#WrestleAlmaty

Four WW storylines to follow at Bolat Turlykhanov Cup

By Olivia Lichti

ALMATY, Kazakhstan (May 29) -- Top women’s wrestlers from across the world will gather for the second Ranking Series tournament of 2022 -- Bolat Turlykhanov Cup. The entry list features strong teams from home nation Kazakhstan as well as Azerbaijan, India, Mongolia, and Uzbekistan. Seeds at the World Championships in Belgrade, Serbia will be on the line as wrestlers fight to make the podium in Almaty, hoping to earn prestigious ranking points.


Zhamila BAKBERGENOVA (KAZ) heads into the second Ranking Series event ranked first in the world at 72kg. (Photo: UWW / Tony Rotundo)

1. Bakbergenova sisters return after dominant Asian performances
Twin sisters Madina and Zhamila BAKBERGENOVA (KAZ) cemented themselves as the faces of the Kazakh wrestling with stellar performances in Ulaanbaatar last month. The two sisters won gold medals in their adjacent weight classes of 68kg and 72kg, picking up some significant victories along the way.

At 72kg, Zhamila followed up on her World silver medal performance in Oslo with four round-robin victories on her way to top honors, sealing her title with criteria victories over tough foes Davanaasan ENKH-AMAR (MGL) and Sumire NIIKURA (JPN).

A day earlier, Madina had an even more stunning performance at 68kg. Despite losing to 2020 Olympic bronze and 2021 world champion Meerim ZHUMANAZAROVA (KGZ) in the nordic bracket, she rebounded with a semifinal upset of 2019 U20 world champion Naruha MATSUYUKI (JPN) to set up a rematch in the finals against the Kyrgyz. There, she reversed the result from earlier in the day, defeating Zhuamanzarova 3-2.

Both twins will be gunning for gold in their home nation. Madina will have the opportunity to further cement herself as a serious international threat with tough competitors in former Asian champion Divya KAKRAN (IND) and Delgermaa ENKHSAIKHAN (MGL) in her bracket. Zhamila will need to defeat Mongolia’s Enkh-Amar once again to win gold.


Grace BULLEN (NOR) will return to action for the first time since the 2021 World Championships. (Photo: UWW / Kadir Caliskan)

2. Bullen returns after adversity
Grace BULLEN (NOR) had a challenging year in 2021. The former European and U23 world champion seemed primed to qualify her Nordic nation for the Olympics but shockingly failed to do so at both the European and World Olympic Qualifiers.

She fell to Bediha GUN (TUR) in the first round at the European event and to Veronika CHUMIKOVA (RWF) in the semi-final of the World OG Qualifier. Her hometown comeback at the 2021 Worlds in Oslo was not to be, as she fell to familiar foe Linda MORAIS (CAN) in the first round -- a heartbreaker for her and local fans.

However, after an eight-month layoff from international competition, Bullen is ready to rumble and will seek to earn some ranking points up at her preferred weight class of 59kg.

She will have to be in top form to do so as her weight class features Alyona KOLESNIK (AZE), whose 2022 has already included a gold medal at the prestigious Ivan Yariguin and silver at the Yasar Dogu Ranking Series. World bronze medalists Sarita MOR (IND) and Shoovdor BAATARJAV (MGL) will be competing as well.

Bullen is revered for her high-flying throws and dynamic style; wrestling fans must ensure they have their eyes glued to any matches involving the Norwegian star.


Bolortuya BAT OCHIR (MGL) headlines a Mongolian squad that'll feature 20 in the women's wrestling field. (Photo: UWW / Martin Gabor)

3. Bat-Ochir leads deep Mongolian contingent
While wrestling fans often crown nations like Japan, China and the United States as the top ones in women’s wrestling, many neglect to notice the consistency and depth that Mongolia always brings to the table. They display this here with a highly competitive 20-woman squad, a true testament to how deep talent runs in this traditional wrestling nation.

Tokyo Olympic bronze medalist Bolortuya BAT-OCHIR (MGL) is the biggest star in attendance and is expected to win 53kg handily. Five other Mongolian women who have previously earned World medals will also be competing in Almaty.

Some of the most compelling weight classes in Almaty will herald potential Mongolian domestic showdowns. Entered at 50kg is both Olympian Namuuntsetseg TSOGT-OCHIR (MGL) and 2021 world bronze medalist Otgonjargal DOLGARJAV (MGL).

Tokyo Olympian Khongorzul BOLDSAIKHAN (MGL), '21 world bronze Gantuya ENKHBAT (MGL) and Tserenchimed SUKHEE (MGL) are entered at 62kg.

Sukhee in particular has had an impressive start to the 2022 season, winning the Ivan Yariguin and Yasar Dogu while taking out Olympic Medallists Taybe YUSEIN (BUL), Sakshi MALIK (IND), and Marwa AMRI (TUN).

The outcome of the head-to-head matches of this tournament may influence which women Mongolia chooses to send to the World Championships in September, which will indubitably have drastic effects on the results of that event.


Aiperi MEDET KYZY (KGZ) comes into the Bolat Turlykhanov Cup ranked second in the world at 76kg. (Photo: Kadir Caliskan)

4. Medet Kyzy, Hamza clash at 76kg
The most highly anticipated matchup this weekend will feature two of the top women at 76kg -- Samar HAMZA (EGY) and Aiperi MEDET KYZY (KGZ). Both women competed in Tokyo but failed to medal before raising their level at Worlds in Oslo, where they each claimed bronze medals.

Medet Kyzy currently sits second in the rankings with 77,000 points by way of her Yasar Dogu and Asian titles this year and is a comfortable 15,900 points above third-place Hamza. With current top-seed Adeline Gray unlikely to compete at Worlds this year, these women will be locked in a battle for the top spot.

Also keep an eye on Gulmaral YERKEBAYEVA (KAZ) who upset Hamza 10-4 at the Yasar Dogu. Yerkebayeva recently added an Asian bronze medal to her list of accolades and will certainly be in the podium hunt in Almaty.

The Bolat Turlykhanov Cup starts Thursday (June 2-5) and can be followed live on uww.org.

#WrestleAlmaty

Iran Fills Remaining Freestyle Spots in Tokyo as Uzbekistan Grabs 4

By Ken Marantz

ALMATY, Kazakhstan (April 11) --- Iran went into the Asian Olympic qualifying tournament with three holes in its freestyle lineup for the Tokyo Olympics. On Sunday, Amir Mohammad YAZDANI (IRI), Yones EMAMICHOGHAEI (IRI) and Mohammadhossein MOHAMMADIAN (IRI) had little trouble filling the gap.

Yazdani secured a ticket to Tokyo for the Middle East powerhouse by easily advancing to the final at 65kg, while Emamichoghaei and Mohammadian did likewise at 74kg and 97kg, respectively, on the final day of the three-day tournament in Almaty that decided two qualifiers in each weight class.

The big winner of the day was Uzbekistan, which, led by Rio 2016 Olympic bronze medalist Magomed IBRAGIMOV (UZB) at 97kg, picked up four berths in Tokyo -- after having been shut out at the 2019 World Championships in Nursultan, where six spots per weight class were allocated.

China secured two places, while host Kazakhstan, which had four spots to begin with, grabbed one along with Kyrgyzstan and Mongolia. India, which had earned three places in Nursultan, failed to add to its tally, despite putting three wrestlers into the semifinals.

But it was Japan that had the most disastrous day. The Olympic host began the day by seeing Rio Olympic silver medalist Rei HIGUCHI (JPN) fail to make weight at 57kg, then had two-time Olympian Sohsuke TAKATANI (JPN) miss out by suffering a heartbreaking, last-second loss in his semifinal. Japan came looking to add to its two freestyle spots from Nursultan, but will leave empty-handed.

Yazdani, a distant cousin of superstar and 86kg Olympic favorite Hassan YAZDANI (IRI), certainly made the family proud with a dominant performance that he capped with a 10-0 technical fall in 5:21 over a tenacious Haji ALI (BRN).

"All my bouts were good," Yazdani said. "But the semifinal was the best because I won 10-0. That bout the most important."

For Iranians, earning the Olympic place is only the start. Now they have to go through a difficult national trial process to fill the spots.

"I will go back to Iran and the coaches will decide the team," Yazdani said. "I have to be the best."

In the final to be held later in the night session, Yazdani will face Ernazar AKMATALIEV (KGZ), who pulled off a stunning victory by fall over Ilyas BEKBULATOV (UZB), the 2020 Asian champion at 70kg.

Bekbulatov had stormed to an 8-0 lead when Akmataliev clamped on a headlock and threw the Uzbek to his back. Akmataliev then secured a ticket to Tokyo by securing a fall with 8 seconds left in the first period.

"I wasn’t thinking anything when I was down," said Akmataliev, a fifth-place finisher at the 2019 world U-23. "All I had to do was beat him to qualify. He is the best wrestler but I want to win as well. This feeling, there are no words to explain this. I was just confident to do it. Olympics here I come."

Emamichoghaei, a world and Asian bronze medalist in 2019 at 70kg, had no trouble moving up to the Olympic weight of 74kg, chalking up three straight technical falls without surrendering a point. In the semifinals, he needed just 2:13 to put away Sandeep MANN (INDIA).

In the other 74kg semifinal, 2018 world bronze medalist Bekzod ABDURAKHMONOV (UZB) earned a second trip to the Olympics by scoring a  takedown with :54 left for a 4-2 victory over Elaman DOGDURBEK UULU (KGZ).

"Before I came here, I had injured my knee and I was not training 100%, but it was a good day to qualify," said Abdurakhmanov, a two-time Asian champion who placed fifth at the Rio 2016 Olympics. "In the semifinal, he was coming very hard at me so I had to keep him away."

Abdurakhmanov said he feels ready to make the Olympic podium this time. "I was so close to a medal in Rio, so I think I can medal now," he said. "The problem was that before Rio, I was a regular 70kg guy and 74 was big for me. Now my weight is good for 74. My weight training is top class.

"Hopefully I train harder, smarter because that's how I will medal in Tokyo."

At 97kg, Ibragimov and Mohammadian were both totally dominant in setting up a showdown in the final. Ibragimov advanced with an 11-1 technical fall over Symbat SULAIMANOV (KGZ) that he capped with six points off a lace lock, while Mohammadian followed a takedown against Satywart KADIAN (IND) with four straight gut wrenches to end the match in 30 seconds.

Mohammadian also knows he has opened the door to the Olympics, but is not through yet.

"I have to go back to Iran and have a trial and there are two very good wrestlers in Iran," he said. "The coaches will decide the team to Tokyo. I definitely want to go there."

While getting to the Olympics is the objective, Mohammadian relishes the chance of challenging world and Olympic champion Abdulrashid SADULAEV (RUS).

"I wanted to wrestle Sadulaev before, but I have not gotten a chance," Mohammadian said. "He is good wrestler obviously. We analyze him a lot. In Tokyo, I don't care if I win a medal or not, but I want to beat Sadulaev. That's my target."

Japan's worst nightmare on the mat came true in the 86kg semifinals, where two-time Olympian Takatani lost 8-7 to unheralded Zushen LIN (CHN), who capped a comeback from a 6-1 deficit by scoring the winning takedown with :23 left.

Lin's biggest move came on a 4-point counter lift in the first period off a Takatani takedown attempt, as that put him ahead on criteria when he tied the score at 7-7. In the final seconds, Takatani came close to scoring a takedown, but couldn't get Lin's knee down for the points. An unsuccessful challenge gave Lin his final point.

"I was ready for this competition," Lin said. "I am 27 years old and I am going to the Olympics for the first time. I was there in Nursultan but failed to qualify so this was my chance."

Lin has come a long way, considering that at the 2014 World Championships, he finished 22nd at 74kg -- the weight class in which Takatani won the silver medal.

In Sunday's final, Lin will face Javrail SHAPIEV (UZB), who denied Kazakhstan a sixth Olympic place by defeating 2018 Asian bronze medalist Azamat DAULETBEKOV (KAZ) by fall at the buzzer while leading 5-2.

"The Uzbek team qualified a lot here because we have good trainers and the federation helps a lot," Shapiev said. "You can see this in the results today."

Uzbekistan secured its first Olympic spot at 57kg, when Gulomjon ABDULLAEV (UZB) defeated Bekbolot MYRZANAZAR UULU (KGZ)  8-4 in the semifinals. Opposing him in the final will be Minghu LIU (CHN), a 6-3 winner over Muhammad IKROMOV (TJK).

Japan had one final chance to secure a berth in an unlikely weight class when Tetsuya TANAKA (JPN) made it to the semifinals at 130kg. But his Olympic hopes were dashed when he was overpowered by Lkhagvagerel MUNKHTUR (MGL), who scored six of his points in a 9-0 victory on stepouts.

Yusup BATIRMURZAEV (KAZ) grabbed the other Olympic berth at 130kg with a 2-0 win over Sumit SUMIT (IND). Both of his points came on stepouts.

Tanaka had been aiming to become the first Japanese wrestler in freestyle to qualify for the Olympics in the heaviest freestyle class since Tamon HONDA (JPN) made it to the Barcelona Games in 1992 at 130kg.

Rio Olympic silver medalist  Rei HIGUCHI (JPN) missed weight on Sunday at the Asian Olympic Qualifier. (Photo: Tony Rotundo)

Heavy heartbreak for Higuchi

One of the biggest shocks of the day occurred before the action started when Japan's Higuchi failed to make weight in his bid to return to the Olympics at 57kg.

"When we left the hotel for the weigh-in location in the morning, the mood was that we had some leeway," explained Shigeki NISHIGUCHI, the Japan Wrestling Federation general manager.

"After arriving at the weigh-ins, he was 250 grams over. He tried to lose the weight within the alloted 30 minutes, but came up 50 grams short. 'We regret that we didn't support him enough. We could have done more."

After winning the silver at Rio, Higuchi moved up to 61kg and remained at that weight class through 2017. The following year, he moved up to the Olympic weight of 65kg in an attempt to make the Tokyo Games. He won the 2018 world U-23 gold medal, but eventually failing to unseat world senior champion Takuto OTOGURO (JPN) on the team to Nursultan.

Having never been fully satisfied with his Olympic silver medal, and despite the fact that at one point his weight had ballooned up to 68 kilograms, Higuchi went on a crash diet with the aim of qualifying again at 57kg and going for the gold.

Subsisting on an all-vegetable diet, he dropped the weight, then gained the right to enter the Asian Olympic qualifying tournament by beating former world champion Yuki TAKAHASHI  (JPN) at the All-Japan Championships in December 2019. The year's postponement of both the Olympics and qualifying tournament did not work out in his favor.

"I took care of everything, including diet, exercise, and caloric intake," Higuchi said in a statement released by the federation. "I've done everything without compromise. But I didn't lose (the last 50 grams) in extreme conditions. It can't be helped. I have no choice but to accept reality. This is the result, it cannot be overturned. I want to engrave it in my heart."

Freestyle

Semifinal Results

57kg
Gulomjon ABDULLAEV (UZB) df. Bekbolot MYRZANAZAR UULU (KGZ), 8-4
Minghu LIU (CHN) df. Muhammad IKROMOV (TJK), 6-3

65kg
Amir Mohammad YAZDANI (IRI) df. Haji ALI (BRN) by TF, 10-0, 5:21
Ernazar AKMATALIEV (KGZ) df. Ilyas BEKBULATOV (UZB) by Fall, 2:52 (4-8)

74kg
Bekzod ABDURAKHMONOV (UZB) df. Elaman DOGDURBEK UULU (KGZ), 4-2
Yones EMAMICHOGHAEI (IRI) df. Sandeep MANN (INDIA) by TF, 10-0, 3:46

86kg
Zushen LIN (CHN) df. Sohsuke TAKATANI (JPN), 8-7
Javrail SHAPIEV (UZB) df. Azamat DAULETBEKOV (KAZ) by Fall, 6:00 (5-2)

97kg
Magomed IBRAGIMOV (UZB) df. Symbat SULAIMANOV (KGZ) by TF, 11-1, 3:59
Mohammadhossein MOHAMMADIAN (IRI) df. Satywart KADIAN (IND) by TF, 10-0, :30

125kg
Yusup BATIRMURZAEV (KAZ) df. Sumit SUMIT (IND), 2-0
Lkhagvagerel MUNKHTUR (MGL) df. Tetsuya TANAKA (JPN), 9-0