#WrestleTunis

World champ Maroulis suffers shock loss at Zouhaier Sghaier

By Vinay Siwach

TUNIS, Tunisia (July 15) -- Helen MAROULIS (USA) was closing in on a routine win. She was 7-2 against Elvira KAMALOGLU (TUR) and had 45 seconds to defend to make the 57kg final.

But Maroulis got hit with a single leg as Kamaloglu built up momentum. Dragging Maroulis to the zone, Kamaloglu scored a takedown and turned the world champion on her back before securing a fall. The U23 European champion celebrated the win, making the final over the Olympic bronze medalist and in a convincing manner.

A gold would have been a cherry on the cake but Kamaloglu could not finish the day on a high as Giullia DE OLIVEIRA (BRA) kept her quiet before securing a fall with two seconds left in the bout.

Kamaloglu led 1-0 at the break as De Oliveira was called passive in the first period. But the Brazil wrestler got the criteria lead 1-1 after Kamaloglu was called for inactivity. With just 30 seconds left on the clock, the Turkey wrestler got on a one-on-one but De Oliveira tossed with her leg and secured the fall.

Tamyra MENSAH STOCK (USA)Tamyra MENSAH STOCK (USA) dominated her way to 68kg gold in Tunis. (Photo: UWW / Bayrem Ben Mrad)

The USA did win two gold medals in women's wrestling as four weight classes were contested on day two of the Zouhaier Sghaier Ranking Series in the Tunisian capital.

Olympic champion Tamyra MENSAH STOCK (USA) and Yelena MAKOYED (USA) came home with the gold medals at 68kg and 76kg respectively. The fourth gold went to Luisa NIEMESCH (GER) at 62kg.

Mensah Stock was making a comeback since the shock loss at the Oslo World Championships. But on Friday it seemed that she was never on a break, winning her three bouts with technical superiority. Silver went to Nisha DAHIYA (IND) who lost only to Mensah Stock while dominating her other bouts.

Makoyed, who had stunned everyone by winning the gold at Matteo Pellicone last month, had to work hard for her gold medal at 76kg as she was up against the USA World team member Dymond GUILFORD (USA).

The two had met in a Round 2 bout which Guilford won 7-6. Both then qualified for the final and it looked like Guilford will once again come out on top but a late takedown turned the bout in favor of Makoyed who won 5-2.

Makoyed broke the deadlock with a stepout despite Guilford getting on a single leg. But she was then called passive and Guilford led 1-1 at the break. In the second period, Guilford was called passive but as soon as the activity period ended, she scored a stepout to maintain the criteria lead of 2-2.

But with 22 seconds remaining, Makoyed managed to takedown Guilford and score the all-important two points. A lost challenge added the final point.

Guilford would rue the missed chances to score a takedown especially when she got behind Makoyed early in the bout but instead of putting her on the mat, she turned and scored a stepout.

For Makoyed, the win meant that she has now finished at the top of the podium in the three international tournaments she has been part of. Last year, she won the U20 Pan-Am Championships before the Matteo Pellicone high two weeks back.

World bronze medalist Samar HAMZA (EGY) won the bronze medal after beating Francy RAEDELT (GER) 3-1.

At 62kg, Niemesch defeated Lais NUNES (BRA) 4-2 in Round 2 and followed that up with a 4-2 win over Sakshi MALIK (IND) to win the gold. Nunes had earlier pinned Malik which proved crucial as she secured the silver.

Tunisian star Marwa AMRI was also entered in the draw but she did not take the mat and all her bouts were forfeited.

Emrah KUS (TUR)Emrah KUS (TUR) won the 82kg gold for Turkey. (Photo: UWW / Bayrem Ben Mrad)

Turkey wins 2 GR gold

The three remaining Greco-Roman weight classes were also in action on Friday and Turkey added two more golds to the three it won on Thursday.

Murat DAG (TUR) won the gold at 72kg while Emrah KUS (TUR) sneaked through to win the gold at 82kg based on classification points.

Dag faced Radhwen TARHOUNI (TUN) in Round 3 and in a tense bout, he came out on top 4-0. He was awarded a stepout before Tarhouni was called passive which made Dag's lead 2-0. He then got a turn from par terre to make it 4-0 and maintained that lead for the win.

At 82kg, Kus had lost a bout to Lamjed MAAFI (TUN) while Harpreet SINGH (IND) came into the third round with two wins under his belt. A win for Kus would tie him with Singh with two wins each.

He led 1-0 when Singh was called passive and then a front chest wrap got him four points to make it 6-0. A takedown then confirmed his 8-0 win and the gold. Since Singh and Kus were the only wrestlers with two wins each, the gold went to Kus due to the head-to-head win.

At 77kg, Aik MNATSAKANIAN (BUL) first defeated Furkan BAYRAK (TUR) 6-1 in the morning session and later dominated Belhasan AZAOUZI (TUN) in an 8-0 win.

The remaining six women's and two freestyle weight categories will be in action Saturday.

Day 2 Results

Greco-Roman

72kg
Round 3: Murat DAG (TUR) df. Radhwen TARHOUNI (TUN), 4-0

Final standings
GOLD: Murat DAG (TUR)
SILVER: Kenedy PEDROSA (BRA)
BRONZE: Radhwen TARHOUNI (TUN)

77kg
Round 3: Aik MNATSAKANIAN (BUL) df. Belhasan AZAOUZI (TUN), 8-0
Round 3: Furkan BAYRAK (TUR) df. Joilson DE BRITO (BRA), 8-0

Final standings
GOLD: Aik MNATSAKANIAN (BUL)
SILVER: Furkan BAYRAK (TUR)
BRONZE: Joilson DE BRITO (BRA)

82kg
Round 3: Emrah KUS (TUR) df. Harpreet SINGH (IND), 8-0 
Round 3: SAJAN (IND) df. Lamjed MAAFI (TUN), via fall

Final standings
GOLD: Emrah KUS (TUR)
SILVER: Harpreet SINGH (IND)
BRONZE: SAJAN (IND)

Women's Wrestling

57kg
GOLD: Giullia DE OLIVEIRA (BRA) df. Elvira KAMALOGLU (TUR), via fall 

BRONZE: Mansi AHLAWAT (IND) df. Helen MAROULIS (USA), via injury default

62kg
Round 3: Lais NUNES (BRA) df. Marwa AMRI (TUN), via forfeit
Round 3: Luisa NIEMESCH (GER) df. Sakshi MALIK (IND), 5-2 

Final standings
GOLD: Luisa NIEMESCH (GER)
SILVER: Lais NUNES (BRA)
BRONZE: Sakshi MALIK (IND)

68kg
Round 3: Nisha DAHIYA (IND) df. Ranim SAIDI (TUN), 10-0
Round 3: Tamyra MENSAH STOCK (USA) df. Grabriela DA ROCHA (BRA), 10-0

Final standings
GOLD: Tamyra MENSAH STOCK (USA)
SILVER: Nisha DAHIYA (IND)
BRONZE: Grabriela DA ROCHA (BRA)

76kg
GOLD: Yelena MAKOYED (USA) df. Dymond GUILFORD (USA), 5-2

BRONZE: Samar HAMZA (EGY) df. Francy RAEDELT (GER), 3-1 

#WrestleParis

Paris 2024: Lopez secures unprecedented place in Olympic history

By Ken Marantz

PARIS (August 6) -- Mijain LOPEZ (CUB) now has a place in a pantheon on his own.

In the 128-year history of the Summer Olympics, no athlete had ever won five gold medals in the same event in any sport. Until Tuesday, when Lopez accomplished the feat at the Paris Olympics with a dominant performance at Greco 130kg.

The 41-year-old Lopez defeated Cuban-born and former training partner Yasmani ACOSTA (CHI) 6-0 in the final before a packed crowd at the Champs de Mars Arena that included International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach.

“I'm happy, it has been an important achievement in my life, in my career," Lopez said. "It has also been an achievement of all my coaching team, my mom, my dad, my family in general, that have been helping me in every single one of my tasks in the sport. And what better celebration than to have achieved this gold medal.”

In other finals, Kenichiro FUMITA (JPN) captured the Greco 60kg that eluded him at his home Olympics three years ago, while rising star Amit ELOR (USA) triumphed at women's 68kg to become the second wrestler to add an Olympic gold to world titles on all four age-group levels.

After a delay for Bach to be seated and the arena in an expectant buzz, Lopez started the featured match of the tournament by scoring a 2-point roll off par terre in the first period against Acosta, who had made history himself by giving Chile its first-ever Olympic wrestling medal.

Lopez added a takedown in the second period to clinch the victory in his first competition since winning the gold three years ago in Tokyo.

There will be no sixth gold. After slamming his coach to the mat in celebration and acknowledging the cheers of the adoring crowd, Lopez took off his wrestling shoes and left them in the middle of the mat, the universal sign of a wrestler's decision to end his career.

"It's a moment to demonstrate that someone has retired officially from the sport of wrestling and that also leaves a path wide open for the younger generation to continue inspiring others," said Lopez, who dedicated the victory to his late father.

Coming into Paris, Lopez had been one of six athletes who had won four golds in the same event along with fellow wrestler Kaori ICHO (JPN), sailing's Paul ELVSTROM (DEN), athletics' Al OERTER (USA) and Carl LEWIS (USA), and swimming's Michael PHELPS (USA). Swimmer Katie LEDECKY (USA) and shooting's Vincent HANCOCK (USA) joined the group in Paris.

Amazingly, Lopez was appearing in his sixth Olympics, having finished fifth in his debut at the 2004 Athens Games. He was also a five-time world champion and three-time silver medalist dating back to his first title in 2005. His last defeat came in the final of the 2015 World Championships to rival Riza KAYAALP (TUR).

Reflecting on his remarkable career, Lopez commented, "To achieve all of these results, one has to love their sport, love their job, and demonstrate to the world that with so little you can achieve great things."

Asked to describe each gold medal in one word, he replied: "Beijing: youth. London: transcendence. Rio: effort. Tokyo: sacrifice. Paris: joy."

Before Lopez made history, Fumita won the Greco 60kg gold that had been an obsession since that tearful day at the Tokyo Olympics, when he lost in the final to Luis ORTA (CUB).

Fumita put together a masterful match, scoring from par terre in the first period and keeping Liguo CAO (CHN) at bay throughout to notch a 4-1 victory and end a 40-year drought for Japan in Greco at the Olympics.

"The number one thing that clearly comes to my mind now is the final from three years ago," Fumita said. "[The three years] was a difficult period that I had never experienced before. But there were also good times in there as well. In total, there were more plusses, which is why I could win the title today."

In the intervening years, the 28-year-old Fumita, a former two-time world champion, got married and became a father. He also lost in the final at last year's World Championships in Belgrade to Zholaman SHARSHENBEKOV (KGZ), a loss that gave him a new perspective on his career -- and which he avenged in the semifinals in Paris on Monday.

He said he was motivated by his family and a large group of supporters who made the trip to Paris. "If it wasn't for my family, I might not have tried again [for the Olympics]," he said. "All the people who have helped me along the way have made this special."

As for becoming Japan's first Greco champion since Atsuji MIYAHARA (JPN) won the 52kg gold at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics, Fumita responded, "It's something to accomplish a feat for the first time in 40 years. But honestly speaking, my bigger feeling is of disappointment that we haven't won for 40 years. I hope that Japan Greco makes great progress in the next 40 years."

Fumita had previously won world titles in 2017 and 2019 before winning a bronze in 2022 and a silver last year. Including his Tokyo silver, none will ever compare with the gold he just won.

"I don't know how many grams its weighs, but it's heavier than any medal I've won up to now," he said. "But it's not just its actual weight. The long time I have aimed at getting it, all of the emotions that went into it, I feel [the weight of it] all hanging from my neck."

In the final match of the night, two-time world 72kg champion Elor put up a wall of defense that Tokyo bronze medalist Meerim ZHUMANAZAROVA (KGZ) was unable to penetrate in a 3-0 victory in the women's 68kg final.

"It was one of the best moments in my life," Elor said. "And when I experience something like that, it just reminds me that everything is worth it. All the hard days the grind, it's all worth it for moments like these."

The 20-year-old Elor, who cut weight for the first time in her life to make her first Olympics, scored the lone technical points of the match with a takedown off a counter, then added an activity point as she kept the 2021 world champion at bay with an underhook that thwarted any tackle attempts.

"I actually wrestled her a few times in international training camps when I was younger," Elor said of the 24-year-old Zhumananarova. "She's a little bit older than me, so those were pretty tough bouts. I know she is an extremely solid, strong wrestler, so my mindset going into the match was to be patient, stay in good position, and to trust in my style of wrestling and in my skills."

With the Olympic gold, Elor joins Yui SUSAKI (JPN) as the only wrestlers who have completed the "Golden Grand Slam" of titles, having previously won the world cadet (U17) in 2021 and the world U20, U23 and senior titles in 2022.

"I think the number one thing that's helped me develop mentally has been experience," Elor said. "For the past two years, I've done three world championships in one summer. Those experiences have not only helped me stay focused and solid under pressure, they've also helped me improve as a wrestler and as a person."

Elor became the third American woman to win Olympic gold after Helen MAROULIS (USA) at Rio 2016 and Tamyra MENSAH-STOCK (USA) last year in Tokyo, while preventing Zhumanazarova from becoming Kyrgyzstan's first Olympic gold medalist in any sport.

Elor already has an added incentive to defend her title in 2028. "Other than becoming an Olympic champion, my biggest dream of all time is to go to the 2028 Olympics, because I'm from California.

"To have the opportunity to compete and represent not only my country, but my state, and to compete in my own state, is incredible. I have been excited about that ever since I heard about it."

Sharshenbekov, Mirzazadeh, Ozaki take home bronzes

Sharshenbekov added an Olympic bronze to his two world golds when he got the roll in par terre in the first period and defeated Mehdi MOHSEN NEJAD (IRI) 3-1 at Greco 60kg.

Sharshenbekov completed a gut wrench from par terre in the first period, then held his ground while on bottom in the second to close with a victory after seeing his streak of 10 consecutive tournament titles ended by Fumita in the semifinals.

In the other bronze-medal match at Greco 60kg, Raiber RODRIGUEZ (VEN) saw his bid to become Venezuela's first-ever Olympic medalist in wrestling end in just over a minute when he was soundly defeated by Se Ung RI (PRK) 10-0.

Ri, a Youth Olympic champion back in 2014 who returned to global competition at the 2023 Asian Games and came home with a bronze medal, followed a takedown with three successive rolls to end the match in 1:11.

At Greco 130kg, reigning world champion Amin MIRZAZADEH (IRI) secured the bronze medal that he missed out on in Tokyo with a 4-0 win over Iranian-born Sabah SHARIATI (AZE), the 35-year-old who was looking to add to his bronze from the 2016 Rio Olympics.

Mirzazadeh went ahead 3-0 with a gut wrench from par terre in the first period, then picked up a fourth point by keeping the pressure on and receiving a second passivity point. Although he was unable to turn Shariati again, he was never in danger and went on become Iran's first-ever Olympic medalist in the heaviest Greco weight.

Shariati, who suffered a gash over his right eye that had to be bandaged during the match, got a ride on the shoulders of Mirzazadeh after the match as a sign of respect. Shariati then left his shoes on the mat.

Lingzhe MENG (CHN) won the other 130kg bronze, scoring two takedowns in the second period to defeat Abdellitif MOHAMED (EGY) 5-2 and avenge a loss to the Egyptian in the bronze-medal match at last year's World Championships.

At women's 68kg, world champion Buse TOSUN (TUR) finally managed to finish off a takedown and it came at the buzzer to defeat teenager Sol Gum PAK (PRK) 4-2.

Tosun had two stepouts sandwiched around Pak's second-period takedown to trail on criteria 2-2. But with the seconds ticking down, she fought off Pak's whizzer and got behind just as time ran out, denying Pak's bid to become the first-ever women's Olympic medalist for DPR Korea.

Nonoka OZAKI (JPN) assured she would have something to show for her ordeal of moving up two weight classes to be in Paris by defeating Tokyo silver medalist Blessing OBORUDUDU (NGR) 3-0 for the other women's 68kg bronze.

Ozaki scored with a sweeping single that sent Oborududu directly to her back in the first period. She added an activity point in the second and never allowed Oborududu an opening.

Ozaki was the 2022 world 62kg champion who missed out on Japan's Olympic spot in that weight class. After a stop at 65kg last year to add a second world title, she secured her ticket to Paris at 68kg with a last-second victory over Ami ISHII (JPN) in a domestic playoff.

Despite winning the gold at the Asian Championships in April in her international debut at 68kg, she struggled in Paris against the naturally heavier opponents and saw her gold-medal hopes end with a late loss to Zhumanazarova in the quarterfinals.

Day 2 Results

Greco-Roman

60kg
GOLD: Kenichiro FUMITA (JPN) df. Liguo CAO (CHN), 4-1

BRONZE: Zholaman SHARSHENBEKOV (KGZ) df. Mehdi MOHSEN NEJAD (IRI), 3-1
BRONZE: Se Ung RI (PRK) df. Raiber RODRIGUEZ (VEN) by TF, 8-0, 1:11

77kg
SF 1: Nao KUSAKA (JPN) df. Malkhas AMOYAN (ARM), 3-1
SF 2: Demeu ZHADRAYEV (KAZ) df. Sanan SULEYMANOV (AZE), 6-1

97kg
SF 1: Artur ALEKSANYAN df. Gabriel ROSILLO (CUB), 5-3
SF 2: Mohammadhadi SARAVI (IRI) df. Mohamad GABR (EGY), 6-0

130kg
GOLD: Mijain LOPEZ (CUB) df. Yasmani ACOSTA (CHI), 6-0

BRONZE: Amin MIRZAZADEH (IRI) df. Sabah SHARIATI (AZE), 4-0
BRONZE: Lingzhe MENG (CHN) df. Abdellitif MOHAMED (EGY), 5-2

Women's Wrestling

50kg
SF 1: Vinesh PHOGAT (IND) df. Yusneylis GUZMAN (CUB), 5-0
SF 2: Sarah HILDEBRANDT (USA) df. Otgonjargal DOLGORJAV (MGL), 5-0

68kg
GOLD -- Amit ELOR (USA) df. Meerim ZHUMANAZAROVA (KGZ), 3-0

BRONZE -- Buse TOSUN (TUR) df. Sol Gum PAK (PRK), 4-2
BRONZE -- Nonoka OZAKI (JPN) df. Blessing OBORUDUDU (NGR), 3-0