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persiantiger
13 Aug 2004, 05:04 PM
Gotta love Kurt Angle ;)




http://www.altoentertainment.com/gallery/sports/a/kurt-angle/mp-14000406.jpg
Sure if you like cheaters....

I know you only did this to piss me off liz. Jadidi got screwed and you know it.


Anyways my hero in this olympic is The World's Strongest man the holder of 3 World and Olympic Records off course im talking about the one the only persian pahlavan mr. Hossein Rezazadeh who the Greeks call Hercules!

http://www.mehrnews.com/media/image/5989_300_180.jpg

ATHENS, August 11 (MNA) -- World’s +105kg weightlifting champion, Hossein Rezazadeh, is known as Hercules in the ancient Greece.
Hercules is a hero of classical myth, the son of Zeus and Alcmene, who possessed exceptional strength.

Rezazadeh shot to fame at the 2000 Sydney Olympics with a superhuman lift to defeat two legends of the sport on the way to gold and the title of the ‘world’s strongest man.’

He took Olympic gold with a world record total of 472.5kg (212.5kg in the snatch and 260kg in the clean and jerk).

His 260kg lift was one of the heaviest in weightlifting history and proved too much for 1992 gold medalist Weller and 1996 winner Chemerkin who settled for silver and bronze respectively.

Targeting the Olympic title, the Iranian champion is determined to lift over 470kg to win the coveted gold medal of 2004 Athens Olympic Games.


“The lifter, who has eyed the gold has no alternative but to raise more than 470kg,” the Iranian Hercules said.


The 2000 Sydney Olympics gold medalist revealed his craving for the glittering gold of Athens Games, saying he will make every effort to win the title.

Rezazadeh won three gold medals in +105kg category of the 72nd World Weightlifting Championships in Warsaw, Poland, in 2002 as he totally lifted 472.5kg. He set a new world record in clean and jerk by 0.5kg as he lifted 263 kilograms.

He set a new world +105kg snatch record at the 35th Asian Weightlifting Championships, which ended in China on September 14, 2003.

Iran stood top among 13 participating countries with 599 points and the host China and Indonesia finished runner-up and third with 514 and 493 points respectively.

Kazakhstan, Thailand, and North Korea stood fourth to sixth.

Rezazadeh improved the world's +105kg record by 0.5kg as he lifted 213kg in snatch.

With two golds and one bronze, Rezazadeh lifted 457.5kg and +105kg title in the 73rd World Weightlifting Championships in Vancouver, southwest of Canada, on Nov. 22, 2003.

The 24-year-old Rezazadeh failed to improve his own snatch record, 213kg, in his third effort for 213.5kg and bagged bronze with 207.5kg.

He retained the clean and jerk title, keeping 250kg above his head in the first move. The lifter did not succeed in handling 263.5kg -- 0.5kg above his own record -- in his second effort. "


My fav athelete of all time in the olympics have been king Takhti. The wrestler who whipped his opponents in olympics but what made him into a national figure was his acts in the politics. The muhammad ali of iran. He was prisoned cause he refused to do what the leaders told him to do blah blah blah cut the story short he is a hero. Nasiri nia and Movahed who each got many gold medals for Iran in weight lifting and wrestling are among my other favorites. With movahed having won the 2nd most gold medals in wrestling after some russian guy. I think he has won 6 and the russian guy who is a legend in russia has won 9.

MOD NOTE: Tiger, try not to quote entire articles without citation. Either link to it or cite it. Thanks!

MarioKempes
13 Aug 2004, 07:12 PM
Jim Thorpe

DoyleG
14 Aug 2004, 02:11 AM
Percy Williams- Double gold winner at the 1928 Olympics in the 100 and 200 sprints. Would be the definition of the "World's Fastest Man".

Silken Laumann- Won bronze in 1992 despite breaking her ankle and suffering ligament damage two months before the Barcelona games.

Men's 4X100M relay team from 1996- Gotta love any time you make American your B***h.:D

Maczebus
14 Aug 2004, 04:42 PM
From a purely UK perspective - the ubiquitous Steve Redgrave. 5 gold medals (rowing) at 5 Olympic Games (1984-2000).
Daley Thompson - consecutive decathlon titles.

bukie2k
15 Aug 2004, 12:48 AM
Dr. Heiden was also a darn good cyclist too--competed in the Tour if I remember, or at least was connected to the 7-11 team in the 1980s.

I was at his first professional race with the 7-11 team. It was a 50 mile criterium in my hometown of Nutley, NJ.

Power_of_foot
15 Aug 2004, 07:10 AM
I like Carl Lewis a lot.
He is my all-time fav

I also like Greg Luganis

the swimmer
Mac Biondi


soccer player?In Olympics... Romario 88 and Luis Enrique92

johan neeskens
16 Aug 2004, 03:18 AM
I can't believe none of the Americans have mentioned swimmer Mark Spitz yet.

LeslieSantosfan
16 Aug 2004, 03:30 AM
Guy is Michael Johnson, lady is Michelle Kwan. :cool:

Caesar
16 Aug 2004, 03:42 AM
I think not Caesar,without checking my records,I think shane won 3gold,1 silver, and 1 bronzeI made the fatal mistake of assuming the poster above me was correct, without first checking my facts. :D

Prawn Sandwich
16 Aug 2004, 04:47 AM
Steve Redgrave by a country mile - not only did he win gold in 5 consecutive Olympics in an extremely physical AND technical event but he also managed to do this whilst suffering from diabetes in the last two of the games he competed in.

Samaranch personally presented him a special award after he won his final gold at Sydney 4 years ago.

No names mentioned on this thread get even close to this (although I must admit Jesse Owens and his feats in Berlin demand the utmost respect).

Wiljoy
17 Aug 2004, 06:17 AM
I wanted to pick Jesse -I'm prouder of his accomplishments than I am of those of any other American Olympian- but I've gotta go with either Jim Thorpe or Edwin Moses.

Moses was undefeated -anywhere- in the (I think) 400m hurdles for almost a decade. Mark Spitz (seven golds in Munich) deserves a mention here, as does Bob Beamon for his long-jump record that stood almost a quarter century.
Bob Beaman jumped his world record in the high altitude of Mexico city,( which assists jumping ) he never jumped anywhere near that distance before or after that,simply a one off miracle.

Wiljoy
17 Aug 2004, 06:20 AM
I like Carl Lewis a lot.
He is my all-time fav

I also like Greg Luganis

the swimmer
Mac Biondi


soccer player?In Olympics... Romario 88 and Luis Enrique92
Another great was Bob Mathias who won the Decathlon at Wembley in 1948, he was only 17 years old ,if my memory serves me correctly

tomas_brolin
18 Aug 2004, 03:37 PM
I would have to agree with Matt Biondi for swimming and Eric Heiden for speed skating. Carl lewis was jsut simply class for a long time when he was in track and field. the thing is he would ahve gotten more than 10 medals for sure if usa didnt boycott the 1980 olympic games because carl qualified for alot of competitions also.

one that no one has mentioned that i think should deserve a mention is 'pocket hercules' i forget what his real name is but he won 3 gold medals in 92, 96, and 2000 from what i remember in lifting and he is only 4 ft 11!

SoccerScout
18 Aug 2004, 06:14 PM
Wow how could this thread go for so long and nobody mention the real greatest Olympian of all time.

Mark Spitz, swimmer, 1972. 7 Gold Medals!

Nadia Comaneci (sp??) is also very worthy scoring 10.0 various times.

BillQ
19 Aug 2004, 05:03 PM
This question does not need a second thought, undoubtedly,unquestionably , nobody comes within a 50 acre paddock of this man, EMILE ZATOPEK,

I second that. In 1952, he won the 5 and 10K, then entered the Marathon on a lark and won that!

Grah
19 Aug 2004, 06:22 PM
Mine is Carl Lewis who twice set a world record in the 100meter dash and ran the anchor final leg on eight world record relay teams. He competed in four Olympics from 1984 to 1996 games, and won a record nine Olympic Gold Medals.



http://www2.raisport.rai.it/atlanta96/news/2907/lewis01.jpg
yes he was a good runner - evenif he was on DRUGS -
http://www.eurosport.com/home/pages/V4/L0/S6/E5761/sport_Lng0_Spo6_Evt5761_Sto623914.shtml

Alarms roared last spring when news leaked that nine times Olympic gold medallist Carl Lewis had failed a drugs test in 1988, the year a "disgraced" Ben Johnson was stripped of his gold medal at the Seoul Games.

Lewis was awarded the gold and everybody was happy until 15 years later when disgruntled former senior U.S. anti-doping official, Dr Wade Exum, released 30,000 pages of documents stating that Lewis was one of among an astounding 100 athletes to test positive for drugs but nevertheless cleared by the U.S. Olympic Committee (USOC).
OOPS

JG
19 Aug 2004, 06:51 PM
yes he was a good runner - evenif he was on DRUGS -


http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/chronicle/archive/2003/05/05/SP191241.DTL

"After a hasty investigation nearly 15 years after the fact, the world governing body for track and field, the International Association of Athletics Federations, said, "The IAAF medical committee feels satisfied -- that the cases had been properly conducted by the USOC as 'negative cases' in accordance with rules and regulations in place at the time and no further action was taken.""

"Under current anti-doping rules, the levels of ephedrine found in the urine samples of Lewis and Deloach would have been too low to trigger sanctions of any kind."

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/news/archive/2003/05/16/sports1509EDT0371.DTL

"World track and field's anti-doping chief determined in 1988 that drug samples provided by eight American athletes at the Olympic trials that year should not be treated as positives, according to IAAF records."

Danks81
19 Aug 2004, 09:21 PM
Amanda Beard

:)

Wiljoy
19 Aug 2004, 10:23 PM
After Zatopek,how about Bob Mathias,He won the Decathlon at Wembley in 1948,and he was still a teenager (17 I believe).

For the Ladies,-- Fanny Blankers-Coen 1948.

Hawkeye17
20 Aug 2004, 10:23 PM
Amanda Beard

:)

Cute kid/water teen in 1996, now dreamy siren/sex symbol in 2004.

I'll still take Janet Evans, then her, followed by Summer Sanders.

-----

Bob Beamon jumped his world record in the high altitude of Mexico city, (which assists jumping ) he never jumped anywhere near that distance before or after that, simply a one off miracle.

Beamon was a no-name that had one spectacular leap in 1968 and that was it--that record stood for the longest time. Despite that one performance, he still gets the nod. It's too bad that he couldn't capitalize on that event--also during that same games, the Black Power movement was in force (re: Tommie Smith and John Carlos and their black glove salute, and Lew Alcindor decided not to play for the USA basketball team).

Wow how could this thread go for so long and nobody mention the real greatest Olympian of all time.

Mark Spitz, swimmer, 1972. 7 Gold Medals!

Spitz was part of the old generation--for those who were kids when his exploits took place, he was the icon for that time. Today, it would be someone like Ian Thorpe or Michael Phelps.

At least, he capitalized on his image with the posters and so forth. Today, he would garner, dare I say it, porn star status with his mustache and threads.

----

However, I'll take Gary Hall Jr--maybe a bit brash but he gets the job done--if Lance Armstrong was a swimmer, that's him.