Ruslan Nurudinov
- Snatch: 194 kg (2016)
- Clean & jerk: 241 kg (2021, CWR)
- Total: 432 kg (2014)
Representing Uzbekistan | ||
---|---|---|
Olympic Games | ||
2016 Rio de Janeiro | – 105 kg | |
World Championships | ||
2013 Wrocław | 105 kg | |
2022 Bogotá | 109 kg | |
2014 Almaty | 105 kg | |
2021 Tashkent | 109 kg | |
2023 Riyadh | 109 kg | |
Asian Games | ||
2018 Jakarta | 105 kg | |
2022 Hangzhou | 109 kg | |
Asian Championships | ||
2012 Pyeongtaek | -105 kg | |
2013 Astana | -105 kg | |
2020 Tashkent | -109 kg | |
2023 Jinju | -109 kg | |
2024 Tashkent | -109 kg | |
Summer Universiade | ||
2013 Kazan | −105 kg |
Ruslan Nurudinov (Uzbek: Ruslan Shamil'evich Nurudinov; born 24 November 1991) is an Uzbekistani weightlifter of Tatar ethnic origin.[1][2] He is the first world champion for Uzbekistan in weightlifting (2013). Nurudinov won a gold medal at the 2016 Olympics, setting a new Olympic record in the clean and jerk at 237 kg.
Career
At the 2013 World Championships which held was in Poland, Nurudinov became the world champion for the first time, confidently winning the snatch (190 kg) and clean and jerk (235 kg). And in the double-event total he took a gold medal with a result of 425 kg.[3]
In 2014, at the World Championships held in Almaty, Nurudinov, in an uncompromising fight for first place with Kazakh and Russian weightlifters, broke the world record in the clean and jerk - 239 kg, then Russian David Bedzhanyan regained the highest world achievement - 240 kg, and finally, Kazakh Ilya Ilyin set the final world record in clean and jerk at 242 kg. As a result, the Uzbek athlete was first in the snatch (193 kg), third in the clean and jerk (239 kg) and took the second place in the combined event (432 kg).
At the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Nurudinov, in the absence of the disqualified Ilyin, won the snatch (194 kg), set an Olympic record in the clean and jerk (237 kg) and by a large margin won a gold medal with a combined total of 431 kg.
At the beginning of November 2018, at the World Championships in Ashgabat, an Uzbek athlete in the new weight category of up to 109 kg failed his performance in the snatch, failed to take the initial weight of 188 kg. But in the clean and jerk he managed to win a small bronze medal with a weight on the barbell of 227 kg. To get a big bronze medal in total, he only had to pull out a barbell weighing 177 kg.
Major results
Year | Venue | Weight | Snatch (kg) | Clean & Jerk (kg) | Total | Rank | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | Rank | 1 | 2 | 3 | Rank | |||||
Olympic Games | ||||||||||||
2012 | London, United Kingdom | 105 kg | 184 | 5 | 220 | 3 | 404 | DSQ | ||||
2016 | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | 105 kg | 190 | 194 | 2 | 225 | 230 | 237 OR | 1 | 431 | ||
World Championships | ||||||||||||
2010 | Antalya, Turkey | 85 kg | 165 | 7 | 197 | 10 | 362 | 10 | ||||
2011 | Paris, France | 94 kg | 177 | 8 | 215 | 221 | 398 | 5 | ||||
2013 | Wrocław, Poland | 105 kg | 190 | 225 | 230 | 235 | 425 | |||||
2014 | Almaty, Kazakhstan | 105 kg | 185 | 190 | 193 | 220 | 230 | 239 WR | 432 | |||
2018 | Ashgabat, Turkmenistan | 109 kg | -- | 222 | 227 | -- | -- | |||||
2021 | Tashkent, Uzbekistan | 109 kg | 185 | 227 | 236 | 421 | ||||||
2022 | Bogotá, Colombia | 109 kg | 177 | 217 | 220 | 397 | ||||||
2023 | Riyadh, Saudi Arabia | 109 kg | 175 | 180 | 4 | 221 | 227 | 407 | ||||
Asian Games | ||||||||||||
2010 | Guangzhou, China | 94 kg | 170 | 4 | 205 | 209 | 4 | 379 | 5 | |||
2018 | Jakarta, Indonesia | 105 kg | 183 | 187 | 191 | 1 | 222 | 230 | -- | 1 | 421 | |
2023 | Hangzhou, China | 109 kg | 175 | 4 | 216 | -- | -- | 3 | 391 | |||
Asian Championships | ||||||||||||
2011 | Tongling, China | 94 kg | 160 | 6 | 200 | 5 | 360 | 5 | ||||
2012 | Pyeongtaek, South Korea | 105 kg | 180 | 184 | 220 | 404 | ||||||
2013 | Astana, Kazakhstan | 105 kg | 185 | 190 | 220 | 230 | -- | 420 | ||||
2016 | Tashkent, Uzbekistan | +105 kg | 183 | 188 | 191 | 225 | 230 | 235 | 4 | 426 | 4 | |
2020 | Tashkent, Uzbekistan | 109 kg | 183 | 188 | 228 | 235 | 241 CWR | 429 | ||||
2023 | Jinju, South Korea | 109 kg | 170 | 175 | 177 | 213 | 221 | 228 | 405 | |||
2024 | Tashkent, Uzbekistan | 109 kg | 165 | 170 | 175 | 207 | -- | 382 | ||||
Summer Universiade | ||||||||||||
2013 | Kazan, Russia | 105 kg | 184 | 190 | 215 | 222 | -- | 412 |
References
External links
- Media related to Ruslan Nurudinov at Wikimedia Commons
- Ruslan Nurudinov at the International Weightlifting Federation
- Ruslan Nurudinov at the International Weightlifting Results Project
- Ruslan Nurudinov at Olympics.com
- Ruslan Nurudinov at Olympic.org (archived)
- Ruslan Nurudinov at Olympedia
- v
- t
- e
- 1920: Filippo Bottino (ITA)
- 1924: Giuseppe Tonani (ITA)
- 1928: Josef Straßberger (GER)
- 1932: Jaroslav Skobla (TCH)
- 1936: Josef Manger (GER)
- 1948: John Davis (USA)
- 1952: John Davis (USA)
- 1956: Paul Anderson (USA)
- 1960: Yury Vlasov (URS)
- 1964: Leonid Zhabotinsky (URS)
- 1968: Leonid Zhabotinsky (URS)
- 1972: Jaan Talts (URS)
- 1976: Yury Zaitsev (URS)
- 1980: Leonid Taranenko (URS)
- 1984: Norberto Oberburger (ITA)
- 1988: Yury Zakharevich (URS)
- 1992: Ronny Weller (GER)
- 1996: Timur Taymazov (UKR)
- 2000: Hossein Tavakkoli (IRI)
- 2004: Dmitry Berestov (RUS)
- 2008: Andrei Aramnau (BLR)
- 2012: Navab Nassirshalal (IRI)
- 2016: Ruslan Nurudinov (UZB)
- 2020: Akbar Djuraev (UZB)
- +82.5 kg (1920–1948)
- +90 kg (1952–1968)
- 110 kg (1972–1992)
- 108 kg (1996)
- 105 kg (2000–2016)
- 109 kg (2020)
- 102 kg (2024–)
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