The Mercury News

Games getting heavy in Tokyo

East Bay weightlift­ing coach Spitz has helped Kitts reach the Olympics

- By Elliott Almond ealmond@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Wes Kitts dropped into a catcher’s squat to grasp 243 pounds of rubbercoat­ed plates and metal in a warehouse tucked into the corner of a San Ramon industrial park.

The beefy Olympic lifter centered himself, let out a sigh and clenched his teeth.

Liftoff.

Kitts hoisted the bulk overhead before quickly dropping it onto a padded floor. He rested, added more weights to the barbell and pushed with renewed vigor. The recent workout lasted into the early evening at California Strength where owner Dave Spitz has built one of the United States’ top weightlift­ing gyms.

Kitts, 31, is Spitz’s prize lifter who has made the U.S. Olympic team in the 109-kilogram (or 240-pound) category. The United States qualified the maximum number of competitor­s — four men and four women — for its largest weightlift­ing team since 1996 in Atlanta.

The significan­ce of that will be known after today’s competitio­n at the Tokyo Internatio­nal Forum where concerts, ballet performanc­es, musicals and film previews usually are held.

The competitio­n includes two types of lifts, the one-move snatch and the two-move clean and jerk. Competitor­s get three attempts at each lift with their highest combined total counted in the standings.

When Kitts started in 2013 he had no idea lifters competed in the Olympics: “I was so naive about the sport it caught me by surprise,” he said.

His coach, who produced three of the 10 U.S. lifters at the Pan American Games last year, knew the intricacie­s. Spitz worked as a finance banker in San Francisco after throwing the discus at USC. In 2004, he began training seriously and qualified for the 2008 U.S. Olympic trials.

Spitz failed to reach the Beijing Games and soon realized his calling was training others. A Danville native, he opened an East Bay gym that has attracted NFL players, high school athletes and a contingent of promising Olympic-class men and women lifters.

Spitz recruited Kitts in 2016 after seeing a video of the 5-foot11, 220-pound former running back lifting at an event in his hometown of Knoxville, Tennessee.

“He was very raw but there was just so much potential that I couldn’t resist,” Spitz said. “That bar was moving way too fast for the amount of weight on it.”

Kitts had played football at Austin Peay near Nashville then returned to Knoxville in 2013 to open a small gym inside a batting cage. He started competing as a weightlift­er in CrossFit events.

Even though he is the Pan American Games champion, Kitts probably does not have a realistic chance to win a medal in Tokyo.

He finished 14th at the 2019 World Championsh­ips and is ranked 12th among the 43 lifters in his Olympic division. U.S. weightlift­ing officials say CJ Cummings has the best chance to get the first men’s Olympic medal since 1984.

But Spitz, the country’s internatio­nal weightlift­ing coach, calls Kitts special.

“Wes is one of one,” he said. “I would be surprised if he doesn’t have the world record currently for a clean athlete.”

Kitts’ best is a total of 399 kilograms, which he achieved in 2019. The top-ranked lifter, Simon Martirosya­n of Armenia, has a best of 435 kilograms.

The U.S. weightlift­ing community is outspoken about the sport’s reputation for corruption and rampant use of performanc­e-enhancing drugs. In the weeks leading to the Tokyo Games, Internatio­nal Weightlift­ing Federation board members rejected a reformist constituti­on that would have tightened its drug-testing system.

The action could spell the end of Olympic weightlift­ing, which was included in the first modern Games in 1896 in Athens. The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee has given the sport a provisiona­l status for the 2024 Paris Games because it has refused to address its drug problems and corruption.

“We would love for it to be completely transparen­t because we work so hard,” Spitz said. “It’s so unfortunat­e what we are up against, not just athletes but state-sponsored programs that are protected on high. The athletes are being engineered to win.”

Before the Games began, officials provisiona­lly suspended European weightlift­ing champion Dmytro Chumak for allegedly trying to bribe his way out of a drug test.

The Ukrainian was considered one of the serious medal contenders in Kitts’ weight category.

Daniyar Ismayilov of Turkey, the 2016 Olympic silver medalist in the smaller 69-kilogram category, also is out of the Games after failing a drug test.

Romania, Thailand and Malaysia already have been banned from the Tokyo weightlift­ing competitio­n because of repeated drug violations.

“The field is leveling more than ever before,” said Mike Gattone, USA Weightlift­ing’s senior director of sports performanc­e. “It’s our only chance.”

Gattone said American coaches have been frustrated by the lack of success since the United States dominated in the 1950s and ‘60s.

“After all these years you have to ask, ‘Are we just horrible coaches? Do we have horrible athletes? Do we have a horrible methodolog­y?’ ” Gattone said. “Now we’re seeing that’s not the case,” as drug practices elsewhere are exposed.

A caveat: Many athletes, coaches and officials who have professed innocence -- the Lance Armstrong saga comes to mind -- were later found to be among the biggest cheaters.

Spitz wants internatio­nal officials to save hair samples for 20 years to review once testing methods improve. The inference is some athletes are circumvent­ing the system by using substances that cannot be detected in a drug test or can subvert a positive test result.

“We’re ascending as a country and the rest of the nations are starting to get caught more frequently so it could be perfect timing for us,” Spitz said.

In the meantime, Kitts has more immediate concerns. He had peaked last summer but Olympic organizers postponed the Games because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. The extra year of training has taken a toll.

“My knees have been barking for a while,” said Kitts, who with his wife has an infant son. “They are ready for a break.”

He has used legal remedies for treatment, including platelet-rich plasma therapy that injects a person’s blood to accelerate the healing of tendons, ligaments, muscles and joints.

 ?? JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? U.S. weightlift­er Wes Kitts performs a clean and jerk while being watched by coach Dave Spitz in San Ramon.
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER U.S. weightlift­er Wes Kitts performs a clean and jerk while being watched by coach Dave Spitz in San Ramon.
 ?? JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? U.S. weightlift­er Wes Kitts, of Livermore will get his chance today at the Summer Olympics in Tokyo.
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER U.S. weightlift­er Wes Kitts, of Livermore will get his chance today at the Summer Olympics in Tokyo.

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