US, Iran unite in bid to keep wrestling in Olympics

AFP
Rich Bender (left) and Hojatollah Khatib at the wrestling World Cup in Tehran on February 20, 2013 this week.

TEHRAN (AFP) –

Rich Bender (left) and Hojatollah Khatib at the wrestling World Cup in Tehran. The United States and Iran may be arch foes on the diplomatic front, but bosses from two of wrestling’s power-houses have allied to fight a decision to drop the sport from the 2020 Olympic Games.

The United States and Iran may be arch foes on the diplomatic front, but bosses from two of wrestling’s power-houses have allied to fight a decision to drop the sport from the 2020 Olympic Games.

Rich Bender, executive director of USA Wrestling, is in Tehran, which is hosting the World Cup men’s freestyle tournament on Thursday and Friday.

“We need the backing of Iran and Russia… to preserve the wrestling, and this goes beyond politics… Iran is one of the powers in wrestling and can defend the game’s credibility,” he was quoted by the ISNA news agency as saying.

Speaking at a ceremony hosted by the Iranian Wrestling Federation, he said he hoped that, with the “comprehensive unity” among the wrestling power-houses, the IOC will change its decision.

The head of the Iranian Wrestling Federation, Hojatollah Khatib, said he hopes that “this unprecedented unity” can change the International Olympic Committee’s decision.

Hegedus Csaba, a member of the International Federation of Associated Wrestling Styles (FILA), said “we are showing the IOC that we are united and will force them to bring back the wrestling to the Olympics.

“I am very happy that Khatib and Bender had very friendly meeting. This shows that we have a common language and that is wrestling.”

North Korea's Yang Kyong Il (right) wrestles Kazakhstan's Daulet Niyazbekov at the London Olympics on August 10, 2012

North Korea’s Yang Kyong Il (right) fights Kazakhstan’s Daulet Niyazbekov at the London Olympics. Last week, the IOC’s executive board voted to drop wrestling as one of the core sports of the games.

Last week, the IOC’s executive board voted to drop wrestling as one of the core sports of the games. That means it now joins seven others — baseball/softball, karate, squash, roller sports, sport climbing, wakeboarding and wushu — vying to be selected as an “additional sport.”

The board will meet in May to consider presentations by their supporters and choose one to recommend to the full committee for a decision in September.

But the full committee is seen as unlikely to vote against the executive board, raising the prospect that one of the few sports that survived from the original Olympics in ancient Greece into the modern era will disappear.

The sport first appeared in 708 BC and has only ever been left out of the Olympic programme once before in 1900.

FILA has vowed to fight the decision, and International Olympic Academy president Isidoros Kouvelos also called on the IOC to respect the historical roots of the Olympics and not remove wrestling.

Turkey's Ramazan Sahin (left) wrestles Kazakhstan's Akzhurek Tanatarov at the London Olympics on August 12, 2012

Turkey’s Ramazan Sahin (left) wrestles Kazakhstan’s Akzhurek Tanatarov at the London Olympics. Wrestling first appeared in 708 BC and has only ever been left out of the Olympic programme once before, in 1900.

Wrestling-mad Iran was one of the first nations to criticise the move to scrap the sport, dubbing it a “big blow” to the country’s sport which has been medal winner for the country.

Wrestling has an ancient history in Iran, dating a time when Persian kings would battle their opponents in epic matches. The sport attracts millions of followers across the country, and unofficial figures say tens of thousands actually go to the mats.

However, wrestling is forbidden for women in Islamic Iran.

Washington broke off relations with Iran in 1980 in the aftermath of the storming of the US embassy in Tehran that led to 52 American diplomats being taken hostage by Islamist students.

Since then, the US has been vilified by the Islamic republic as the “Great Satan.”

It is particularly significant that public figures from the United States and Iran have come together with a common goal, given that the two countries’ governments are locked in a tense showdown over an array of issues.

The United States, along with much of the West and Israel, suspects that Iran’s civil nuclear programme is a cover for developing a bomb.

Tehran strongly denies that, but has been slapped with a host of sanctions aimed at pushing it to stop enriching uranium which, in highly pure form, can be used as the core of a bomb.

Washington is also at loggerheads over its support for the embattled regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and for Hezbollah, the powerful Lebanese Shiite movement that is an archfoe of close US ally Syria.

Edited by Staff Editor
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