Sofia Mattsson Explained

Sofia Mattsson
Full Name:Sofia Magdalena Mattsson
Nationality:Swedish
Hometown:Ljungbyhed
Birth Date:11 November 1989
Birth Place:Gällivare, Sweden
Height:164 cm
Weight:53 kg
Country:Sweden
Sport:Freestyle wrestling
Club:Gällivare SK
Coach:Fariborz Besarati

Sofia Magdalena Mattsson (born 11 November 1989) is a Swedish wrestler, who has won a World Championship, four European championships and an Olympic bronze medal.

Profile

Born in Gällivare, she is one of the highest-ranking female wrestlers in Europe. She wrestles in the 48 kilo division for the Gällivare SK Wrestling club, coached by Håkan Johansson and Kalle Taivalsaari. Since 2001, she has won eleven Swedish National Championships (six at cadet level, two at junior level and three at senior level).

In 2007 she competed at the European Championship in Sofia, her first ever international championship at senior level. Despite her young age and inexperience, she won her first match; however, in the following match she was defeated by the Russian wrestler Larisa Oorzhak (who went on to win the gold medal). In the repechage, Mattsson defeated her other two opponents and won the bronze medal.

In August 2007, Mattsson became Junior World Champion for the second time after she defeated the Japanese wrestler Fuyuko Mimura in Beijing.

In September the same year, she competed at her first ever World Championship at senior level in Baku, Azerbaijan, where she placed 8th, assuring herself qualification for the 2008 Summer Olympics.

In April 2008 the young Swedish wrestler won a silver medal at her second ever European Championship at senior level. That summer, she was defeated in the second round at the Olympics by Clarissa Chun.[1]

In September 2009, Mattsson won the Senior World Championship in 51 kg.

At the 2012 Summer Olympics, Mattsson competed in the women's lightweight (-55 kg) division. She beat Sündeviin Byambatseren in the first round and Marwa Amri in the second, but lost to Valeria Zholobova in the quarterfinals.

In 2014, Mattsson competed on the Swedish version of the television show Fort Boyard.[2]

In June 2015, she competed in the inaugural European Games, for Sweden in wrestling, more specifically, the women's freestyle 55 kg division. She earned a gold medal.

On 9 March 2016 Mattsson won the 2016 European Wrestling Championships, she won all wrestling matches by fall. She won the bronze medal in 53 kg (featherweight) at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. She did this by beating Odunayo Adekuoroye in the last 16, then Katarzyna Krawczyk in the quarterfinals. She lost to eventual gold medalist Helen Maroulis in the semifinals. Mattsson was entered into the repechage, where she beat Zhong Xuechun to win a bronze medal.

In March 2021, she qualified at the European Qualification Tournament to compete at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan.[3] [4] She competed in the women's 53 kg event.[5]

She is in the team of Haryana Hammers pro wrestling season2 held in New Delhi.

National results

International results

Senior

2007European ChampionshipsSofia, Bulgaria3rd48 kg
World ChampionshipsBaku, Azerbaijan8th48 kg
2008European ChampionshipsTampere, Finlandbgcolor=silver2nd51 kg
Olympic GamesBeijing, China12th48 kg
2009European ChampionshipsVilnius, Lithuania10th51 kg
World ChampionshipsHerning, Denmarkbgcolor=gold1st51 kg
2010European ChampionshipsBaku, Azerbaijanbgcolor=gold1st51 kg
World ChampionshipsMoscow, Russia3rd51 kg
2011World ChampionshipsIstanbul, Turkeybgcolor=silver2nd59 kg
2012European ChampionshipsBelgrade, Serbiabgcolor=silver2nd55 kg
Olympic GamesLondon, Great Britain7th55 kg
2013European ChampionshipsTbilisi, Georgiabgcolor=gold1st55 kg
2014European ChampionshipsVantaa, Finlandbgcolor=gold1st55 kg
20152015 World Wrestling ChampionshipsLas Vegas, United Statesbgcolor=silver2nd53 kg
2016Olympic GamesRio de Janeiro, Brazil3rd53 kg

Junior and cadet

Trivia

Notes and References

  1. Sofia Mattsson . 3 November 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170712102433/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/ma/sofia-mattsson-1.html . 12 July 2017.
  2. Web site: Lutte dans la boue - Sofia Mattson - YouTube . YouTube.
  3. News: Shefferd . Neil . 19 March 2021 . Twelve more wrestlers secure Tokyo 2020 places as women's action takes centre stage at European Olympic qualifier . InsideTheGames.biz . 20 March 2021.
  4. Web site: 2021 European Wrestling Olympic Qualification Tournament Results Book . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20210324185322/https://uww.org/sites/default/files/2021-03/final-book.pdf . 24 March 2021 . 24 March 2021 . United World Wrestling.
  5. Web site: Wrestling Results Book . Tokyo 2020 Olympics . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20210807164330/https://olympics.com/tokyo-2020/olympic-games/resOG2020-/pdf/OG2020-/WRE/OG2020-_WRE_B99_WRE-------------------------------.pdf . 7 August 2021 . 8 August 2021.