Taniela Rainibogi Hits Top Form in Qatar

Taniela Rainibogi Hits Top Form in Qatar

Arguably the biggest achievement of the day, though, was Taniela Rainibogi’s show of strength in the men’s 109kg.

Azerbaijan and Armenia were the winners on the penultimate day of the IWF Grand Prix in Qatar.

Arguably the biggest achievement of the day, though, was Taniela Rainibogi’s show of strength in the men’s 109kg.

In making six-from-six for a huge career best of 170-210-380, Rainibogi became the first male lifter from Fiji to win a medal at a global
competition.

 

There have been medals in Oceania and Commonwealth events, but none in a competition open to the world.

Eileen Cikamatana, who was third in the women’s 81kg yesterday, won plenty of international medals for Fiji before she switched to Australia.

Now Rainibogi has ended Fiji’s wait for a man to do the same.

 

“I think our first lifter competed in 1953, so it took us 70 years to do it,” said national coach Henry Elder.

Rainibogi improved his best snatch by 5kg, clean and jerk by 18kg and total by 23kg in finishing third behind Dadash Dadashbayli
from Azerbaijan.

He would have been second but for a career-bestlift of 219kg by Bekdoolot Rasulbekov from Kyrgyzstan, which won
clean and jerk gold and silver on total.

 

“This was the big one for me, this is special,” said Rainibogi, whose training preparations were for two competitions rather than one.

Nineteen days ago he won gold in the Solomon Islands at the Pacific Games, which doubled up as the Oceania Championships.

He missed his last two attempts in a total of 357kg there. There were no failures today.

 

“I trained hard, and this time we had a special training camp in Samoa where I lifted with my friend Don,” said Rainibogi, 25.

He was referring to Don Opeloge, the Samoan who won a clean and jerk medal in Doha on Tuesday and is well placed to qualify for Paris
2024 at 102kg.

Rainibogi, who weighed in at 107.9kg today, will drop down to the Olympic weight for his last two qualifiers in New Zealand and
Thailand next year.

 

If he can match today’s numbers he will be only 6kg behind Opeloge in the Paris rankings.

His improvement is all the remarkable the had three years out of the sport after finishing third at the 2018 Commonwealth Games, when
he lifted at 85kg.

During a dispute between Fiji’s Taniela Rainibogi with medal winning lift in Qatar. Photo: IWF athletes and their federation, Rainibogi
moved to New Zealand.

 

“I did seasonal work there, and came back to Fiji when it was all sorted out,” he said.

“Then I worked in construction, carrying bricks.”

He bulked up by more than 20kg, trained again on his home island of Levuka, and now trains full-timein Suva, the capital.

 

Dadashbayli made 176-212-388, well below the 403kg he made in finishing third at the World Championships in Saudi Arabia three
months ago.

Rasulbekov made 162-219-381. Sargis Martirosjan, 37, became the oldest medallist in Doha when he took snatch bronze on 166kg for Austria.

International Weightlifting

Federation

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