Anatoly Ivanovich Nasarenko
Anatoly Nasarenko medal table |
||
---|---|---|
Soviet Union | ||
Olympic games | ||
silver | 1972 Munich | medium |
World Championship | ||
gold | 1970 Edmonton | medium |
silver | 1971 Sofia | medium |
gold | 1974 Katowice | medium |
gold | 1975 Minsk | {{{12}}} |
European Championship | ||
gold | 1972 Katowice | medium |
gold | 1974 Madrid | medium |
bronze | 1977 Bursa | medium |
Anatoli Ivanovich Nasarenko , Russian Анатолий Иванович Назаренко , scientific transliteration Anatolij Ivanovič Nazarenko , (born December 19, 1948 in Alma-Ata , Kazakh SSR ) is a former Soviet wrestler .
Career
Anatoly Nasarenko started wrestling at the age of 12. After successes in the youth and junior classes, the Dinamo Alma-Ata sports club was delegated. As a member of the Soviet security forces, he was able to concentrate fully on the wrestling. Under his coach Vadim Psarew , he made the leap into the Soviet national team at the age of 20. With a height of 1.75 m and a weight of approx. 85 kg, he was a powerful, stocky type. In 1970 he was used for the first time at an international championship. At the World Championships in Edmonton , Canada , he was immediately world champion in the middleweight in Greco-Roman style. The fact that he was disqualified for passivity in the fight against Petar Krumow from Bulgaria did not change that .
In 1971 Nasarenko failed to defend the world title at the World Cup in Sofia . He lost in the final against the Hungarian newcomer Csaba Hegedűs , who started in great form and also defeated Nasarenko prematurely.
At the 1972 European Championships in Katowice , when Hegedűs was absent, he became European champion for the first time with six wins, although he was surprised and shouldered in a preliminary round fight by the Romanian Ion Gabor . In the same year he also started at the Olympic Games in Munich . Again he was beaten by Csaba Hegedűs, this time on points, so that only the silver medal remained for him.
In 1973 Nasarenko started neither at the European Championship nor at the World Championship. 1974 was a very successful year for him, as he became European champion in Madrid and world champion in Katowice . In Madrid he defeated the German Werner Schröter on points in the final battle and in Katowice he shone with seven victories that were necessary to win the title.
At the 1975 World Cup in Minsk , he finally managed to beat Csaba Hegedűs, which was equivalent to winning the third world title. In 1976 Nasarenko lost at the Soviet championships against Vladimir Cheboksarov and was therefore not used at the European Championships or the Olympic Games.
In 1977 he was once again at the European Championships in Bursa, Turkey . But he could not win the title because he was defeated by the 20-year-old Romanian Ion Draica and the Bulgarian Pawel Christow . But he came in third place.
After that, Anatoly Nasarenko was no longer used in international championships. He was trained as a trainer, went to the USA in the late 1990s and is now a wrestler trainer there.
International success
year | space | competition | Weight class | Results |
1970 | 1. | World Cup in Edmonton | medium | after victories over Kenjirō Hiraki , Japan , Adam Ostrowski, Poland , Milan Nenadić , Yugoslavia and Jan Kärström , Sweden ; in the fight between Nasarenko and Petar Krumow , Bulgaria , both wrestlers were disqualified for being passive |
1971 | 1. | Army Championship of the "Warsaw Pact" countries | medium | before Rudolf Vesper , GDR and Kovacs, Hungary |
1971 | 2. | World Cup in Sofia | medium | with victories over Harald Barlie, Norway , Ali Yağmur, Turkey , Antonius De Rooy, Netherlands , Kiril Dimitrov , Bulgaria and Frank Hartmann, GDR, a draw against Ostrowski and a defeat against Csaba Hegedűs , Hungary |
1972 | 1. | Memorial "Roger Coulon" in Clermont-Ferrand | medium | before Milan Nenadic, Yugoslavia, Andre Bouchoule, France and Jimmy Martinetti, Switzerland |
1972 | 1. | "Ivan Poddubny" Memorial in Minsk | medium | before Milan Nenadic and Muchanow, USSR |
1972 | 1. | EM in Katowice | medium | with victories over József Juhász, Hungary, John Petersen, Denmark , Dimitrios Savas, Greece , Dimitrov, Nenadić and Miroslav Janota , Czechoslovakia and despite a defeat against Ion Gabor , Romania |
1972 | silver | OS in Munich | medium | with victories over Reinhold Hucker , BR Germany , Dimitrov, Nenadić, Gabor, Yağmur and one defeat against Csaba Hegedűs |
1974 | 1. | EM in Madrid | medium | with victories over Miroslav Janota, Ömer Suzan, Turkey, Volker Zwick, GDR, Dimitrov, André Bouchoule , France and Werner Schröter , FR Germany |
1974 | 1. | World Cup in Katowice | medium | with victories over Stefan Ghenerali, Albania , Klaus Mysen , Norway , Nenadić, Miroslav Janota, Dimitar Iwanow, Bulgaria, Miklós Hegedűs , Hungary and Ion Enache , Romania |
1975 | 1. | World Cup in Minsk | medium | with victories over Dan Chandler , USA , Leif Andersson , Sweden, Iwanow, Csaba Hegedűs, Ostrowski and Enache |
1976 | 1. | Grand Prix of the Federal Republic of Germany in Aschaffenburg | medium | in front of Ion Enache, Romania, Pawel Pawlow, Bulgaria Andre Bouchoule and Kurt Götze, GDR |
1977 | 1. | Grand Prix of the Federal Republic of Germany in Aschaffenburg | medium | in front of Leif Andersson, Jan Dolgowicz , Poland, Kurt Spaniol , BR Germany, Andre Bouchoule and Franz Pitschmann , Austria |
1977 | 3. | EM in Bursa | medium | with victories over Jimmy Martinetti, Switzerland , Dolgowicz, Suzan and István Nagy, Hungary and defeats against Ion Draica , Romania and Pawel Christow , Bulgaria |
Soviet championships
year | space | Weight class | Results |
1969 | 1. | medium | before J. Schjelest u. A. Artemyev |
1970 | 2. | medium | behind Tamas Maschawariani and in front of Said Abdulayev |
1971 | 1. | medium | before Leonid Liberman and Vladimir Nechayev |
1973 | 1. | medium | before Awo Talpas and Olev Kiirend |
1974 | 1. | medium | before Vladimir Cheboksarov and T. Kiknadze |
1975 | 1. | medium | before Vladimir Cheboksarov and S. Klimov |
1976 | 2. | medium | behind Vladimir Cheboksarev, in front of Kasim Khalilov |
- Explanations
- all competitions in Greco-Roman style
- OS = Olympic Games, WM = World Championship, EM = European Championship
- Middle weight, at that time up to 82 kg body weight
literature
- 1) Trade magazines Athletik and Der Ringer from 1970 to 1977
- 2) Documentation of International Wrestling Championships of the FILA, 1976
- 3) Website of the Institute for Applied Training Sciences at the University of Leipzig
Web links
- Profile of Anatoli Nasarenko at the Institute for Applied Training Science
- Anatoli Nasarenko in the Sports-Reference database (English; archived from the original )
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Nasarenko, Anatoly Ivanovich |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Назаренко, Анатолий (Russian) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | soviet wrestler |
DATE OF BIRTH | December 19, 1948 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Alma-Ata , Kazakh SSR |