch" the bar on the front of the shoulders (usually in a deep front squat position). The lifter finishes the clean by rising to a standing position whilst holding the barbell on the front of their shoulders. The lifter then uses the jerk to jump into a bent knees position (most commonly with one foot forward and the other back, a technique known as the split jerk) whilst pumping the barbell overhead. The jerk is completed when the lifter re-straightens the legs (bringing them together after a split jerk) so they come to a straight standing position with the barbell held overhead.

A third lift, the clean and press, was also a competition lift from 1924 through 1972. It entails a clean followed by an overhead press. The overhead press is distinguished from the jerk, in that jerking movements, bending of the legs, and displacement of the feet are prohibited.[2] It was discontinued after 1972 due to difficulties in judging proper form.

Weight classes

Athletes compete in a division determined by their body mass. In summer 2018, the IWF approved the current weight categories, specifying which 7 of the 10 total would be contested at the 2020 Summer Olympics.[3]

IWF Men's weight classes:

Categories

  • 55 kg (121 lb)
  • 61 kg (134 lb)
  • 67 kg (148 lb)
  • 73 kg (161 lb)
  • 81 kg (179 lb)
  • 89 kg (196 lb)
  • 96 kg (212 lb)
  • 102 kg (225 lb)
  • 109 kg (240 lb)
  • 109 kg and over (240 lb+)

Only five weight classes were chosen for Paris 2024:

  • 61 kg, 73 kg, 89 kg, 102 kg and over 102 kg.

IWF Women's weight classes:

Categories

  • 45 kg (99 lb)
  • 49 kg (108 lb)
  • 55 kg (121 lb)
  • 59 kg (130 lb)
  • 64 kg (141 lb)
  • 71 kg (157 lb)
  • 76 kg (168 lb)
  • 81 kg (179 lb)
  • 87 kg (192 lb)
  • 87 kg and over (192 lb+)

Weight classes chosen for Paris 2024:

  • 49 kg, 59 kg, 71 kg, 81 kg and over 81 kg.

Official procedure

In each weight division, lifters compete in both the snatch and clean and jerk. Prizes are usually given for the heaviest weights lifted in each and in the overall—the maximum lifts of both added. The order of the competition is up to the lifters—the competitor who chooses to attempt the lowest weight goes first. If they are unsuccessful at that weight, they have the option of reattempting at that weight or trying a heavier weight after any other competitors have made attempts at the previous weight or any other intermediate weights. The barbell is loaded incrementally and progresses to a heavier weight throughout the course of competition. Weights are set in 1-kilogram increments. If two athletes lift the same weight, they are both credited with it but in terms of placing the one who lifted the weight first gets the highest placing.[3]

During competition, the snatch event takes place first, followed by a short intermission, and then the clean and jerk event. There are two side judges and one head referee who together provide a "successful" or "failed" result for each attempt based on their observation of the lift within the governing body's rules and regulations. Two successes are required for any attempt to pass. Usually, the judges' and referee's results are registered via a lighting system with a white light indicating a "successful" lift and a red light indicating a "failed" lift. This is done for the benefit of all in attendance be they athlete, coach, administrator or audience. In addition, one or two technical officials may be present to advise during a ruling.

Lifters who fail to successfully complete at least one snatch and at least one clean and jerk fail to total, and receive an "incomplete" entry for the competition.

Local competition rules

At local competitions, a "Best Lifter" title is commonly awarded. It is awarded to both the best men's and women's lifters. The award is based on a formula which employs the "Sinclair coefficient", a coefficient derived and approved by the sport's world governing body, which allows for differences in both gender and bodyweight. When the formula is applied to each lifter's overall total and then grouped along with the other competitors' and evaluated, it provides a numeric result which determines the competition's best overall men's and women's lifters.[4] And while, usually, the winner of the heaviest weight class will have lifted the most overall weight during the course of a competition, a lifter in a lighter weight class may still have lifted more weight both relative to their own bodyweight, and to the Sinclair coefficient formula, thereby garnering the "Best Lifter" award.

History

Competitions to establish who can lift the heaviest weight have been recorded throughout civilization, with the earliest known recordings including those found in Egypt, China, India, and Ancient Greece.[5][6]

Early international competitions

The international sport of weightlifting began with the First World Weightlifting Championships in 1891, in London, with Edward Lawrence Levy becoming the first world champion;[7][8]

In 1896, the inaugural Olympic Games in Athens included weightlifting in the field event (the predecessor to today's track and field or athletics event). In the early Olympic Games a distinction was drawn between lifting with 'one hand' only and lifting with 'two hands', and all competitors competed together regardless of their size and weight. The winner of the 'one hand' competition in 1896 was Launceston Elliot of Scotland, while the winner of the 'two hands' event was Viggo Jensen of Denmark.[9]

Further World Weightlifting Championships followed in 1898 in Austria,[10] 1899 in Milan, and 1903 in Paris,[11] with the International Weightlifting Federation being founded in 1905.[7]

Weightlifting was next contested at the Olympics in the 1904 Games (again in athletics), and at the 1906 Intercalated Games, but was omitted from the Games of 1900, 1908 and 1912 (1912 being the last Games until after the First World War).

Olympic Games 1920–1972

In 1920, weightlifting returned to the Olympics and, for the first time, as an event in its own right – and weightlifting has been contested at every (summer) Olympics Games since. The 1920 Games took place at Antwerp in Belgium; and fourteen nations competed. The competition lifts were the 'one hand' snatch, the 'one hand' clean and jerk and the 'two hands' clean and jerk. At the next Olympic Games, in Paris, in 1924, the 'two hands' press and the 'two hands' snatch were added to the program, making a total of five lifts; and weight classes were introduced for competitors, with weightlifters competing in five weight divisions.

 
The 110 kg division weightlifting winners at the 1980 Summer Olympics, held in Moscow

In 1928, the sport dropped the 'one hand' exercises, going forward with three 'two hand' exercises: the snatch, the clean and press, and the clean and jerk.

The 1972 Olympics was the last Olympics featuring the clean and press, as difficulties in judging proper form led to it being dropped from subsequent competitions. Athletes, rather than "strictly" pressing the weight overhead with an upright torso, had been using their hips and leaning backward substantially. Some athletes were able to initiate the press with a hip thrust so rapid that judges found it difficult to determine whether or not they had utilized any knee bend to generate additional force, something strictly prohibited in the rules. Also prohibited was "excessive layback" (leaning back too much), but it was considered too difficult to determine what degree of layback constituted a rule violation. As a result, the clean and press was discontinued as a competition lift after 1972.

1973–present

Since the 1973 World Weightlifting Championships, weightlifting competitions have been biathlons of the snatch and the clean and jerk, with the 1976 Olympics being the first Olympics in this format.

Women's weightlifting

In 1987, women's world championship events were included for the first time in IWF's annual World Weightlifting Championships, with women such as Karyn Marshall (USA) and Cai Jun (China) amongst the winners in that first year.[12][13] Yet it was not until the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia, that women's weightlifting was incorporated into the Olympics.[14][15] China's Chen Yanqing became an early star of women's weightlifting at the Olympics—as she won Olympic gold two games in a row, in 2004 and 2008.[16][17]

In 2011, the International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) ruled that athletes could wear a full body "unitard" under the customary weightlifting uniform.[18] Kulsoom Abdullah became the first woman to do so at the U.S. National Championships that year, and athletes are allowed to do so at the Olympics.[18] IWF rules previously stated that an athlete's knees and elbows must be visible so officials can determine if a lift is correctly executed.[18]

Equipment

Barbell

 
Knurling on an Olympic barbell

Olympic weightlifting uses a steel bar (also known as a barbell) with larger-diameter rotating sleeves on either end, holding rubber-coated weight plates of different weights. This sleeve rotation is important for the Olympic lifts, particularly the snatch and clean movements, because it drastically reduces the rotational inertia of the bar. Without sleeve rotation, the Olympic lifter faces more challenging lifts and a greater risk of injury.[19]

A men's Olympic barbell weighs 20 kg (44 lbs) with a shaft diameter of 28 mm and a length of 2200 mm, whereas a women's Olympic barbell weighs 15 kg (33 lbs) and has a shaft diameter of 25 mm with a length of 2010 mm.[20][21] The distance between the sleeves, however, is the same for the men's and the women's bars at 1310 mm. The grip texture of the bar is called the knurling, and is distributed differently between the men's and women's bars: the men's has knurling in the center but the women's does not. The Olympic barbells used in competition are certified by the IWF.[19]

Bumper plates

The weight plates, typically referred to as "bumper plates" because of their rubber coated design, weigh between 10 kg and 25 kg in 5 kg increments. The bumper plates are coated with rubber to allow the weights to be dropped from various heights—either after a successful lift or during an unsuccessful one. Olympic bumper plates conform to international standards for coloring. That is, 10 kg is green, 15 kg is yellow, 20 kg is blue, and 25 kg is red.[19]

Competition iron plates

In addition to the rubber bumpers, smaller competition iron plates can be used to add weight in small increments to the bar. The color designations for these iron plates are as follows: 1 kg is green, 1.5 kg is yellow, 2 kg is blue, 2.5 kg is red, 5 kg and 0.5 kg are white. It is useful to note the color assignment of these iron plates is consistent with the heavier bumper plates (i.e. 1 kg and 10 kg are green, 1.5 kg and 15 kg are yellow, etc.).[19]

Collars

 
An Olympic lifter, Jang Mi-ran, holding a barbell loaded with red 25 kg bumper plates, held in place with a collar. Note the lifter's taped wrists and thumbs, her weightlifting shoes, and her weightlifting belt.

Weight plates are secured to the bar using collars on each sleeve that weigh exactly 2.5 kg each.

Singlet

Lifters typically wear a one-piece close-fitting leotard often called a singlet. The wearing of a T-shirt underneath the singlet is optional.

Belt

A weightlifting belt of 120 mm maximum width may also be worn to increase intra-abdominal pressure.

Chalk

Chalk is regularly used by Olympic lifters, generally prior to each attempt at a lift. Lifters rub their hands with the chalk to promote dryness and prevent the bar moving in their hands.

Tape

Olympic lifters frequently use tape to cover the areas of their bodies exposed to friction while completing Olympic lifts. Tape is most commonly found on the Olympic lifter's thumb. A taped thumb not only lessens the risk of calluses, but it also reduces the pain associated with the hook grip.

Olympic lifters also tape their wrists, preventing exaggerated and uncomfortable joint movement during lifts. For particularly heavy overhead lifts, a taped wrist enables the lifter to regulate wrist extension and delimit the translation of the radius and ulna distal heads. However, while taped wrists can prevent wrist and forearm injuries in the short-term, excessive use can lead to weakened connective tissue in the area, increasing the risk of pain and injury.[19]

Shoes

The type of shoes worn by Olympic weightlifters is perhaps their most distinctive piece of equipment. Weightlifting shoes are typically designed with a raised heel of 0.5" to 1.5" and one or two metatarsal straps that tighten across the instep of the shoe. The raised heel helps the lifter maintain an upright torso while catching the bar and also allows for a deeper squat under the bar. The soles of the shoes are also quite rigid, helping to resist compression while under heavy loads. The shoes are designed for maximum stability while remaining flexible in the toe box. This allows the lifter to come up on the toes and to catch the weight on the ball of the back foot during the "jerk" movement of the lift.[19]

See also

References

  1. ^ "World Championships". International Weightlifting Federation. Retrieved 2023-01-25.
  2. ^ Hoffman, Bob (1963). Guide to Weight Lifting Competition. Urbana-Champaign, Illinois: Strength and Health Publishing Company. p. 2.
  3. ^ a b "New Bodyweight Categories Approved by the IWF Executive Board". International Weightlifting Federation. 5 July 2018. Retrieved 2018-10-19.
  4. ^ "The Sinclair Coefficients for the Olympiad". International Weightlifting Federation. Retrieved 2009-07-24.
  5. ^ "Lift Up, History of Olympic Weightlifting". chidlovski.net. Retrieved 2022-11-04.
  6. ^ "Ancient Egyptian Sport".
  7. ^ a b "Weightlifting History". International Weightlifting Federation. Retrieved 2023-01-25.
  8. ^ "122 years since the first World Championships". International Weightlifting Federation. 2013-03-29. Retrieved 2023-01-25.
  9. ^ Encyclopedia Britannica Almanac 2010. Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc. 2010. p. 736. ISBN 9781615353293.
  10. ^ chidlovski (2019-04-17). "Wilhelm Turk: World Champion (1898)". CHIDLOVSKI БЛОГ ШИДЛОВСКОГО. Retrieved 2023-01-25.
  11. ^ chidlovski (2019-04-27). "Sergey Eliseev and Georg Hackenschmidt: Early World Class Weightlifters From the Russian Empire". CHIDLOVSKI БЛОГ ШИДЛОВСКОГО. Retrieved 2023-01-25.
  12. ^ . teamUSA.org. 2009-10-02. Archived from the original on 2010-04-12. Retrieved 2009-10-02.
  13. ^ Julie Carft (July 29, 1989). "Image is Heavy Burden - Weightlifter Karyn Marshall Feels Pressure to Project 'Femininity, Intelligence'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2009-10-02.
  14. ^ "20 years anniversary of female inclusion in weightlifting at the Olympic Games". International Weightlifting Federation. 2020-09-22. Retrieved 2023-01-25.
  15. ^ Miele, Vincent J.; Bailes, Julian E. (2001). Bailes, Julian E.; Day, Arthur L. (eds.). Neurological Sports Medicine: A Guide for Physicians and Athletic Trainers. Rolling Meadows, Illinois: American Association of Neurological Surgeons. p. 239. ISBN 1-879284-75-8.
  16. ^ "Chen Yanqing". www.insidethegames.biz. 2022-11-29. Retrieved 2023-02-01.
  17. ^ "Yanqing CHEN". olympics.com. 2023-02-01. Retrieved 2023-02-01.
  18. ^ a b c "Kulsoom Abdullah makes history". ESPN. 2011-07-15. Retrieved 2012-09-19.
  19. ^ a b c d e f Everett, Greg (2009). Olympic Weightlifting: A Complete Guide for Athletes & Coaches. Catalyst Athletics. pp. 20, 21, 22, 26, 27. ISBN 978-0980011111.
  20. ^ Johnson, Jolie. "Official Specifications for Olympic Weightlifting Bar". Retrieved 22 October 2014.
  21. ^ Morrison, Norm. "Olympic Lifting for Beginners". Retrieved 22 October 2014.

External links

  • International Weightlifting Federation
  • Swiss Amateur Weightlifting Federation (SAGV/FSHA)

olympic, weightlifting, this, article, about, sport, named, weightlifting, which, often, called, olympic, weightlifting, this, sport, olympics, weightlifting, olympic, games, general, overview, weight, lifting, exercise, sports, weightlifting, weightlifting, o. This article is about the sport named Weightlifting which is often called Olympic Weightlifting For this sport at the Olympics see Weightlifting at the Olympic Games For a general overview of weight lifting exercise and sports see Weightlifting Weightlifting often known as Olympic weightlifting is a sport in which athletes compete in lifting a barbell loaded with weight plates from the ground to overhead with each athlete trying to successfully lift the heaviest weights Athletes compete in two specific ways of lifting the barbell overhead these are the snatch and the clean and jerk The snatch is a wide grip lift in which the weighted barbell is lifted overhead in one motion The clean and jerk is a combination lift in which the weight is first taken from the ground to the front of the shoulders the clean and then from the shoulders to overhead the jerk WeightliftingOlympic lifter Lasha Talakhadze lifting 258 kg at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio BrazilHighest governing bodyInternational Weightlifting FederationFirst developedAncient Greece Egypt China IndiaCharacteristicsContactNoMixed sexNoTypeStrength sportEquipmentBarbells weight plates collars chalk tape shoes beltPresenceCountry or regionWorldwideOlympicMen 1896 1904 1920 present Women 2000 presentWorld GamesWomen 1997Each weightlifter gets three attempts at both the snatch and the clean and jerk with the snatch attempts being done first An athlete s score is the combined total of the highest successfully lifted weight in kilograms for each lift Athletes compete in various weight classes which are different for each sex and have changed over time Weightlifting is an olympic sport and has been contested in every Summer Olympic Games since 1920 Whilst the sport is officially named weightlifting the terms olympic weightlifting and olympic style weightlifting are often used to distinguish it from the other sports and events that involve the lifting of weights such as powerlifting weight training and strongman events Similarly the snatch and clean and jerk are known as the olympic lifts While other strength sports test limit strength olympic style weightlifting also tests aspects of human ballistic limits explosive strength the olympic lifts are executed faster and with more mobility and a greater range of motion during their execution than other barbell lifts The olympic lifts and their component lifts e g cleans squats and their variations e g power snatch power clean are used by elite athletes in other sports to train for both explosive and functional strength Contents 1 Competition 1 1 Component lifts 1 2 Weight classes 1 3 Official procedure 1 4 Local competition rules 2 History 2 1 Early international competitions 2 2 Olympic Games 1920 1972 2 3 1973 present 2 4 Women s weightlifting 3 Equipment 3 1 Barbell 3 2 Bumper plates 3 3 Competition iron plates 3 4 Collars 3 5 Singlet 3 6 Belt 3 7 Chalk 3 8 Tape 3 9 Shoes 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksCompetition EditThe sport is competed at local national and international levels The sport is governed internationally by the International Weightlifting Federation IWF which runs the World Weightlifting Championships each year 1 Component lifts Edit Main articles Snatch weightlifting Clean and jerk and Clean and press Mohammad Reza Barari an Iranian lifter snatching at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio Brazil The snatch is a lift wherein an athlete sweeps the barbell up and overhead in one fluid action the lifter takes a wide grip on the bar and pulls the barbell off the floor before rapidly re bending their knees to get themself under the barbell usually bringing themself into a deep overhead squat position so that the barbell is supported over their head with arms outstretched The snatch is then completed by the lifter rising to a standing position whilst holding the barbell overhead The snatch demands precise balance Lidia Valentin of Spain performing a clean at the 2012 Olympic Games in LondonThe clean and jerk is a combination lift in which the athlete gets the barbell overhead in two stages first by lifting the barbell into support on the front of the shoulders the clean and then lifting it from shoulders to overhead the jerk To perform the clean the lifter takes a shoulder width grip on the bar and pulls it off the floor and then rapidly re bends their knees and bends their arms to get their body under the barbell and catch the bar on the front of the shoulders usually in a deep front squat position The lifter finishes the clean by rising to a standing position whilst holding the barbell on the front of their shoulders The lifter then uses the jerk to jump into a bent knees position most commonly with one foot forward and the other back a technique known as the split jerk whilst pumping the barbell overhead The jerk is completed when the lifter re straightens the legs bringing them together after a split jerk so they come to a straight standing position with the barbell held overhead A third lift the clean and press was also a competition lift from 1924 through 1972 It entails a clean followed by an overhead press The overhead press is distinguished from the jerk in that jerking movements bending of the legs and displacement of the feet are prohibited 2 It was discontinued after 1972 due to difficulties in judging proper form Weight classes Edit Athletes compete in a division determined by their body mass In summer 2018 the IWF approved the current weight categories specifying which 7 of the 10 total would be contested at the 2020 Summer Olympics 3 IWF Men s weight classes Categories 55 kg 121 lb 61 kg 134 lb 67 kg 148 lb 73 kg 161 lb 81 kg 179 lb 89 kg 196 lb 96 kg 212 lb 102 kg 225 lb 109 kg 240 lb 109 kg and over 240 lb Only five weight classes were chosen for Paris 2024 61 kg 73 kg 89 kg 102 kg and over 102 kg IWF Women s weight classes Categories 45 kg 99 lb 49 kg 108 lb 55 kg 121 lb 59 kg 130 lb 64 kg 141 lb 71 kg 157 lb 76 kg 168 lb 81 kg 179 lb 87 kg 192 lb 87 kg and over 192 lb Weight classes chosen for Paris 2024 49 kg 59 kg 71 kg 81 kg and over 81 kg Official procedure Edit In each weight division lifters compete in both the snatch and clean and jerk Prizes are usually given for the heaviest weights lifted in each and in the overall the maximum lifts of both added The order of the competition is up to the lifters the competitor who chooses to attempt the lowest weight goes first If they are unsuccessful at that weight they have the option of reattempting at that weight or trying a heavier weight after any other competitors have made attempts at the previous weight or any other intermediate weights The barbell is loaded incrementally and progresses to a heavier weight throughout the course of competition Weights are set in 1 kilogram increments If two athletes lift the same weight they are both credited with it but in terms of placing the one who lifted the weight first gets the highest placing 3 During competition the snatch event takes place first followed by a short intermission and then the clean and jerk event There are two side judges and one head referee who together provide a successful or failed result for each attempt based on their observation of the lift within the governing body s rules and regulations Two successes are required for any attempt to pass Usually the judges and referee s results are registered via a lighting system with a white light indicating a successful lift and a red light indicating a failed lift This is done for the benefit of all in attendance be they athlete coach administrator or audience In addition one or two technical officials may be present to advise during a ruling Lifters who fail to successfully complete at least one snatch and at least one clean and jerk fail to total and receive an incomplete entry for the competition Local competition rules Edit At local competitions a Best Lifter title is commonly awarded It is awarded to both the best men s and women s lifters The award is based on a formula which employs the Sinclair coefficient a coefficient derived and approved by the sport s world governing body which allows for differences in both gender and bodyweight When the formula is applied to each lifter s overall total and then grouped along with the other competitors and evaluated it provides a numeric result which determines the competition s best overall men s and women s lifters 4 And while usually the winner of the heaviest weight class will have lifted the most overall weight during the course of a competition a lifter in a lighter weight class may still have lifted more weight both relative to their own bodyweight and to the Sinclair coefficient formula thereby garnering the Best Lifter award History EditCompetitions to establish who can lift the heaviest weight have been recorded throughout civilization with the earliest known recordings including those found in Egypt China India and Ancient Greece 5 6 Early international competitions Edit The international sport of weightlifting began with the First World Weightlifting Championships in 1891 in London with Edward Lawrence Levy becoming the first world champion 7 8 In 1896 the inaugural Olympic Games in Athens included weightlifting in the field event the predecessor to today s track and field or athletics event In the early Olympic Games a distinction was drawn between lifting with one hand only and lifting with two hands and all competitors competed together regardless of their size and weight The winner of the one hand competition in 1896 was Launceston Elliot of Scotland while the winner of the two hands event was Viggo Jensen of Denmark 9 Further World Weightlifting Championships followed in 1898 in Austria 10 1899 in Milan and 1903 in Paris 11 with the International Weightlifting Federation being founded in 1905 7 Weightlifting was next contested at the Olympics in the 1904 Games again in athletics and at the 1906 Intercalated Games but was omitted from the Games of 1900 1908 and 1912 1912 being the last Games until after the First World War Olympic Games 1920 1972 EditIn 1920 weightlifting returned to the Olympics and for the first time as an event in its own right and weightlifting has been contested at every summer Olympics Games since The 1920 Games took place at Antwerp in Belgium and fourteen nations competed The competition lifts were the one hand snatch the one hand clean and jerk and the two hands clean and jerk At the next Olympic Games in Paris in 1924 the two hands press and the two hands snatch were added to the program making a total of five lifts and weight classes were introduced for competitors with weightlifters competing in five weight divisions The 110 kg division weightlifting winners at the 1980 Summer Olympics held in Moscow In 1928 the sport dropped the one hand exercises going forward with three two hand exercises the snatch the clean and press and the clean and jerk The 1972 Olympics was the last Olympics featuring the clean and press as difficulties in judging proper form led to it being dropped from subsequent competitions Athletes rather than strictly pressing the weight overhead with an upright torso had been using their hips and leaning backward substantially Some athletes were able to initiate the press with a hip thrust so rapid that judges found it difficult to determine whether or not they had utilized any knee bend to generate additional force something strictly prohibited in the rules Also prohibited was excessive layback leaning back too much but it was considered too difficult to determine what degree of layback constituted a rule violation As a result the clean and press was discontinued as a competition lift after 1972 1973 present Edit Since the 1973 World Weightlifting Championships weightlifting competitions have been biathlons of the snatch and the clean and jerk with the 1976 Olympics being the first Olympics in this format Women s weightlifting Edit In 1987 women s world championship events were included for the first time in IWF s annual World Weightlifting Championships with women such as Karyn Marshall USA and Cai Jun China amongst the winners in that first year 12 13 Yet it was not until the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney Australia that women s weightlifting was incorporated into the Olympics 14 15 China s Chen Yanqing became an early star of women s weightlifting at the Olympics as she won Olympic gold two games in a row in 2004 and 2008 16 17 In 2011 the International Weightlifting Federation IWF ruled that athletes could wear a full body unitard under the customary weightlifting uniform 18 Kulsoom Abdullah became the first woman to do so at the U S National Championships that year and athletes are allowed to do so at the Olympics 18 IWF rules previously stated that an athlete s knees and elbows must be visible so officials can determine if a lift is correctly executed 18 Equipment EditBarbell Edit Knurling on an Olympic barbell Olympic weightlifting uses a steel bar also known as a barbell with larger diameter rotating sleeves on either end holding rubber coated weight plates of different weights This sleeve rotation is important for the Olympic lifts particularly the snatch and clean movements because it drastically reduces the rotational inertia of the bar Without sleeve rotation the Olympic lifter faces more challenging lifts and a greater risk of injury 19 A men s Olympic barbell weighs 20 kg 44 lbs with a shaft diameter of 28 mm and a length of 2200 mm whereas a women s Olympic barbell weighs 15 kg 33 lbs and has a shaft diameter of 25 mm with a length of 2010 mm 20 21 The distance between the sleeves however is the same for the men s and the women s bars at 1310 mm The grip texture of the bar is called the knurling and is distributed differently between the men s and women s bars the men s has knurling in the center but the women s does not The Olympic barbells used in competition are certified by the IWF 19 Bumper plates Edit The weight plates typically referred to as bumper plates because of their rubber coated design weigh between 10 kg and 25 kg in 5 kg increments The bumper plates are coated with rubber to allow the weights to be dropped from various heights either after a successful lift or during an unsuccessful one Olympic bumper plates conform to international standards for coloring That is 10 kg is green 15 kg is yellow 20 kg is blue and 25 kg is red 19 Competition iron plates Edit In addition to the rubber bumpers smaller competition iron plates can be used to add weight in small increments to the bar The color designations for these iron plates are as follows 1 kg is green 1 5 kg is yellow 2 kg is blue 2 5 kg is red 5 kg and 0 5 kg are white It is useful to note the color assignment of these iron plates is consistent with the heavier bumper plates i e 1 kg and 10 kg are green 1 5 kg and 15 kg are yellow etc 19 Collars Edit An Olympic lifter Jang Mi ran holding a barbell loaded with red 25 kg bumper plates held in place with a collar Note the lifter s taped wrists and thumbs her weightlifting shoes and her weightlifting belt Weight plates are secured to the bar using collars on each sleeve that weigh exactly 2 5 kg each Singlet Edit Lifters typically wear a one piece close fitting leotard often called a singlet The wearing of a T shirt underneath the singlet is optional Belt Edit A weightlifting belt of 120 mm maximum width may also be worn to increase intra abdominal pressure Chalk Edit Chalk is regularly used by Olympic lifters generally prior to each attempt at a lift Lifters rub their hands with the chalk to promote dryness and prevent the bar moving in their hands Tape Edit Olympic lifters frequently use tape to cover the areas of their bodies exposed to friction while completing Olympic lifts Tape is most commonly found on the Olympic lifter s thumb A taped thumb not only lessens the risk of calluses but it also reduces the pain associated with the hook grip Olympic lifters also tape their wrists preventing exaggerated and uncomfortable joint movement during lifts For particularly heavy overhead lifts a taped wrist enables the lifter to regulate wrist extension and delimit the translation of the radius and ulna distal heads However while taped wrists can prevent wrist and forearm injuries in the short term excessive use can lead to weakened connective tissue in the area increasing the risk of pain and injury 19 Shoes Edit The type of shoes worn by Olympic weightlifters is perhaps their most distinctive piece of equipment Weightlifting shoes are typically designed with a raised heel of 0 5 to 1 5 and one or two metatarsal straps that tighten across the instep of the shoe The raised heel helps the lifter maintain an upright torso while catching the bar and also allows for a deeper squat under the bar The soles of the shoes are also quite rigid helping to resist compression while under heavy loads The shoes are designed for maximum stability while remaining flexible in the toe box This allows the lifter to come up on the toes and to catch the weight on the ball of the back foot during the jerk movement of the lift 19 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Olympic weightlifting World Weightlifting Championships Weightlifting at the Summer Olympics List of world records in Olympic weightlifting List of Olympic records in weightlifting List of Olympic medalists in weightlifting Powerlifting Power training Paralympic powerliftingReferences Edit World Championships International Weightlifting Federation Retrieved 2023 01 25 Hoffman Bob 1963 Guide to Weight Lifting Competition Urbana Champaign Illinois Strength and Health Publishing Company p 2 a b New Bodyweight Categories Approved by the IWF Executive Board International Weightlifting Federation 5 July 2018 Retrieved 2018 10 19 The Sinclair Coefficients for the Olympiad International Weightlifting Federation Retrieved 2009 07 24 Lift Up History of Olympic Weightlifting chidlovski net Retrieved 2022 11 04 Ancient Egyptian Sport a b Weightlifting History International Weightlifting Federation Retrieved 2023 01 25 122 years since the first World Championships International Weightlifting Federation 2013 03 29 Retrieved 2023 01 25 Encyclopedia Britannica Almanac 2010 Encyclopedia Britannica Inc 2010 p 736 ISBN 9781615353293 chidlovski 2019 04 17 Wilhelm Turk World Champion 1898 CHIDLOVSKI BLOG ShIDLOVSKOGO Retrieved 2023 01 25 chidlovski 2019 04 27 Sergey Eliseev and Georg Hackenschmidt Early World Class Weightlifters From the Russian Empire CHIDLOVSKI BLOG ShIDLOVSKOGO Retrieved 2023 01 25 The History of Weightlifting teamUSA org 2009 10 02 Archived from the original on 2010 04 12 Retrieved 2009 10 02 Julie Carft July 29 1989 Image is Heavy Burden Weightlifter Karyn Marshall Feels Pressure to Project Femininity Intelligence Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2009 10 02 20 years anniversary of female inclusion in weightlifting at the Olympic Games International Weightlifting Federation 2020 09 22 Retrieved 2023 01 25 Miele Vincent J Bailes Julian E 2001 Bailes Julian E Day Arthur L eds Neurological Sports Medicine A Guide for Physicians and Athletic Trainers Rolling Meadows Illinois American Association of Neurological Surgeons p 239 ISBN 1 879284 75 8 Chen Yanqing www insidethegames biz 2022 11 29 Retrieved 2023 02 01 Yanqing CHEN olympics com 2023 02 01 Retrieved 2023 02 01 a b c Kulsoom Abdullah makes history ESPN 2011 07 15 Retrieved 2012 09 19 a b c d e f Everett Greg 2009 Olympic Weightlifting A Complete Guide for Athletes amp Coaches Catalyst Athletics pp 20 21 22 26 27 ISBN 978 0980011111 Johnson Jolie Official Specifications for Olympic Weightlifting Bar Retrieved 22 October 2014 Morrison Norm Olympic Lifting for Beginners Retrieved 22 October 2014 External links EditInternational Weightlifting Federation Swiss Amateur Weightlifting Federation SAGV FSHA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Olympic weightlifting amp oldid 1137716327, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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