#Trnava2018

Opiev Stuns World Champ Bey, Betschart and Mohamed Make History

By Eric Olanowski

TRNAVA, Slovakia (September 17)  – For most people, Monday is the worst day of the week, but not Russia’s Islam OPIEV (RUS). Opiev knocked off back-to-back Junior World finalist Kamal BEY (USA) to start his week and make his first-ever Junior World gold-medal bout. 

Opiev silenced the Mestská Sports Hall, dominating the bottom side of the 77kg bracket which included three of the four returning 74kg world medalists from Tampere 2017. His run to the finals included four wins, including the gold and silver medalists from last year’s junior world championships, Bey and Akzhol MAKHMUDOV (KGZ).

After locking up wins in his first two bouts, Opiev me returning Junior world runner-up and 2018 Asian champion, Makhmudov in the quarterfinals. He trailed 1-0 before earning a passivity point and holding on to win a slow 1-1 bout. 

The quarterfinal win stopped a potential finals rematch and put Opiev on a semifinal path to Bey. 

In that semifinal bout, Opiev squared off with Bey whose high-flying, aggressive style has made him one of the most-watched wrestlers in the world. 

The Russian wrestler was shutout in the opening period and trailed 1-0 heading into the final three minutes. In the second period, last year's 26th place finisher, Opiev outscored Bey 7-0 and won the bout 7-1, making his first-ever world finals.

Opiev will wrestle reigning Junior world bronze medalist Sajan SAJAN (IND) for the 77kg gold medal.

Sajan defeated Ukraine's Dmytro GARDUBEI (UKR) 4-1 in the semifinals to improve on his third-place finish from a year ago. Sajan is the lone Indian wrestler to make the finals after India put four wrestlers into the day one semifinals. 

Ramon BETSCHART (SUI) will wrestler Tuesday night for Switzerland's first-ever Junior World medal. (Photo by Justin Hoch) 

Meanwhile, Ramon BETSCHART (SUI) not only became Switzerland's first-ever junior world finalist, but he became Switzerland's first-ever junior world medalist. Before Betschart's semifinal win, Switzerland's highest Greco-Roman finish came from Thomas ROETHISBERGER (SUI) at the 1992 World Championships when he finished in fourth place. 

Betschart historic run to the finals included a technical superiority win over Ardo PAJUR (EST), a 5-5 criteria win over Maimaiti KAISAIER (CHN), and a 5-3 semifinals victory over Nazarshah FATULLAYEV (AZE). 

The Swiss wrestler will take on the 2018 Asian Junior champion Mohammadhadi SARAVI (IRI) in tomorrow night's 87kg gold-medal bout. 

Joining Betschart in the history hunt will be Egypt's Hassan MOHAMED (EGY), who will also be wrestling for his countries first-ever Junior World gold medal. Egypt has had three wrestlers who previously made it as far as Mohamed, but each has fallen in the Junior world gold-medal bout.

Tomorrow night, Mohamed, the 2017 Junior world bronze medalist will try to change history when he competes against Kyrgyzstan's 2016 Cadet world bronze medalist Erbol BAKIROV in the 63kg finals match. 

The day two Greco-Roman finals begin at 18:00 (local time). 

*Please note that the start time for Tuesday, September 18 has been updated. The new start time is 9:30 AM and not 10:30 AM as originally released. 

RESULTS
55kg
GOLD - Pouya NASERPOUR (IRI) vs. Tigran MINASYAN (ARM)

Semifinals - Pouya NASERPOUR (IRI) df. Nurtazin KERIMBERDI UULU (KGZ), 7-1 
Semifinals - Tigran MINASYAN (ARM) df. Vijay VIJAY (IND), 8-0.

63kg
GOLD - Erbol BAKIROV (KGZ) vs. Hassan MOHAMED (EGY)

Semifinals - Erbol BAKIROV (KGZ) df. Azamat KAIROV (RUS), via fall 
Semifinals - Hassan Hassan MOHAMED (EGY) df. Sagar SAGAR (IND), 5-3 

77kg
GOLD - Islam OPIEV (RUS) vs. Sajan SAJAN (IND) 

Semifinals - Islam OPIEV (RUS) df. Kamal BEY (USA), 7-1 
Semifinals - Sajan SAJAN (IND) df. Dmytro GARDUBEI (UKR), 4-1 

87kg 
GOLD -  Mohammadhadi SARAVI (IRI) vs. Ramon Rainer BETSCHART (SUI)

Semifinals - Mohammadhadi SARAVI (IRI) df. Ilia ERMOLENKO (RUS), 3-1 
Semifinals - Ramon BETSCHART (SUI) df. Nazarshah FATULLAYEV (AZE), 5-3 

130kg 
GOLD - David OVASAPYAN (ARM) vs. Amin MIRZAZADEH (IRI)

Semifinals - David OVASAPYAN (ARM) df. Cohlton Michael SCHULTZ (USA), 2-1 
Semifinals - Amin MIRZAZADEH (IRI) df. Beka MAKARIDZE (GEO), 9-0 

#wrestlebishkek

Asian Championships 2026 Day 1 Greco-Roman Highlights

By Ken Marantz & Vinay Siwach

BISHKEK, Kyrgyzstan (April 6) -- For the first time, the Asian Championships will be held in two-day format. The edition in Bishkek will begin with Greco-Roman, followed by Women's Wrestling and then Freestyle. Five Greco-Roman weight classes -- 55kg, 63kg, 77kg, 87kg and 130kg -- are in action on Monday.

WATCH LIVE | LIVE MATCH ORDER | ASIAN CHAMPIONSHIPS PREVIEW

The semifinals will begin at 18:00 local time

55kg
SF 1: Huoying SHI (CHN) vs. LALIT (IND)
SF 2: Ikhtiyor BOTIROV (UZB) vs. Ulan MURATBEK UULU (KGZ)

63kg
SF 1: Azatjan ACHILOV (TKM) vs. Aftandil TAALAIBEK UULU (KGZ)
SF 2: Erfan JARKANI (IRI) vs. Islomjon BAKHRAMOV (UZB)

77kg
SF 1: Ali OSKOU (IRI) vs. AMAN (IND)
SF 2: Doniyorkhon NAKIBOV (UZB) vs. Akzhol MAKHMUDOV (KGZ)

87kg
SF 1: Asan ZHANYSHOV (KGZ) vs. Nursultan TURSYNOV (KAZ)
SF 2: Sunil KUMAR (IND) vs. Gholamreza FAROKHI (IRI)

130kg
SF 1: Amin MIRZAZADEH (IRI) vs. Minseok KIM (KOR)
SF 2: Yuta NARA (JPN) vs. Rafael TSITSUASHVILI (UZB)

13:10: World champion Amin MIRZAZADEH (IRI) begins his Asian title defense with a 10-0 win over Roman KIM (KGZ) and advance to the semifinals. He will face Minseok KIM (KOR)

13:03: Returning bronze medalist Yuta NARA (JPN) gets the winning score with a slow-motion gut wrench in the second period, prevailing on last-point criteria 3-3 over two-time Asian U23 silver medalist Jokhar UZAROV (KAZ) to advance to the 130kg semifinals.

12:58: Gholamreza FAROKHI (IRI) gets a gut wrench to the back upgraded to a 4-point move upon his opponent's challenge, giving him a 10-0 victory over two-time bronze medalist Mukhammadkodir RASULOV (UZB) and moving him a step closer to a second straight gold, this time up at 87kg after winning at 82kg last year.

12:57: World bronze medalist Asan ZHANYSHOV (KGZ) with some big throws and a fall against Dovletmyrat BAYRAMOV (TKM) at 87kg in just 30 seconds. Zhanyshov vs Gholamreza FAROKHI (IRI) final will be a treat.

12:50: Sunil KUMAR (IND), the last Indian to win a Greco gold when he did on home soil in New Dehli in 2020, reeled off two gut wrenches from par terre in the second period for a 5-1 victory over Shichang ZHENG (CHN) and a place in the 87kg semifinals. Kumar is also going for his fourth career Asian medal.

12:42: Kaisei TANABE (JPN), last year's champion at freestyle 65kg looking to make history with a victory at Greco 63kg, minimized the points scored by Aftandil TAALAIBEK UULU (KGZ), but failed to get enough of his own and came out on the short end of a 4-3 score. Taalaibek Uulu had the first chance in par terre, but even though he lifted Tanabe off his feet, he could only get a 1-point throw out of it. Taalaibek Uulu then got in on a bear hug and lifted Tanabe again, but only got a takedown out of that situation to lead 4-0 at the break. Tanabe got a chance at par terre and hit a gut wrench to cut the gap to 1, but could not pull out the win.

12:32: Ikhtiyor BOTIROV (UZB), aiming to improve on his two bronze medals from 2023 and 2025, rips off four straight rolls from par terre and he's into the 55kg semifinals with a 10-0 win over Hajiali HOSSEINVAND (IRI). The Iranian side pushed the challenge button before the first roll, looking for a leg foul, but the scoring was upheld.

12:25: Doniyorkhon NAKIBOV (UZB), a bronze medalist in 2024, makes short work of Amro SADEH (JOR), storming to a quick 9-0 win to earn a semifinal date with Makhmudov.

12:23: There cannot be a better way to find a way to win a Greco-Roman bout that a five-point throw! AMAN (IND) does exactly that in his quarterfinal against Halishan BAHEJIANG (CHN) at 77kg. Aman was down 4-1 but got on a duckunder and locked Bahejiang and completes a perfect throw for five points and wins 6-4

12:20: Ali OSKOU (IRI), Zagreb Open Ranking Series champion at 77kg, defends from par terre twice, against Yeonghun NOH (KOR) and he does that well, once with 25 seconds remaining to win 5-2 and advance to the semifinals.

12:18: Akzhol MAKHMUDOV (KGZ) with another spectacular throw as he defeats Kaharman KISSYMETOV (KAZ) 9-1 to gain a place in the semifinals. Makhmudov is put on the bottom of par terre, but wiggles his way out and gets behind for a takedown. Then the fun starts, as he hits a high-flying 4-point throw to lead 6-1. In the second period, Makhmudov gets the top position, and he quickly executes a gut wrench that ends the proceedings.

12:10: Roman KIM (KGZ) gets the home crowd going, getting four straight rolls from par terre to knock off Nambardagva BATBAYAR (MGL) 9-0 at 130kg. Batbayar is one of a few wrestlers who will be doing the Greco-Freestyle double in Bishkek — he's the Asian U23 champion in freestyle!

12:08: Gholamreza FAROKHI (IRI), the reigning world champion at 82kg, has moved up to the Olympic weight of 87kg and gets off to a good start, overwhelming Muhammad SULTONZODA (TJK) 9-0 in less than two minutes.

12:05: Hyunwoong CHOI (KOR) survives a battle against Huangsheng WU (CHN) at 63kg. He was leading 11-6 when Wu scored a huge four-pointer with 11 seconds remaining to make it 11-10. But the last desperate attempt ended with Choi getting two points and a 13-10 win

12:02: Islomjon BAKHRAMOV (UZB), an Asian champion in 2019 and world bronze medalist in 2023, is looking to regain the magic up a weight at 63kg. He cruises through his opening match, handily defeating  Rayan HAWSAWI (KSA) 8-0.

11:51: Hajiali HOSSEINVAND (IRI), winner at the Zagreb Ranking Series tournament, advances at 55kg with a 4-0 victory over Nurzat KABDYRAKHIMOV (KAZ). Hosseinvand chalks up three points in the first period, then adds a stepout in the second.

11:41: Local star Akzhol MAKHMUDOV (KGZ) gets the tournament off to an exciting start with a 4-point bear hug en route to a 7-3 victory over a spunky Isami HORIKITA (JPN) in the opening match at 77kg. Makhmudov, a two-time Olympic medalist and two-time world champion aiming for his fourth career Asian gold, used a bear hug to power Horikita to the mat, then added a 2-point roll for 6-1 lead. In the second period, Makhmudov got the passivity point, but when he tried a gut wrench from par terre, Horikita stepped over for a 2-point exposure. But that was the end of the scoring and Makhmudov was safely through. 

11:15: The Asian Championships will get underway in Bishkek with Greco-Roman. Five weight classes with local hero Akzhol MAKHMUDOV (KGZ) in action as well.