Hamid Sourian Explained

Headercolor:Gold
Hamid Sourian
Nickname:7 star General
Fullname:Hamid Sourian Reihanpour
Native Name:Persian: حمید سوریان ‌
Nickname:7 Star General
Nationality:Iranian
Birth Date:24 August 1985
Birth Place:Rey, Iran
Country:Iran
Sport:Wrestling
Event:Greco-Roman
Club:Babak Rey Club
Coach:Abdollah Zare

Hamid Sourian Reihanpour (Persian: حمید سوریان ریحان‌پور; born 24 August 1985) or Hamid Soryan is a retired Iranian wrestler. Sourian is 2012 Summer Olympic games gold medalist and six-time World Champion. He won both the Junior World Championships and Senior World Championships in 2005. He is also 2007 and 2008 Asian championships gold medalist.[1]

Summer Olympics 2008

Sourian was a strong favorite to win the gold medal at 55 kg in the 2008 Beijing Olympics, but was upset in the quarterfinals by eventual gold medalist Nazyr Mankiev of Russia. Sourian was defeated in the bronze medal match by South Korea's Park Eun-Chul, Sourian had beaten Park in two different world championship finals prior to this Bronze medal match. In both his losses, he lost on tie-breaker criteria.[2]

Summer Olympics 2012

On 5 August 2012, he won his country's first ever gold medal in Greco-Roman wrestling, defeating Azerbaijan's Rovshan Bayramov in the 55 kg final.[3] [4]

Summer Olympics 2016

After failing to qualify for the World Championship games and Continental Qualifier, on 3 May 2016 Sourian entered the second of the two worldwide qualification tournaments for the 2016 Summer Olympics in Turkey after failing to overcome Ivo Angelov from Bulgaria in Mongolia.

On May 5, Aleksandr Karelin posted a photo of Sourian on his Instagram page, wishing him success by writing: "You are the best and I wish you the best in the last 2016 Olympic Qualification Tournament. Believe you can and you will."[5]

On May 7, Sourian finished first in the tournament and secured his ticket for Rio.[6]

On the 14th of August, he was defeated by Shinobu Ota from Japan in the round of 32. Although leading by 4–0 in the first half of the bout, his energy quickly depleted in the second half and he was defeated by 5–6 in the end. His next match was against Almat Kebispayev from Kazakhstan in the repechage round. Again he was comfortably in the lead by 7–0 in the first half and then only needed one point for victory in the second, but his energy levels dropped towards the end and he lost the bout. This was his last appearance in Rio and his tournament was brought to a surprising end.[7]

International competition record

width=8%Resultwidth=15%Roundwidth=35%Opponentwidth=15%Score
2005 World Championship / Budapest / Gold medal / 55 kg
WinRound of 322–0 (4–3, 2–1)
WinRound of 162–0 (4–0, 3–2)
WinQuarterfinals2–0 (2–1, 7–1)
WinSemifinalsDSQ (3–0, 5–0)
WinFinal2–0 (2–1, 4–3)
2006 World Championship / Guangzhou / Gold medal / 55 kg
WinRound of 322–0 (6–0, 7–0)
WinRound of 162–0 (7–2, 2–1)
WinQuarterfinals2–0 (8–2, 4–0)
WinSemifinals2–0 (5–3, 3–2)
WinFinal2–0 (3–0, 3–0)
2007 World Championship / Baku / Gold medal / 55 kg
WinRound of 642–0 (5–0, 8–1)
WinRound of 322–0 (2–1, 4–0)
WinRound of 16DSQ (4–0, 6–0)
WinQuarterfinals2–0 (4–3, 2–2)
WinSemifinals2–0 (3–0, 1–1)
WinFinalDSQ (1–1, 3–0, 4–0)
2008 Summer Olympics / Beijing / 5th place / 55 kg
WinRound of 32Fall (4–0)
WinRound of 162–0 (8–0, 6–0)
LossQuarterfinals1–2 (2–2, 1–1, 1–1)
WinRepechage2–0 (5–0, 1–1)
LossBronze medal match0–2 (1–1, 2–2)
2009 World Championship / Herning / Gold medal / 55 kg
WinRound of 322–0 (7–0, 3–0)
WinRound of 162–0 (1–0, 6–0)
WinQuarterfinals2–0 (1–0, 1–0)
WinSemifinals2–0 (1–0, 6–0)
WinFinal2–0 (5–0, 1–0)
2010 World Championship / Moscow / Gold medal / 55 kg
WinRound of 322–0 (5–0, 1–0)
WinRound of 162–0 (2–0, 2–2)
WinQuarterfinals2–0 (2–0, 1–1)
WinSemifinals2–0 (1–0, 2–0)
WinFinal2–1 (4–0, 0–3, 1–0)
2012 Summer Olympics / London / Gold medal / 55 kg
WinRound of 162–1 (4–0, 0–2, 2–1)
WinQuarterfinals2–0 (2–0, 1–0)
WinSemifinals2–0 (3–0, 3–0)
WinFinal2–0 (2–0, 1–0)
2014 World Championship / Tashkent / Gold medal / 59 kg
WinRound of 648–0
WinRound of 322–1
WinRound of 165–0
WinQuarterfinals3–0
WinSemifinals2–1
WinFinal2–1
2015 World Championship / Las Vegas / 7th place / 59 kg
WinRound of 328–0
WinRound of 165–0, Fall
LossQuarterfinals0–2, DSQ
LossRepechage5–6
2016 Summer Olympics / Rio de Janeiro / 11th place / 59 kg
LossRound of 324–5
LossRepechage7–6, Fall

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.london2012.com/athlete/soryan-reihanpour-hamid-mohammad-1077346/ Hamid Mohammad Soryan Reihanpour
  2. Web site: Nazyr Mankiev and Islam-Beka Albiev win gold for Russia - International Herald Tribune . www.iht.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080925160326/http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/08/12/sports/olywrest12.php . 2008-09-25.
  3. Web site: London 2012 Wrestling: Iran's Hamid Sourian Claimed Gold Medal in Men's 55kg Greco-Roman . Kabir News . 2012-08-06 . 2013-11-12 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131112024343/http://kabirnews.com/london-2012-wrestling-irans-hamid-sourian-claimed-gold-medal-in-mens-55kg-greco-roman/2941/ . dead .
  4. News: London Olympics: Iran's Reihanpour wins Greco-Roman 55kg wrestling gold. August 6, 2012 . The Times Of India.
  5. Web site: Instagram .
  6. Web site: Sourian claims gold in Istanbul to book Olympic spot. 7 May 2016.
  7. Web site: Google. www.google.no. 15 August 2016.