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Weightlifting: Breeze snatches gold but Batsiua is left with nothing

Indian cleans up in competition where three medals were sometimes being chased by only four entrants

John Roberts
Thursday 01 August 2002 00:00 BST
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During rehearsals for the parade of athletes at the opening ceremony, volunteers acted as standard-bearers for the 17 countries. But instead of carrying flags, they trailed lengths of string representing the numbers in each team to help the organisers time the event.

Having answered the age-old question – how long is a piece of string? – the volunteers missed an opportunity to save more time by using an elastic band to group together the four competitors in the women's up to 58kg weightlifting event.

It is often said by people who know these things that there is no bigger disappointment in sport than losing in a semi-final, although there is obviously no kudos for a favourite who finishes second in a two-horse race.

We could only imagine what the atmosphere was like in the warm-up area at the Manchester International Convention Centre yesterday as Tyoni Batsiua, of the Republic of Nauru, Michaela Breeze, of Wales, Sunaina Sunaina, of India, and Maryse Turcotte, of Canada, prepared to pull their weight in the auditorium. One would win gold, one would win silver, one would win bronze, and the other would be asked if her journey had been really necessary.

Horsemen of the Apocalypse formed a quartet, likewise gangs of politicians, but yesterday four was a crowd, even though Batsiua, Breeze, Sunaina and Turcotte comprised the lowest entry for any event in this eventful Commonwealth Games, which invited women weightlifters to participate for the first time.

Snatching and cleaning and jerking can be dodgy at the best of times, and it was all too much for the 20-year-old Batsiua, who will return empty-handed to Nauru, an island measuring eight square miles in the south-western Pacific Ocean, and express her disappointment to the 10,199 other inhabitants. In short, she tried her best but failed to be credited with a single lift: nil points.

It might be said that Batsiua only managed to lift the pressure off her fellow competitors, although the trio were far too busy raising the loaded bar to take much notice. Breeze won the gold medal for Wales in the snatch while Batsiua was still wondering if she would ever get the weights off the ground long enough to attract the interest of the judges.

The 23-year-old Breeze, who has set British records for snatch, clean and jerk, and total, won the snatch with a lift of 87.5kg. She went on to win a silver medal in the clean and jerk and a silver in the combined total (200kg). Overall, however, the afternoon belonged to 27-year-old Turcotte, who took gold medals in the clean and jerk and for the combined total, and the silver medal after finishing second to Breeze on body weight in the snatch. Breeze reached 87.5kg after two failed attempts. Turcotte reached 87.5kg on her second attempt. Breeze had the advantage in lower body weight. She was competing at 56.83kg, Turcotte at 56.95kg.

Sunaina won three bronze medals for India, whose day was made by Sanamacha Chanu, who won three golds in the 53kg category. There were six competitors in this event. Two Australians, Natasha Barker and Seen Lee, both won two silver medals and two bronze, although we were all tempted to move back a row after Barker dropped the bar, which rolled to the edge of the stage.

Kirstie Law, of Scotland, worked hard but finished fourth, and it was not a successful day for England: Dyana Altenor, who finished fifth, fell on her back after one failed attempt, and Joanne Calvino, like Batsiua in the 58kg event, did not register a single lift.

When the women's competition began on Tuesday, Maryse Turcotte was among the spectators as her younger sister, Karina, 23, won silver medals for Canada in the 48kg category snatch, clean and jerk, and combined. Karina, who has a three-year-old son, was still at work as a mortgage consultant last week and did not arrive in Manchester until Saturday. "My goal coming here was to win the silver," she said. "I didn't think I could beat the Indian."

The Indian in question was the 34-year-old Kunjarani Nameirakpam, who won all three gold medals in the 48kg category. These will be added to the 21 medals she has won from World Championships, an impressive record, particularly since she was hampered by a knee injury in 1999 and was suspended for six months last year after testing positive for anabolic steroids.

Mary Hancock, a 44-year-old from Wales, who finished fifth of seven competitors, at least equalled her personal best (107.5kg combined) and also had the distinction of becoming the first woman to lift weights in the Commonwealth Games. "I'm sure more women will now join the sport," she said.

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