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Weightlifting: The Games 350kg But gold-winning Alexsan wanted more

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  • Weightlifting: The Games 350kg But gold-winning Alexsan wanted more

    The Advertiser, Australia
    March 22, 2006 Wednesday
    State Edition

    The Games 350kg But gold-winning Alexsan wanted more;
    He's not heavy - he's my son

    by MICHAEL HORAN

    Weightlifting

    AN angry Alexsan Karapetyan crushed his opposition to win Australia
    weighlifting gold in the men's 94kg class yesterday.

    Karapetyan was in a class of his own as he lifted a total of 350kg to
    defend the Commonwealth Games title he won at Manchester four years
    ago.

    And Melbourne local hero Simon Heffernan, 31, made it a home-town
    quinella when he farewelled inter national competition in theatrical
    style to win the silver medal. Scotland's Thomas Yule took the
    bronze.

    Karapetyan didn't appear until every other competitor had made all
    three lifts in the snatch section and with his first attempt he
    raised 155kg put a five-kilogram space between himself and the field.

    The ante was upped by 10kg for the next lift and Karapetyan clearly
    wanted more in order to bid to break his own Commonwealth Games
    record of 167kg, but coach Luke Borregine argued against it.

    The crowd watched a testy exchange between the pair on the two big
    screens before a simmering Karapetyan returned to the platform. He
    easily lifted the 165kg and then appeared to throw the barbell down
    in open disgust.

    ''I wanted to lift 170kg, I wanted to post a new record. I was a bit
    angry, but it is okay. I have forgotten already,'' an exuberant
    Karapetyan said later.

    Karapetyan accepted his gold medal draped in an Australian flag and
    holding his two-year-old son Garik in his arms.

    ''When I came to compete my son said 'father, I need gold - nothing
    else','' Karapetyan said.

    The 35-year-old vowed he would be in New Delhi in four years' time in
    a bid to make it three in a row.

    Karapetyan, who competed for Armenia at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics and
    then for Australia in Sydney 2000, cemented the gold medal with his
    first lift in the clean and jerk, 185kg before missing twice at
    190kg.

    Heffernan, who missed Manchester four years ago due to a hernia
    operation, wowed the crowd with extroverted behaviour after each
    successful lift in the snatch.

    He gave the Brett Lee ''chainsaw'' after lift one, a windmill and a
    Lleyton Hewitt gesture second time around and even threw in a pelvic
    thrust much to the delight of the packed house.

    Later he vritually conceded it was time to quit.

    ''I think I'm done. It's a good time to just finish on a good note,''
    Heffernan, a schoolteacher who is due back at work on Monday, said.

    Australia's Deborah Lovely won a gold medal after a tight battle in
    the women's 75kg weightlifting event at the Commonwealth Games in
    Melbourne last night.

    Lovely was equal with Nauru's Sheba Deireragea after the snatch, but
    outlifted her by 6kg in the clean and jerk to take the title.

    Deireragea won silver, with South Africa's Babalwa Ndleleni taking
    bronze.

    Lovely won a silver medal in the same event at the Manchester Games
    in 2002.

    The woman who won gold on that occasion, India's Pujari Shailaja, had
    been the favourite to defend her title here until she was
    disqualified from competing after recently testing positive to a
    banned drug.



    Men's 94kg

    G Aleksan Karapetyan (AUS) 165 185 35

    S Simon Heffernan (AUS) 150 178 332

    B Thomas Yule (SCO) 151 175 326

    Women's 75kg

    G Deborah Lovely (AUS)

    S Sheba Deireragea (NAU)

    B Babalwa Ndleneni (RSA)
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