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Author Topic: IPF European Championships 6-9 May (Live stream)  (Read 1621 times)
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Maitolasi
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« on: May 06, 2009, 05:24 AM »


Timetable (GMT 2+1 summertime)
Quote
Provisional Schedule of Events
Day Weigh in time Classes Start
6.5.2009
1300-1430 hours Women 48,0 & 52,0 kg 1500 hours
7.5.2009
0900-1030 hours Women 56,0 & 60,0 kg 1100 hours
8.5.2009
0900-1030 hours Women 67,5 & 75,0 kg 1100 hours
9.5.2009
0800-0930 hours Women 82,5 to 90+ kg 1000 hours

Victory Ceremonies: Immediately after the end of each lifting session.
Important Note: Changes may be made to the schedule of events at the Technical
Meeting depending on the number of lifters finally entered at this occasion.
Official site
Live stream
Entry list

This yers IPF powerlifting EC are held in Ylitornio, Finland. This competion brings lifters from Finland, France, Austria, Ukraine, Sweden, Hungary, Norway, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Iceland, Denmark, Poland, Italy, Germany, Netherlands, Estonia, Bulgaria, Great Britain, Belgium, Luxembourg, and Latvia to the arctic circle.
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Maitolasi
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« Reply #1 on: May 06, 2009, 05:15 PM »

Unfortunately that stram was no good. At least on my computer it freezed all the time.

Quote
cat   pl   name   born   team   bwt   squat   bench   dead   total   
48kg   Wed 06 May 2009
   1   JURKKO Raija   1963   FIN   47.05   177.5   92.5   157.5   427.5   [pending drug-test]
   2   LE PANSE Bénédicte   1978   FRA   47.50   162.5   95.0   152.5   410.0   
   3   APULI Sanna (FIN1981F1)   1981   FIN   47.80   155.0   77.5   152.5   385.0   
   4   SCHWENGL Ilka (AUT1965F1)   1965   AUT   47.35   135.0   97.5   140.0   372.5   [pending drug-test]
52kg   Wed 06 May 2009
   1   DMYTRUK Olena (UKR1983F1)   1983   UKR   51.75   180.0   110.0   172.5   462.5   [pending drug-test]
   2   PETROCZKI Magdolna (HUN1968F1)   1968   HUN   51.15   162.5   82.5   165.0   410.0   
   3   SIRKIÄ Mervi (FIN1972F1)   1972   FIN   51.70   162.5   90.0   155.0   407.5   
   4   DEREVYANKO Anastasiya   1987   UKR   49.75   162.5   90.0   167.5   405.0   
   5   LINDSTRÖM Carola (SWE1982F2)   1982   SWE   50.65   155.0   75.0   150.0   385.0   
   6   GUIHOMAT Sophie   1975   FRA   51.30   155.0   80.0   145.0   380.0   
   -   SANDVIK Marcela   1974   FIN   51.80   147.5   102.5   130.0   -0.0   

I've seen Sanna Apuli lifting a couple of times. At first glance you wouldn't believe how much she can lift, but after seeing it, I didn't have a choise.

Not much activity in lifting topics, so I'm going to try stir up some conversation about powerlifting in general.

The problem in this other way great sport is that there is too much federations. All have different kind of rules about equipment, lifts and general judging. In some federations they seem to allure more viewers in competiotions and free media coverage by stretching the rules a bit in order to make new records possible. Different kind of bars, half squats, multilayer suits and so on.

That is really irritating for a statistics geeks like my self, since because of that it makes lists like this complitely useless; it is no good to compare lifts from different federations — sometimes even between competition due to varying judging — even though they are both 'powerlifting' unions.

Here is a sample what I'm talking about:


All respects to Laura, but I don't know what lift that was. Most definetively it wasn't a squat. Here is a squat:


See any difference in leg position and depth? Judge for yourselves.

Suits are good in preventing injuries, but in my opinion, it has come a bit too far. Bench press and squat results have risen so much and this is directly related to lifting suit developement. But in deadlift you can't cheat and store potential energy since the lift starts from the ground. Always when I see results where squat it much more than deadlift, I smell something isn't right.

So any opinions?



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Maitolasi
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« Reply #2 on: May 07, 2009, 08:38 AM »

Quote
56kg   Thu 07 May 2009
   1   RANTAMÄKI Mervi (FIN1974F1)   1974   FIN   55.90   185.0   97.5   170.0   452.5   
   2   ABDULINA Vita   1967   UKR   55.80   180.0   100.0   172.5   442.5   [pending drug-test]
   3   CHUMAK Oksana   1983   UKR   54.05   175.0   102.5   155.0   432.5   
   4   LINDBERG Maria   1973   FIN   54.60   160.0   90.0   170.0   420.0   
60kg   Thu 07 May 2009
   1   MATEJOVA Dana   1975   SVK   59.90   197.5   125.0   170.0   492.5   [pending drug-test]
   2   CHEPIL Mariya (UKR1970F1)   1970   UKR   58.95   180.0   120.0   165.0   465.0   
   3   HOILAND Linda (NOR1979F1)   1979   NOR   59.85   165.0   90.0   177.5   432.5   
   1   COURQUEUX Cécile (FRA1983F1)   1983   FRA   57.40   170.0   77.5   167.5   407.5   
   -   HRABALOVA Jana   1984   CZE   59.55   145.0   90.0   150.0   -0.0   

Gold for Finnish in the 56 kg: Congratulation Mervi!
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Maitolasi
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« Reply #3 on: May 10, 2009, 09:22 AM »

Quote
67.5kg   Fri 08 May 2009
   1   ORSINI Antonietta (ITA1964F1)   1964   ITA   66.65   220.0   145.0   210.0   575.0   [pending drug-test]
   2   LUND Synnøve   1972   NOR   67.10   207.5   125.0   185.0   517.5   
   3   VIRKKUNEN Susanna   1973   FIN   67.05   172.5   127.5   172.5   472.5   
   4   HOFMANN Kristina Kaas   1981   DEN   66.45   187.5   90.0   185.0   462.5   
   5   JABLONSKA Magdalena   1985   POL   67.40   210.0   90.0   160.0   460.0   
   6   SCHREIBER Elke (GER1984F1)   1984   GER   66.25   177.5   90.0   170.0   437.5   
   7   GUDSTEINSDOTTIR María   1970   ISL   67.15   172.5   95.0   170.0   437.5   
75kg   Fri 08 May 2009
   1   KOZLOVA Olena   1990   UKR   74.40   235.0   127.5   232.5   595.0   [pending drug-test]
   2   BLIKRA Inger (NOR1961F1)   1961   NOR   74.20   225.0   142.5   210.0   577.5   
   3   YLITALO Riikka (FIN1982F2)   1982   FIN   74.65   200.0   125.0   215.0   540.0   
   4   CHRISTENSEN Lucia (SWE1985F3)   1985   SWE   73.80   185.0   115.0   180.0   480.0   
   5   OPDAL Veronica   1985   NOR   68.60   172.5   95.0   162.5   430.0   
82.5kg   Sat 09 May 2009
   1   IVANOVA Ielizaveta   1988   UKR   75.15   240.0   150.0   220.0   610.0   
   2   PEDERSEN Anette W   1968   DEN   73.50   202.5   135.0   210.0   547.5   
   3   ARNESEN HILLE Heidi   1970   NOR   75.30   215.0   122.5   192.5   530.0   
90kg   Sat 09 May 2009
   1   STRIK Ielja (NED1973F1)   1973   NED   88.60   255.0   165.0   220.0   640.0   [pending drug-test]
   2   BUSHUYEVA Yuliya   1981   UKR   84.85   170.0   100.0   150.0   420.0   
90+kg   Sat 09 May 2009
   1   VARLAMOVA Tetiana   1989   UKR   137.15   232.5   105.0   240.0   577.5   
   2   MEULEN V/D Brenda   1978   NED   108.10   230.0   155.0   190.0   575.0   
   -   HUGDAL JUVET Hildeborg   1983   NOR   128.50   270.0   185.0   205.0   -0.0   
Best Lifter »
   1   ORSINI Antonietta (ITA1964F1)   1964   ITA   592.2   pts (575.0, 66.65)   
   2   IVANOVA Ielizaveta   1988   UKR   579.2   pts (610.0, 75.15)   
   3   DMYTRUK Olena (UKR1983F1)   1983   UKR   578.7   pts (462.5, 51.75)   
Team Points »
   1   UKR      66   pts (12+12+12+12+9+9)
   2   FIN      56   pts (12+12+8+8+8+8)
   3   NOR      40   pts (9+9+8+8+6)
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cpbell0033944
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« Reply #4 on: May 16, 2009, 12:07 PM »

Thanks Maitolasi - I'm sorry that I didn't comment earlier.  I agree with you on the Federation issue, it's like boxing.  I also once read that the latest lifting suits actually make it harder for a bench presser to lower the bar than to lift it.  Is that true?
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"When I hear women expressing a fear of weight lifting, what I am
really hearing is a fear of being powerful. The social ideal tells
women to be hungry, manageable, childlike, not demanding space."

 -- Krista Scott-Dixon, aka Mistress Krista.
Maitolasi
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« Reply #5 on: May 17, 2009, 10:26 AM »

I also once read that the latest lifting suits actually make it harder for a bench presser to lower the bar than to lift it.  Is that true?

Well sounds a bit exaggerated or the lifter must have had some problems with the suit.  On the contrary I guess it makes the negative phase easier since it supports your shoulders and extensors — the bar comes down really slow in competition lifts — making the lift more stable. Although that said, I don't have any first-person experience about this matter so I may as well be wrong. I'm just guessing.

I think it would be very risky if the lifter is having trouble getting the bar down; if the suit would tore, the weight would come down very quickly and lifer might get injured.

But here's an example of one of the best female lifts. At firsti it sounds awesome: 402 pounds bench press from a 148 lbs lifter, but after seein it, I lost quite a bit of my interest in powerlifting.

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« Reply #6 on: May 17, 2009, 11:13 AM »

That makes sense Maitolasi, if the suit was too restrictive it could lead to a pretty bad injury.  Not just from the possibility that the suit tears and causes a sudden weight shift, but I would imagine the added stress of trying to lower the arms while handling such heavy weight could cause some pretty bad joint injuries.  I wouldn't want my shoulder to give out when it's holding 500+ pounds just inches above my torso.  Cry
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Maitolasi
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« Reply #7 on: Jun 11, 2009, 03:38 AM »

Almost forgot that the junior competition is already in progress in Sweden.
Website for the competition. http://www.styrkelyftaren.com/
and live stream http://qstream-live.qbrick.com/05130live_push

Timetable: UTC/GMT +2 hours

Day Weigh in time Classes Start
Wednesday: 10. 6. 2009 0900-1030 hours
1300-1430 hours
Women 44,0 & 52,0 kg
Men 52,0 to 75,0 kg
11:00
15:00
Thursday: 11. 6. 2009 0900-1030 hours
1300-1430 hours
Women 56,0 to 60,0 kg
Men 82,5 & 90,0 kg
11:00
15:00
Friday: 12. 6. 2009 0900-1030 hours
1230-1400 hours
Women 67,5 & 75,0 kg
Men 100,0 & 110,0 kg
11:00
14:30
Saturday: 13. 6. 2009 0830-1000 hours
1100-1230 hours
Women 82,5 to 90+ kg
Men 125,0 & 125+ kg
10:30
13:00
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