Stop at Turlykhanov
Cyrillic ( Russian ) | |
---|---|
Даулет Болатович Турлыханов | |
Transl. : | Daulet Bolatovič Turlychanov |
Transcr. : | Daulet Bolatovich Turlykhanov |
Cyrillic ( Kazakh ) | |
Дәулет Болатұлы Тұрлыханов | |
Latin : | Däwlet Bolatulı Turlıxanov |
Transcr. : | Dulps Bolatuly Turlykhanov |
Däulet Turlykhanov medal table |
||
---|---|---|
Soviet Union / Kazakhstan | ||
Olympic games | ||
silver | 1988 Seoul | Welter |
bronze | 1992 Barcelona | medium |
World Championship | ||
bronze | 1987 Budapest | Welter |
gold | 1989 Martigny / Switzerland | Welter |
silver | 1993 Stockholm | medium |
European Championship | ||
gold | 1987 Tampere | Welter |
Asian Games | ||
gold | 1994 Hiroshima | medium |
Asian Championships | ||
gold | 1996 Xiaoshan / China | medium |
Däulet Bolatuly Turlychanow (born November 18, 1963 in Georgievka , Eastern Kazakhstan Region , Kazakh SSR ) is a former Soviet or Kazakh wrestler . He was world champion in 1989 and won a silver medal at the 1988 Olympics in Greco-Roman style in welterweight.
Career
Däulet Turlykhanov began wrestling as a teenager in 1976. His first coach was his father Bolat Turlykhanov. After his first major successes at national level, he joined the Red Army and became a member of CSKA Moscow . His trainer there was Alexander Lebedev. A little later he came into the hands of head coach Gennady Sapunov in the Soviet national team , who shaped him into a world-class wrestler in the Greco-Roman style.
In 1986 he was the first Soviet welterweight champion. In the same year it was used in several international tournaments. Among other things, he wrestled in the Grand Prix of the Federal Republic of Germany in Freiburg and took 4th place in the welterweight division behind his compatriot Michail Mamiaschwili , the Swede Roger Tallroth and Raimund Feser from Freiburg.
1987 his first start at an international championship, the European championship in Tampere . There he immediately became European champion ahead of the Finn Jouko Salomäki and the Bulgarian Dobri Marinow . At the world championship of the same year in Clermont-Ferrand he lost to Jouko Salomäki and took 3rd place behind him and the Pole Jozef Tracz . In the same year Däulet Turlychanow met Jouko Salomäki for the third time in a year at the FILA Grand Prix Final in Budapest . He won for the second time and won this tournament.
In 1988 Däulet Turlychanow was used at the Olympic Games in Seoul . In welterweight he won the silver medal behind the South Korean Kim Young-Nam . In the journal Der Ringer No. 10/1988 it says about the fight on page 5: “In the welterweight division the Soviet man Däulet Turlykanow was cheated of the gold medal . Not that the Korean Young-Nam Kim was unworthy of the gold medal, but it was given to him. "" But it is no secret that in these games, especially in wrestling and boxing, the judges are very strange, but always in favor of the South Korean athletes outgoing, decisions made.
In 1989 Däulet Turlychanow celebrated the greatest success of his career at the world championship in Martigny / Switzerland , because he became world champion in welterweight before Anton Arghira from Romania and Peter Tenew from Bulgaria .
From 1990 to 1994 he got caught up in the hustle and bustle of political developments in the Soviet Union. During these years, the established sports system of the Soviet Union largely collapsed, with the result that athletes temporarily suffered enormous drops in performance due to a lack of training opportunities. Däulet Turlykhanov felt the same way. He was absent from the 1990 World Cup because he had lost to Mnazakan Iskandarjan in the Soviet welterweight championship . At the 1991 World Cup in Varna he lost, starting in the middleweight division for the first time, against Todor Angelow from Bulgaria just on points and against the Swede Magnus Fredriksson by disqualification. He only came in 9th place.
Nevertheless, Däulet Turlychanow won at the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona in the middleweight division for the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), behind Peter Farkas from Hungary and Piotr Stepien from Poland again a medal, the bronze.
After the final collapse of the Soviet Union and the dissolution of the CIS, Däulet Turlykhanov decided to start for Kazakhstan in 1993 . For this country he won the world championship silver medal behind the new Turkish superstar Hamza Yerlikaya at the world championship in Stockholm in the middleweight division . In addition, Däulet Turlychanow was very intensively involved in wrestling in Kazakhstan over the next few years. He founded his own wrestling club in Alma-Ata (today Almaty ), in which he bundled the wrestling forces of this country. He also brought his former coach in the Soviet national wrestling team Gennady Sapunov to Almaty, who took over the training of the Kazakh wrestlers in the Greco-Roman style. After the end of his sporting career in 1997, Däulet Turlychanow took over this position himself.
In the years from 1994 to 1997 he was still active as a wrestler himself and was winner of the Asian Games in Hiroshima in 1994 and of the Asian Championships in 1995 in Manila and in 1996 in Xianshan / China, both in the middleweight division. At the 1995 World Cup in Prague he reached 6th place in the middleweight division and was unable to compete there in the fight for entry into the final against the German Thomas Zander due to an injury. At the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta , he got five wins. But he lost against Hamza Yerlikaya , who clearly dominated him in his points win with 7-0 technical points, and against Valeri Zilent from Belarus and narrowly missed a medal. Ultimately, he landed on the ungrateful 4th place.
After the end of his wrestling career in 1997, he became national coach of Kazakhstan in the Greco-Roman. Style. He was also active in politics and made it to the Minister of Tourism and Sports of Kazakhstan. He has been a member of the FILA office (World Wrestling Association) since 2006, where he is responsible for global trainer training.
International success
year | space | competition | Weight class | |
1986 | 4th | Grand Prix of the FRG in Freiburg | Welter | behind Michail Mamiaschwili , USSR , Roger Tallroth , Sweden a . Raimund Feser , FRG, before Andreas Lemke, GDR a . Martial Mischler , France |
1986 | 1. | World Cup in Oak Lawn / USA | Welter | before Gyula Erdelyi, Hungary a . David Butler , USA |
1987 | 1. | Grand Prix of the FRG in Aschaffenburg | Welter | in front of Andreas Lemke, Timo Niemi , Finland , Udo Ruggaber , BRD a. Dan Podlesek, Denmark |
1987 | 1. | EM in Tampere | Welter | before Jouko Salomäki , Finland, Dobri Marinow , Bulgaria a. Roger Tallroth |
1987 | 3. | World Cup in Clermont-Ferrand | Welter | behind Jouko Salomäki u. Jozef Tracz , Poland , in front of Dobri Marinow u. Mirko Jahn , GDR |
1987 | 1. | FILA Grand Prix Gala in Budapest | Welter | before Jouko Salomäki, Jozef Tracz, Dobri Marinow u. Roger Tallroth |
1988 | silver | OS in Seoul | Welter | behind Kim Young-Nam , South Korea , in front of Jozef Tracz, Janus Takacs , Hungary a. Martial Mischler |
1989 | 1. | World Cup in Martigny / Switzerland | Welter | before Anton Arghira, Romania , Peter Tenew , Bulgaria, Udo Ruggaber a . Martial Mischler |
1990 | 1. | World Cup in Gothenburg | medium | before John Morgan , USA, Magnus Fredriksson , Sweden a. Nasser Khalili, Egypt |
1991 | 9. | World Cup in Varna | medium | Winner: Peter Farkes , Hungary ahead of Todor Angelow, Bulgaria a. Goram Kasum , Yugoslavia ; Däulet Turlychanow lost to Todor Angelow, Bulgaria and Magnus Fredriksson, Sweden |
1992 | bronze | OS in Barcelona | medium | behind Peter Farkas u. Piotr Stepien , Poland, before Magnus Fredriksson u. Timo Niemi |
1993 | 2. | World Cup in Stockholm | medium | behind Hamza Yerlikaya , Turkey , in front of Murat Kardanow , Russia , Valeri Zilent , Belarus u. Peter Farkas; Däulet Turlychanow led in the final against Hamza Yerlikaya with 1-0 points until one minute before the end, but gave up six points to Yerlikaya in the final minute |
1994 | 1. | Asian Games in Hiroshima | medium | before Raatbek Sanatbajew , Kyrgyzstan a . Kim Yeon-Soo, South Korea |
1995 | 1. | Asian Championship in Manila | medium | before Ueon Jin-Han, South Korea a. Rozy Redjepow, Turkmenistan |
1995 | 6th | World Cup in Prague | medium | behind Hamza Yerlikaya, Gocha Chichiaschwili , Israel , Thomas Zander , Germany , Sergei Zwir , Russia a. Alexander Pekalo, Belarus |
1996 | 1. | Asian Championship in Xianshan / China | medium | in front of Park Myung-Suk, South Korea a. Eaatbek Sanatbayev |
1996 | 4th | OS in Atlanta | medium | with victories over Elias Antonio Marcano Tochod, Venezuela , one defeat against Hamza Yerlikaya , victories over Tuomo Karila , Finland, Raatbek Sanatbajew, Levon Geghamjan , Armenia u. Gocha Chichiaschwili u. a loss to Valery Zilent, Belarus |
1997 | 3. | East Asia Games in Busan | medium | behind Park Myung-Suk, South Korea a. Agwaansamdangiin Süchbat , Mongolia |
Soviet championships
year | space | Weight class | Results |
1986 | 1. | Welter | before Alexander Kudrjawzew and Valeri Bogdanyok |
1987 | 1. | Welter | before Magomedrasin Battanow and Alexander Koudraschkin |
1988 | 1. | Welter | before Alexander Koudraschkin and S. Magomedow |
1989 | 1. | Welter | before Bisolt Dezijew and Viktor Mamiashvili |
1990 | 1. | medium | before Sergei Nassewitsch and Begi Darschja |
1991 | 1. | medium | before A. Avakjan and A. Alexanjan |
- Explanations
- all competitions in Greco-Roman style
- OS = Olympic Games, WM = World Championship, EM = European Championship
- Welter weight, up to 74 kg, mean weight, up to 1996 up to 82 kg, from 1997 up to 85 kg body weight
literature
- Trade journal Der Ringer
Web links
- Profile of Däulet Turlychanow at the Institute for Applied Training Science
- Däulet Turlychanow in the database of Sports-Reference (English; archived from the original )
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Turlychanov, Däulet |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Turlychanow, Daulet Bolatowitsch |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Soviet or Kazakh wrestler |
DATE OF BIRTH | November 18, 1963 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Georgievka , Kazakh SSR |