Difference between revisions of "Weightlifting"

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(New page: '''Weightlifting''' is an Olympic sport where athletes compete to see who can lift the heaviest weights (in the form of a metal bar with heavy weights on each end). Both men and wo...)
 
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'''Weightlifting''' is an [[Olympic]] [[sport]] where athletes compete to see who can lift the heaviest weights (in the form of a metal bar with heavy weights on each end). Both men and women compete, and there are several weight divisions for each gender.
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'''Weightlifting''' has been an [[Olympic]] [[sport]] since the first modern games in [[Athens]] in 1896<ref>http://www.olympic.org/uk/sports/programme/index_uk.asp?SportCode=WL</ref>. Athletes compete to see who can lift the heaviest weights (in the form of a metal bar with heavy weights on each end). Both men and women compete, and there are several weight divisions for each gender.
  
 
Olympic weightlifting has two divisions:
 
Olympic weightlifting has two divisions:
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* '''Clean and jerk''', where the bar is first lifted to just beneath the chin, and then lifted above the head after a short pause.
 
* '''Clean and jerk''', where the bar is first lifted to just beneath the chin, and then lifted above the head after a short pause.
  
Participants compete in both disciplines (with the weights being increased in a similar way to the raising of the bar in a [[high jump]] competition), and add their best scores in each. The man or woman with the highest combined total is the winner.
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Participants compete in both disciplines (with the weights being increased in a similar way to the raising of the bar in a [[high jump]] competition), and add their best scores in each. The man or woman with the highest combined total is the winner<ref>http://www.iwf.net/</ref>.
  
Countries who usually perform well in weightlifting include [[China]] and many former [[Soviet]] states.
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The world record for weightlifting in the men's super-heavyweight division is 472kg (over 1000lb), set at the Olympic Games in [[Sydney]] in 2000<ref>http://www.olympic.org/uk/sports/records/results_uk.asp</ref>. This is about as heavy as two fully-grown male lions<ref>http://www.lioncrusher.com/animal.asp?animal=59</ref>.
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Countries who usually perform well in weightlifting include [[China]] and many Eastern [[Europe]]an and former [[Soviet]] states.

Revision as of 17:30, September 15, 2008

Weightlifting has been an Olympic sport since the first modern games in Athens in 1896[1]. Athletes compete to see who can lift the heaviest weights (in the form of a metal bar with heavy weights on each end). Both men and women compete, and there are several weight divisions for each gender.

Olympic weightlifting has two divisions:

  • Snatch, where the bar must be lifted above the head in one continuous motion.
  • Clean and jerk, where the bar is first lifted to just beneath the chin, and then lifted above the head after a short pause.

Participants compete in both disciplines (with the weights being increased in a similar way to the raising of the bar in a high jump competition), and add their best scores in each. The man or woman with the highest combined total is the winner[2].

The world record for weightlifting in the men's super-heavyweight division is 472kg (over 1000lb), set at the Olympic Games in Sydney in 2000[3]. This is about as heavy as two fully-grown male lions[4].

Countries who usually perform well in weightlifting include China and many Eastern European and former Soviet states.
  1. http://www.olympic.org/uk/sports/programme/index_uk.asp?SportCode=WL
  2. http://www.iwf.net/
  3. http://www.olympic.org/uk/sports/records/results_uk.asp
  4. http://www.lioncrusher.com/animal.asp?animal=59