English
Noun
- A sport in which competitors lift heavy weights in two events: the snatch and the clean and jerk.
- A form of exercise in which weights are lifted.
Synonyms
- italbrac form of exercise: weight training
Translations
sport in which competitors lift heavy weights
- Czech: vzpírání
- Japanese: ウエイトリフティング ueitorifutingu
- Korean: 역도 yeogdo
- Spanish: halterofilia
form of exercise
See also
Weightlifting , also called Olympic weightlifting
or Olympic-style weightlifting, is a sport in which participants
attempt a maximum weight single lift of a barbell loaded with
weight plates. The two lifts currently competed are the clean and
jerk and the snatch. The compound word "weightlifting" is often
used incorrectly to refer to weight
training. In comparison with powerlifting, weightlifting
requires more power
because the lifts must be executed more quickly and with more
mobility because of a greater range of motion during the lifts.
While there are relatively few competitive Olympic lifters, the
lifts and their components are commonly used by elite athletes to
train for explosive and functional strength.
The Olympic lifts
The sport of Olympic weightlifting consists of two lifts, the snatch and the clean and jerk. In both, the lift begins with the barbell on the floor and ends with the lifter standing erect with the barbell held steady over his head with arms and legs straight and motionless.In the snatch, the lifter must lift the barbell
from the floor to over their head in one continuous movement. The
lifter attempts to accelerate the bar vertically as fast as
possible (the pull), then "jump" under it into an overhead squat
position (the drop). The lifter then executes the concentric portion of the
squat to complete the lift.
The clean and jerk has two major components. The
clean portion consists of the pull, the drop, and the front squat.
The jerk consists of the dip, the drive (together called the
quarter jerk), and the split ( or the squat or catch). The lifter
first "cleans" the barbell from the floor to an intermediate
position, "racking" the bar against their chest in a front
squat then stands up in the concentric portion of the
front squat. The lifter then rapidly pushes the barbell vertically
and separates his legs either front-to-back or side-to-side to get
under the bar and straighten his arms. The lifter then works his
legs back together to complete the lift.
In competition, three judges oversee the
successful completion of the lift. Once a competitor has met the
requirements in their opinion, each judge shines a white light.
When at least two white lights are shown, the lift is regarded as
successful and the competitor may return the bar to the platform.
If the competitor fails to achieve a successful lift in the opinion
of a judge, a red light is shown. The bar must be lifted to at
least knee level within 60 seconds of the bar being loaded or the
lift does not count. If the competitor is making two consecutive
lifts, then they are permitted 120 seconds for the second
lift.
A third lift, the "clean and
press" or simply "press", was practiced in the Olympics
until 1972.
The clean and press differs from the clean and jerk, in that the
weight is pressed directly up from the chest with the arms only,
while remaining standing, while the jerk uses the legs' power to
assist the arms part of the way up, followed by the body sinking
downward into a split or squat to complete the extension of the
arms, before once again standing. The press was eliminated due to
the difficulty in judging whether the lift was performed correctly:
lifters were bending so far backward as to turn it into a "standing
bench press".
Requirements of weightlifting
Weightlifting requires power, technique,
flexibility and consistency. A weightlifter's strength comes
primarily from the legs, specifically the muscles of the quadriceps and posterior
chain, and secondarily the back, anterior core, and shoulders.
Weightlifting is a full body activity, but these muscles receive
emphasis over the others within the body. Weightlifters need not
necessarily be heavy, as they compete by weight classes.
The inherent mechanics of weightlifting favors
the physical characteristics of short people, similar to the manner
in which basketball favors tall people. The effort of lifting a
weight is "work done" and is the product of weight x distance.
Weightlifting does not measure work done. It is easy to imagine
that a very short person could snatch to 5 feet (1.5m), and a very
tall person to 8 feet (2.4m). A very tall lifter's chest could
exceed a short lifter's jerk, meaning they have already done more
work just by lifting to the chest. Nevertheless, many taller people
have been successful at lifting, as indeed, have some shorter
basketball players.
Relative exercises compared to a lift
A lifter can typically lift more for each
component parts of an Olympic lift than they can for an Olympic
lift itself. The figures below are an example for a 150 kg clean
and jerk for a typical experienced lifter:
- Clean: 160.0 kg
- Jerk: 160.0 kg
- Clean Pull: 195.0 kg
- Front Squat: 195.0 kg
- Back Squat: 210.0 kg
- Deadlift: 240.0 kg
- Snatch (relative): 120.0 kg
Competition
The competitive sport is controlled by the
International Weightlifting Federation (IWF). Based in Budapest, it was
founded in 1905.
Competitors compete in one of eight (seven for
women) divisions determined by their body mass.
These classes are currently: men's: 56 kg (123.5 lb), 62 kg
(136.7 lb), 69 kg (152.1 lb), 77 kg (169.8 lb), 85 kg (187.4 lb),
94 kg (207.2 lb), 105 kg (231.5 lb) and 105+ kg, and women's: 48kg
(105.8 lb.), 53 kg (116.8 lb), 58 kg (127.8 lb), 63 kg (138.9 lb),
69 kg (152.1 lb), 75 kg (165.3 lb), and 75+ kg. In each weight
division, competitors compete in both the snatch and clean and
jerk, and prizes are usually given for the heaviest weights lifted
in the snatch, clean and jerk, and the two combined.
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 that lift or trying a heavier weight later (after any
other competitors have made attempts at that weight or any
intermediate weights). Weights are set in 1 kilogram increments
(previously 2.5kg increments), and each lifter can have a maximum
of three lifts, regardless of whether lifts are successful or
not.
The title Best Lifter is commonly awarded at
local competitions. The award is based on the lifters' Sinclair
Coefficients, which calculate strength-to-weight ratio of the
lifters. Typically, the winner of the heaviest weight class will
have lifted the most weight, but a lifter in a lighter weight class
will have lifted more in proportion to his bodyweight.
Lifters from Bulgaria, Romania, China, Iran, Greece and Turkey are known for
competing successfully at the international level.
Top lifters
- Andrei Chemerkin (Russia) - Olympic gold (1996), Olympic bronze (2000)
- Vasily Alexeyev (USSR) - 80 world records, Olympic gold (1972, 1976)
- Tommy Kono (United States) - 26 world records, Olympic gold (1952, 1956), Olympic silver (1960)
- Galabin Boevski (Bulgaria) - current and all time 69 kg world record holder, and current best record lifter.
- Hossein Rezazadeh (Iran) - current super-heavyweight world record holder, Olympic gold (2000, 2004)
- Pyrros Dimas (Greece) - Olympic gold (1992, 1996, 2000), Olympic bronze (2004)
- Naim Suleymanoglu (Turkey) - Olympic gold (1988, 1992, 1996)
- Kakhi Kakhiashvili (Greece) - Olympic gold (1992, 1996, 2000)
- Halil Mutlu (Turkey) - Olympic gold (1996, 2000, 2004)
- Norbert Schemansky (United States) - Olympic gold (1952), silver (1948), bronze (1960, 1964)
- Ronny Weller (Germany, East Germany) - Olympic gold (1992), silver (1996, 2000), bronze (1988)
- Nikolay Pechalov (Bulgaria, Croatia)- Olympic gold (2000), silver (1992), bronze (1996, 2004)
- Leonid Taranenko (USSR) - Olympic gold (1980), silver (1992)
- Stefan Topurov (Bulgaria) - first feather weight to lift three times his body weight (180kg clean and jerk in the 60kg weight class at the 1983 World Championship in Moscow)
- Tara Nott (United States) - Olympic gold (2000)
- Yurik Vardanyan - Olympic gold (1980), light-heavyweight record holder since 1980
Records
The total record in the men's 56 kg class is 305 kg, in the 105+ kg class it is 472.5 kg. The current official record for the clean and jerk in the men's +105 kg class is held by Hossein Rezazadeh of Iran, who clean and jerked 263.5 kg (580.9 lb) at the 2004 Athens Summer Olympics. He snatched 213.0 kg (469.6 lb) in September 2003 at Qinhuangdao. Rezazadeh scored a record total of 472.5 kg at both the 2000 Sydney Olympics and 2004 Athens Olympics. The current record for the clean and jerk in the women's 75+ kg class is held by Gonghong Tang of China, who lifted 182.5 kg (402.3 lb) at the 2004 Athens Summer Olympics.See also
- Bodybuilding, an activity which focuses on the visual aesthetics of a muscular physique.
- Powerlifting, a pure strength sport which includes the bench press, squat, and deadlift.
- Strength athletics or strongman competition, a sport which involves competitions in unusual lifts involving heavy weights, including stone lifting and vehicle pull
References
External links
weightlifting in Arabic: رفع أثقال
weightlifting in Bulgarian: Вдигане на
тежести
weightlifting in Catalan: Halterofília
weightlifting in Czech: Vzpírání
weightlifting in Danish: Vægtløftning
weightlifting in German: Gewichtheben
weightlifting in Estonian: Tõstmine
weightlifting in Modern Greek (1453-): Άρση
βαρών
weightlifting in Spanish: Halterofilia
weightlifting in Esperanto: Halterlevo
weightlifting in Persian: وزنهبرداری
weightlifting in French: Haltérophilie
weightlifting in Galician: Halterofilia
weightlifting in Korean: 역도
weightlifting in Croatian: Dizanje utega
weightlifting in Indonesian: Angkat besi
weightlifting in Italian: Sollevamento
pesi
weightlifting in Hebrew: הרמת משקולות
weightlifting in Haitian: Altewofili
weightlifting in Dutch: Gewichtheffen
weightlifting in Japanese: 重量挙げ
weightlifting in Norwegian: Vektløfting
weightlifting in Polish: Podnoszenie
ciężarów
weightlifting in Portuguese:
Halterofilismo
weightlifting in Russian: Тяжёлая атлетика
weightlifting in Slovak: Vzpieranie
weightlifting in Serbian: Дизање тегова
weightlifting in Serbo-Croatian: Dizanje
utega
weightlifting in Finnish: Painonnosto
weightlifting in Swedish: Tyngdlyftning
weightlifting in Thai: ยกน้ำหนัก
weightlifting in Turkish: Halter
weightlifting in Chinese:
举重