ADVT:

  Home   Astrology   Business   Indiafocus   Lifestyle   Movies   News   Parenting   Online Exam   Sports   Travel
   Sports    Athletics    Cricket    Golf    Hockey    Soccer    Tennis    Others    Archives


Sports HomeOthers
Japan moves closer to Gold
Tuesday, August 19, 2008 12:07 [IST]

Beijing: Asian champion Tomohiro Matsunaga upset Russia's world champion Besik Kudukhov in the Freestyle 55kg semi-finals to move closer to winning Japan's first Olympic men's wrestling gold medal in two decades.

Matsunaga, only 26th at last years world championships, led the first period 3-0 and pinned the Russian for a fall in the second on the first day of the three-day six-division men s freestyle competition.

The Japanese was to battle for the gold with unfancied American Henry Cejudo who stunned 2006 world champion Radosiav Velikov of Bulgaria in overtime in the last 16 round on his way to the final.

"I don't have too many considerations to win the match," 28-year-old Matsunaga said. "I just tried my best to compete at the highest level and I concentrated on my defence."

Japan last won a men's Olympic wrestling gold through Mitsuru Sato in the freestyle 55kg at the 1988 Seoul Games.

In contrast, Japanese women wrestlers have collected two golds, one silver and one bronze here as they did in Athens when their sport made its Olympic debut.

Russian pride was saved by Olympic and world champion Maviet Batirov Tuesday as he reached the 60kg final.

Batirov, who won the world title after grabbing the 55kg gold medal at the Athens Olympics, needed three periods to overcome Athens 60kg winner Yandro Quintana of Cuba.

He went on to whip Iran's 2006 world champion Seyedmorad Mohammadi 2-0 in the semi-finals.

Batirov was to fight Ukraine's European champion Vasyl Fedoryshyn for the title.

Russia won five of the six world titles last year.

In the Greco-Roman competition earlier at the Games, Russia took three golds and one silver, compared with their two-gold haul in Athens.

Batirov beat Quintana in the 2006 world quarter-finals after stepping up to the 60kg.

"He (Quintana) was stronger in 2006. He s not as good this year," the Russian said.

Cejudo, the 22-year-old three-time Pan American champion, outlasted Azerbaijian's Namig Sevdimov 4-3 with an outside single-leg attack in the tie-breaking third period.

"The foreigners aren't used to the U.S. style and wrestling every second of the match. They get tired and I put my American will forward," said Cejudo, who was 31st at the worlds last year.


Source : AFP

 Post Your Feedback   
Name
Email ID
Comments
 Other Features
News today
Screen Sever
Gallery
WallPaper
Print this page
Mail this page
Archives


  
More News
God! Was that a pitch for...
Federer, Murray open with wins
Bouncers for Sachin, full toss...
Chawla in, Pankaj disappoints
India-US partnership is...
Tendulkar crosses 30,000 runs
It will be a close series:...
India draws the first test
India trail Lanka by 78 runs...
Middlesex set sight on...
Mattoo brings peace in hockey...
Parthiv slams ton, Guj leads
Saina, Arvind bow out of China...
Ref succummed to FIFA...
No but, Shoaib won't return:...
India 190/2 in second innings
Federer faces choppy ride for...
Sehwag, Gambhir give India a...
Jayawardene's massacre ends:...
Lanka 708/5 against India by...
SL in drivers seat: Mahela...