Tomas Johansson (wrestler) explained

Tomas Johansson
Birth Date:20 July 1962
Birth Place:Haparanda, Sweden
Nationality:Swedish
Height:193 cm
Weight:130 kg
Sport:Wrestling

Tomas Johansson (born 20 July 1962) is a Swedish wrestler. He was born in Haparanda. He won an Olympic silver medal in Greco-Roman wrestling in 1992, and a bronze medal in 1988. He won a gold medal at the 1986 World Wrestling Championships[1] In 1986 Johansson won the Jerring Award.[2] Johansson's success is overshadowed in controversy after he was found cheating at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. He was disqualified, and stripped of his silver medal and later suspended after testing positive for anabolic steroids. He was also a twenty-time Swedish champion,[3] and is considered one of the greatest sportsmen in Swedish history.[4] He was considered to be the dominating force in wrestling until Karelin's arrival in the sport.[5]

Olympics

Tomas Johansson made his Olympic debut in Los Angeles in 1984. His aim was a gold medal, stating before the games that wrestling was one of the sports that had been weakened the most by the Olympic boycott. After losing the final to American Jeffrey Blatnick, Johansson claimed a silver medal. That medal was stripped a couple of days later when it was found that he had tested positive for anabolic steroids. The Swede was banned for 18 months.

In 1988, having won medals in two straight world championships, Johansson was unfortunate to be drawn against the eventual gold medal winner Aleksandr Karelin in the opening match of the Olympic games of Seoul. Johansson lost that bout but went on winning the three next to claim a bronze medal.

During the four next years, leading up to the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona, Tomas Johansson won two more World Championship medals. Every international championship during these years was won by Aleksandr Karelin, so Johansson was fortunate when he was drawn at the opposite side of the Olympic tournament. After an initial tie against Hungarian László Klauz, Johansson won three bouts to reach the gold medal match. Karelin, having won three of his first four games by fall, did this once again, after 93 seconds.

After having won his last World championship medal in 1993, Johansson struggled during the years until the 1996 Olympics. There, he won two of his first four bouts, but losing the other two, thereby reaching a match of 7th and 8th places against Japan's Kenichi Suzuki. Tomas Johansson won this, his final Olympic match, by fall.

External links


Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tomas Johansson . https://web.archive.org/web/20200417204600/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/jo/tomas-johansson-2.html . dead . 17 April 2020 . Sports Reference LLC . 6 April 2012.
  2. News: Radiosporten . 2008-10-19 . Johanssons Jerringskål står i prisrummet . 2024-04-01 . Sveriges Radio . sv.
  3. Web site: 2023-09-19 . Александр Карелин: непобедимый борец, который своим видом внушал соперникам страх . 2024-08-10 . sportmail.ru.
  4. Web site: Leijon . Mikael . 2017-04-21 . "Brottningen blev min räddning" . 2024-08-10 . nsd.se . sv.
  5. Web site: Ruissalo . Pekka . 2021-02-09 . "Toivoi, ettei sen kanssa mene minuuttitolkulla" – Juha Ahokas: Paini muuttui, kun voittamaton Aleksander Karelin tuli lajiin . 2024-08-11 . Tamperelainen . fi.