Shamil Shamschatdinowitsch Chissamutdinow

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Shamil shame Chat Dino Petrovich Chissamutdinow ( Russian Шамиль Шамшатдинович Хисамутдинов , Tatar Шамил Шәмсетдин улы Хисаметдинов , * 20th September 1950 in uzlovaya , Tula Oblast , Russian SFSR ) is a former Soviet wrestler . He was Olympic champion in 1972 in Munich in the Greco-Roman style in lightweight.

Career

Chissamutdinow is of Tatar origin and comes from Tula Oblast . He started wrestling in 1963 as a teenager. He quickly developed into an excellent wrestler in the Greco-Roman style and, after his talent was recognized, was delegated to the sports club "Spartak" Moscow. There he found excellent training conditions and received an excellent coach in Nikolai Parchomenko, a very successful former heavyweight wrestler.

He celebrated his first great success in 1971 when he won the Völkerspartakiade of the Soviet Union. He won there in the Greco-Roman style in the lightweight before Umerow and Moloschdin. In 1972 he was used at the Olympic Games in Munich . He was in excellent shape there and became Olympic champion with six wins . Among the wrestlers he defeated there were u. a. the world class athletes Stojan Apostolow from Bulgaria , Simion Popescu from Romania and Andrzej Supron from Poland .

He was also extremely successful in 1973, when he won three major international titles: he was world champion in Tehran , European champion in Helsinki and student world champion in Moscow. At these championships he remained undefeated in 17 fights and won u. a. about Nedko Nedew from Bulgaria, Sreten Damjanović from Yugoslavia , Lars-Erik Skiöld from Sweden , Antal Steer from Hungary , Andrzej Supron and Heinz-Helmut Wehling from the GDR .

In 1974 he was only used at the European Championships in Madrid , where he won again. At the World Cup he was injured and was replaced by Nelson Dawidjan very successfully. In 1975 he was back at the World Cup in Minsk and won his second world title after 1973. His toughest competitors were Heinz-Helmut Wehling, Andrzej Supron and Binjo Tschifudow from Bulgaria. Chissamutdinow won against these wrestlers.

The last start at an international championship he completed at the 1976 European Championships in Leningrad . He was there with six wins, u. a. via Manfred Schöndorfer from Germany , Heinz-Helmut Wehling and Ștefan Rusu from Romania, clearly on course for the title when he sensationally lost to Lars-Erik Skiöld in the final and had to be satisfied with third place. He was therefore not considered in the Soviet team for the Olympic Games in Montreal . There was Suren Nalbandyan used.

Overall, Chissamutdinov's career was extremely successful. In the seven international championships in which he started, he only lost one fight, the one against Skiöld. He became Olympic champion, world and European champion. After 1976 Chissamutdinow ended his career as an active wrestler. He completed training as a trainer and is now a wrestler trainer in Moscow.

International success

(OS = Olympic Games, WM = World Championship, EM = European Championship, GR = Greco-Roman style, Le = lightweight, We = welterweight, then up to 68 kg or 74 kg body weight)

swell

  • 1) Div. Issues of the specialist journals "Athletik" from 1971 to 1975 and "Der Ringer" from 1976,
  • 2) Documentation of International Wrestling Championships of FILA, 1976,
  • 3) International Wrestling Database of the Institute for Applied Training Sciences at the University of Leipzig

Web links