Ivan Ivanov (weightlifter) explained

Ivan Ivanov
Birth Date:27 August 1971
Birth Place:Shumen, Bulgaria
Nationality:Bulgarian
Sport:Weightlifting
Event:52 kg, 54 kg, 56 kg
Coach:Ivan Abadjiev
Retired:2000
Coaching:Bulgarian National Team

Ivan Ivanov Ivanov (Bulgarian: Иван Иванов Иванов, born 27 August 1971 in Shumen) is a Bulgarian former weightlifter and current head coach of the national Bulgarian weightlifting teams.[1] [2] [3] He claimed one gold medal at the 1992 Olympic Games, four time World Champion, and five time European Champion. He won the 1990 World Cup. Ivan also won 1991 World Cup Final in Barcelona and 1990 World Cup Final in Tainan, and in 1989 in Lisbon he finished second. In 1990, he became a gold medalist in Total and Clean, and Jerk and silver, medalist in Snatch of the Goodwill Games in Seattle. Ivanov was named the Best Weightlifter in the World by the International Weightlifting Federation for 1989 and 1990. Ivanov is also a three-time World Junior Champion and twice European Junior Champion. He was elected as the best coach of Bulgaria for 2019 by the Ministry of Youth and Sports of the country together with the trainer on rhythmic gymnastics Vesela Dimitrova.

Career

Olympics

Ivanov made his Olympic debut at the 1992 Summer Olympics competing in the flyweight division (52 kg).[4] He was the heavy favorite to win the gold medal as the three time reigning World Champion and World Record holder in the clean & jerk and total. After the snatch portion of the competition he was in second place (due to being 0.1 kg heavier than leader Lin Qisheng). Later in the clean & jerk portion, he set a new Olympic Record 150.0 kg in the clean & jerk to claim the gold medal.[5]

In 1996, the IWF restructured the weight classes and Ivanov competed in the newly created 54 kg category. He finished in 7th place after the snatch portion and 6th overall after the clean & jerk portion was completed. His 257.5 kg total was his lowest total of the year and this was the first senior competition in which he did not win a medal in the overall total lift.

Ivanov qualified for the Bulgarian 2000 Olympic team and actually did compete in the 56 kg category. He won a silver medal but failed the doping test and was disqualified. He tested positive for the banned diuretic furosemide.[6] [7]

Major results

YearVenueWeightSnatch (kg)Clean & Jerk (kg)TotalRank
width=65 1width=65 2width=65 3width=45 Rankwidth=65 1width=65 2width=65 3width=45 Rank
Olympic Games
Barcelona, Spain110.0 115.0 117.5 2 142.5 147.5 150.0 1 265.0
Atlanta, United States112.5 112.5 112.5 7 145.0 145.0 155.0 6 257.5 6
125.0 130.0 130.0 155.0 160.0 162.5 DSQ
World Championships
align=left 52 kg 110.0 115.0 117.5 142.5 147.5 155.0 WR 272.5 WR
52 kg 110.0 115.0 115.0 137.5 142.5 150.0 265.0
align=left 52 kg 110.0 115.0 117.5 140.0 145.0 155.5 WR 272.5
align=left 54 kg 115.0 120.0 120.0 4 150.0 157.5 157.5 277.5 WR
align=left 54 kg 115.0 120.0 4 150.0 155.0 158.5 275.0
122.5 127.5 127.5 4 155.0 160.0 165.0 282.5
115.0 120.0 122.5 6 150.0 155.0 157.5 280.0 4

Weightlifting achievements

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Weightlifting: Bulgaria says don't blame former Soviet bloc for doping. Reuters. 15 August 2016 . 10 April 2019.
  2. Web site: Olympic Doping. www.cbsnews.com. 13 August 2004 . en. 2019-07-08.
  3. Web site: BBC SPORT OTHER SPORTS Bulgarian lifters sent home. news.bbc.co.uk. 2019-07-08.
  4. Web site: 1992 Barcelona Results Book. LA84.org. 10 April 2019.
  5. News: BARCELONA; Australian Wins Cycling Medal. New York Times. 27 July 1992 . 10 April 2019.
  6. Web site: 2 Olympic Athletes Fail Drug Test. Associated Press. 10 April 2019. 2 October 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20221002163848/https://apnews.com/d80092b285b03d3684ac9365c14ff041. dead.
  7. Web site: Two Athletes Sent Home After Testing Positive for Drugs. Los Angeles Times. 20 September 2000 . 10 April 2019.