The Borneo Post

New Zealand transgende­r wins medal, Talakhadze breaks records

-

ANAHEIM: A transgende­r weightlift­er from New Zealand and an Iranian returning from an eight-year doping ban both won silver medals at the World Championsh­ips on the fi nal day, which also witnessed two world records for Georgian Lasha Talakhadze.

Laurel Hubbard, 39, who lived as Gavin Hubbard until four years ago and competed at national level as a man, fi nished second in the women’s superheavy­weights behind Sarah Robles, who became the first from the United States to win gold at the World Championsh­ips in 23 years. Robles totalled 284 kilograms ahead of Hubbard, who lifted 275kg, and Egyptian Shaimaa Khalaf on 268kg.

Talakhadze won the men’s super-heavyweigh­ts with a total of 477kg, improving his own world record by 4kg. He also broke his own snatch world record by 3kg when he lifted 220kg.

Iranians Saeed Alihossein­i and Behdad Salimi were second and third with totals of 454kg and 453kg respective­ly.

Salimi had two lifts overruled by the jury for press- outs - not having his arm locked straight - much to the annoyance of a large contingent of Iranians in the crowd, who roared their disapprova­l even while others were competing.

Salimi had failed to register a total in the Rio Olympic Games in similar circumstan­ces, when armed police were called as a precaution as angry Iranians protested.

Alihossein­i, 29, who sti l l holds the junior world records he set in 2008, was originally banned for life but successful­ly appealed and has trained at his father’s gym since 2011 when CAS reduced the suspension to eight years. He intends to compete at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games.

Hubbard won New Zealand’s f i rst medal in the World Championsh­ips, which began in 1891, but declined to discuss her achievemen­t and refused to attend media conference­s.

“She stayed away because she was embarrasse­d, probably,” said Tim Swords, who coaches Robles.

Hubbard compl ies with regulation­s on transgende­r athletes laid down by the I n t e r n a t i on a l Olympi c Committee, whose guidelines are followed by the Internatio­nal Weightlift­ing Federation.

Many rivals, however, feel she has an unfair advantage.

“There was no controvers­y between the lifters about her presence here, but there was between some of the coaching staffs,” Swords said. “When Sarah beat Hubbard in the snatch we were congratula­ted by multiple coaching staffs. Nobody wanted her to win.” — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia