Aslan Khazbiyevich Chadarzew

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Aslan Chasbijewitsch Chadarzew ( Russian Аслан Хазбиевич Хадарцев ; born February 4, 1961 in Suadag ; † May 7, 1990 in Chataldon ) was a Soviet wrestler of Ossetian origin.

Career

Aslan Chadarzew, a native of North Ossete, began wrestling in 1977. North Ossetia , where he grew up, has been one of the wrestling strongholds since the end of World War II , from which some world-class wrestlers came who made careers in the Soviet and Russian national wrestling teams. Aslan Chadarzew appeared with 20 years on the international scene wrestler when he was in Vancouver at the Junior World Champion (Espoirs) heavyweight in free style , the style that he wrestled exclusively, was. In the meantime he wrestled for Dynamo Tashkent, his coach there was KM Dedekayew. His younger brother Macharbek was also a freestyle wrestler and was even more successful than him.

Aslan Chadarzew was first Soviet heavyweight champion in 1983 and represented the USSR at the World Cup in Kiev . There he won the world title straight away.

Over the next few years, Chadarzew had two tough competitors in the Soviet Union in Magomed Magomedow and Leri Chabelowi in the fight for the starting places at the international championships. In 1984 Magomedov represented the USSR at the European Championships in Jönköping , while Chadarzew should go to the start as the Soviet champion of the USSR at the Olympic Games in Los Angeles . The Olympic boycott of the socialist states prevented this.

For the next use at an international championship Chadarzew came only in 1986 at the European Championships in Athens . There he beat u. a. in a preliminary round match the German champion Wilfried Colling with 12-0 points, but surprisingly lost in the final against the Bulgarian Georgi Karaduschew. At the world championship of the same year in Budapest , however, he was no longer surprised and won the world championship title.

In 1987 Chadarzew moved to the super heavyweight class. He quickly found his way around this class and became world champion in Clermont-Ferrand . In the final he defeated Andreas Schröder from Jena , while Olympic champion Bruce Baumgartner from the USA , who had lost to Chadarzew in the semifinals, had to be satisfied with 3rd place.

In 1988, Chadarzew was again in a superior style European super heavyweight champion in Manchester . At the Olympic Games in Seoul , however, not he, but the Soviet champion of that year Dawit Gobedschishvili , who also became Olympic champion, was used.

In the spring of 1989 Chadarzew was successful again at the European Championships in Ankara . He became European champion again. The Turkish Ayhan Taşkın had the support of the audience in the final but no chance against Chadarzew. At the world championship of the same year in Martigny / Switzerland, Chadarzew was defeated in the semifinals against the surprising Iranian Ali Reza Soleimani , but won the battle for the bronze medal against Andreas Schröder.

After this world championship Aslan Chadarzew ended his career as an active wrestler and completed training as a coach. In 1990, Chadarzew was killed in a traffic accident in North Ossetia. In September 2014 he was inducted into the FILA International Wrestling Hall of Fame for his services to wrestling .

International championships

(WM = world championship, EM = European championship, F = freestyle, S = heavyweight, SS = super heavyweight, back then up to 100 kg or up to 130 kg body weight)

  • 1981, 1st place , Junior World Championships (Espoirs) in Vancouver , F, S, ahead of Christow, Bulgaria and O'Hara, USA ;
  • 1984, 1st place , World Cup tournament in Toledo / USA, F, S, ahead of Gibson, Miranda and Wayne Brightwell, Canada ;
  • 1985, 1st place , World Super Cup tournament in Tokyo , F, S, ahead of Dan Severn, USA and Tamon Honda, Japan ;
  • 1986, 1st place , World Championships in Budapest , F, S, ahead of William Scherr , USA, Georgi Jantschew, Robotka, Colling u Strnisko;
  • 1988, 1st place , EM in Manchester , F, SS, ahead of Atanas Atanassow, Bulgaria, Andreas Schröder, Sezgin, Valentin Sándor, Hungary and Wojciech Wala, ČSSR;
  • 1989, 1st place , EM in Ankara , F, SS, ahead of Ayhan Taşkın , Turkey , Barbutow, Bulgaria, Juraj Štěch, ČSSR and Andreas Schröder;

USSR championships

Aslan Chadarzew became the Soviet heavyweight champion in 1983, 1984, 1985 and 1986.

swell

  • International Wrestling Database of the Institute for Applied Training Sciences at the University of Leipzig
  • Trade journal Der Ringer issues: 10/83, 05/86, 11/86, 09/87, 05/88, 05/89 and 09/89
  • Website about personalities of Ossetia

Individual evidence

  1. FILA Announces Class of 2014 Hall of Famers: Sixteen Individuals to be Inducted in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, on September 6 , accessed on April 16, 2017 (English)

Web links