It was this style of coaching that formed never-ending relationships with his students. After Yargiun set the tone, another of Mindashvili's student Buvaysar Saitiev followed it. He won the gold medal at the Olympic Games three times. To name a few more, Olympic champion Sagid Murtazaliev, Olympic medalists Sergey Karamchakov and Adam Barakhoev, two-time world champions Viktor Lebedev and Viktor Alekseev all came the Mindashvili school of wrestling.
His contribution have not gone unnoticed. There is a famous picture of him with many laurels on his blazer and medals around his neck.
One of those pins is the title of Hero of Labor of the Russian Federation for special labor services to the state and people. He was also named the 'coach of the 20th century.'
“Dmitry Georgievich has brought up dozens of outstanding athletes: among his students are prize-winners of the most prestigious world championships, including the Olympic Games. He teaches athletes not only to fight and win, but also to be worthy people, honest, noble, always ready to help,” Vladimir Putin, president of Russia, had said in his speech in 2020.
Perhaps it his coaching that helped Yargiun retire before the 1980 Olympics to make way for younger wrestlers in the team. He would later coach the USSR team for 10 years starting 1982.
A couple of years after the Soviet Union fell, Yargiun was appointed the president of the national wrestling federation. During those testing times, he rose to the occasion and led the federation with authority and clarity.
"All my life, Ivan and I were together with Dmitry Georgievich, and he is a unique person, an excellent organizer. He has the ability to captivate all the guys, possesses a mentoring talent, and first of all he is not a coach, but a teacher," Natalya Yarygina, the former vice-president of the FSBR, first.
It was Mindashvili's mantras of success that he had instilled in his wrestlers that made him stand apart as a coach. In making Russia the wrestling powerhouse it is now, Mindashvili played a huge role. He was appointed the coach of the senior USSR national team in 1970 and he attended all Olympic Games till 2008.
“He had a way of thinking ahead of everyone else,” Alekseev said. “His intiutions were always right and he had a way with people that made him successful. He would always get along with everyone.”
Three-time Olympic winner in Greco-Roman Alexander Karelin agrees.
"Dmitry Georgievich was always happy with strong people and was devoted to wrestling, the personification of wrestling friendship. If kindness can be persistent, this is about him," he said.
Ask anyone who has been to the Mindiashvili Wrestling Academy, the coach will always show up for training. He did this until the last couple of years when his health began deteriorating.
Unfortunately, he won't be around when the Ivan Yargiun Grand Prix, a tournament he made famous even when wrestling in Russia was dominated by the Caucasus region, begins Thursday in Krasnoyarsk. But the wrestlers and organizers will pay tribute to a coach who was proud of his work and his wrestling.
“When I will close my eyes for the last time, even God will have no reason to reproach me for something, some dishonest behaviour. Our wrestling is honest,” he had said.
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