Weekly FIVE!

Weekly FIVE! December 24, 2018

By Eric Olanowski

Reviewing the new Ranking Series point structure and tournament locations. Also taking a look at Icho's win over Kawai, the #UWWAwards, and the 2018 Greco-Roman World Clubs Cup. 

1. Wrestling Revamps Ranking Series System, Names 2019 Host Locations
The United World Wrestling Bureau has approved new regulations for the 2019 Ranking Series. The recommendations were brought forward by the Technical Commission at a meeting last week in Belgrade.

The most important changes to the 2019 Ranking Series centered around the allocation of points at world championships, continental championships, and Ranking Series events. The points were rebalanced to emphasize participation, and success, at the world and continental championships.

New worldwide rankings have been updated on the United World Wrestling website. The 2018 World Championships results are the basis of the rankings, as each year the world championships results will be the first points for the following year.

The seeding process for the World Championships and Olympic Games will now also include a field of the top four wrestlers in each weight category with lower seeded athletes bumping up, should one of the top four not participate in the world championships. The previous version of the world championships did not replace top seeds when they were absent of the competition.

Click HERE to see locations for the freestyle, Greco-Roman, and women's wrestling Ranking Series events. 

 

2. Icho Pulls Off Dramatic Win over Kawai to Move Step Closer to Shot at Olympic 5-peat
Adding another chapter to her bulging legend, Kaori ICHO pulled off a dramatic last-second victory over the new titan on the block, and moved a step closer to gaining a shot at winning a historic fifth Olympic gold medal in her home country.

Icho scored a takedown with 10 seconds left to clinch a 3-2 victory over fellow Rio 2016 Olympic champion Risako KAWAI in a nationally televised women’s 57kg final that brought a close to the All-Japan Championships in Tokyo.

Icho’s stunning victory came a day after Kawai, this year’s world champion at 59kg, edged the four-time Olympic champion 2-1 in a preliminary round-robin group match, handing Icho her first loss to a Japanese opponent since 2001.

I knew it was going to be a tough match, but I’m happy I could pull it off,” said Icho, who let out a short scream of joy and clenched her fists after the victory. “It’s been awhile since I’ve felt this nervousness, so I thought to just try and stay relaxed.”

The 34-year-old Icho won her first national title since 2015 and 13th overall dating back to 2002, despite spending more than two years away from the mat after winning the gold in Rio, which made her the first woman in Olympic history to win four straight titles in a single event.

She returned to competition in September as a prelude for the All-Japan Championships, also referred to as the Emperor’s Cup and which was serving as the first stage in the qualifying process for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.

Click HERE to read the full recap of the final day of wrestling at the Emperor’s Cup. 
Day One: Emperor's Cup Wrap 
Day Two: Emperor's Cup Wrap 
Day Three: Emperor's Cup Wrap 

3. Bonne, Bacsi and Gray Named Comeback Athletes of the Year

United World Wrestling named Yowls BONNE-RODRIGUEZ (CUB), Peter BACSI (HUN), and Adeline GRAY (USA) the 2018 Comeback Athletes of the Year.

In freestyle, Cuba’s Yowls Bonne-Rodriguez won his first world title just days before his 35th birthday. Bonne finally obtained the elusive world gold medal after three previous attempts, scoring come-from-behind wins in the quarterfinals and finals.

In the quarterfinals, Bonne trailed Iran’s Mohammadbagher YAKHKESHI by two points with five seconds left when he hit a four-point inside trip and stole the match, 10-8.

Then, in the finals, Bonne trailed Russia’s Gadzhimurad RASHIDOV  2-0 before scoring a massive five-point move, which ultimately catapulted him to the top of the podium with a 5-5 criteria win.

This was Bonne's third world medal, previously finishing up the 2014 and 2017 World Championships with bronze medals.

Peter Bacsi, the 35-year-old Hungarian, won his first world championship since 2014 earning himself this year's Greco-Roman Comeback Athlete of the Year.

Basci trailed Turkey’s Emrah KUS 3-0 in the 82kg gold medal bout but scored four unanswered points to give the host nation their first and only gold medal of the Budapest World Championships.

The 2018 World Championships were rumored to be Bacsi’s last, but after his surprise victory he didn't rule out the 2019 Astana World Championships, though he did confirm he will not be making a run for Hungary’s 2020 Tokyo Olympic team.

Adeline Gray (USA) was named the women’s wrestling Comeback Athlete of the Year after returning from a year absence to win her fourth world title.

The American’s impressive road to her fourth world title went through reigning Olympic champion Erica WIEBE (CAN), and reigning world champion, Yasmin ADAR (TUR).

In the semifinals, Gray edged Wiebe, 3-1, and wrapped up the gold-medal bout early with a 13-1 win over Adar, winning the gold medal in a weight class that featured eight previous world champions.

4. Burroughs and Chamizo, Snyder and Sadulaev Headline Biggest Rivalries of the Year

United World Wrestling has named four of the Biggest Rivalries of the Year. There were two in freestyle, and one in Greco-Roman and women's wrestling.

The freestyle season saw more than one top-level rivalry, so a pair were selected for this category. The first freestyle rivalry selected was the 74kg showdown between Jordan BURROUGHS (USA) and Frank CHAMIZO (ITA), and the second was Abdulrashid SADULAEV (RUS) and Kyle SNYDER (USA).

Perhaps no weight category was more competitive in 2018 than women’s wrestling’s 76kg. Lead by reigning world champion, Yasmin ADAR (TUR), four-time world champion, Adeline GRAY (USA), and Rio Olympic champion, Erica WIEBE (CAN). It was the American Adeline Gray who prevailed and won her fourth world title.

In Greco-Roman, Kyrgyzstan’s Akzhol MAKHMUDOV (KGZ) was looking for redemption coming into the Junior World Championships the American Kamal Ameer BEY (USA) was victorious in the 2017 junior world finals. Makhmudov dominated the bronze-medal bout at the Junior World Championships and picked up the 8-1 win.

5.  Iran Team Wins GR World Clubs Cup, Azizli & Kayaalp Remain Undefeated
Iran's Team Bimeh Razi Ardabil defeated Team Russia to capture 2018 Greco-Roman World Clubs Cup title in Ardabil city of Iran. 

The Iranian team, lifted by Eldaniz AZIZLI and Sergey SEMENOV, the pair of reigning world 2018 world champions, defeated Russia, 8-2 to claim the 2018 Greco-Roman World Clubs Cup team title. 

Azerbaijan’s 55kg world champion Eldaniz Azizli gave Bimeh Razi their first win of the finals with a technical fall victory over Vitalii Kabaloev (RUS). 

Bimeh Razi added wins from Mehrdad MARDANI and Saman ABDEVALI (Bimeh) and took a three match lead into the 67kg matchup between Maksim SURKOV (RUS) df. Mohammad ELYASI (Bimeh). Surkov put Russia on the board with a 1-1 criteria win, and closed the scored to 3-1. Denis MURTAZIN (RUS) gave Russia their second and final win of the night with a 10-8 win over Boroumand ASLAN. 

Bimeh Razi closed out the gold-medal bout on a five match win steak, including two 5-0 shutout wins at 82kg and 87kg, and a fall from Russia’s reigning 130kg world champion, Sergey Semenov, who was competing for the Iranian side. 

In the bronze medal match, Iran’s Sina Sanat Izeh narrowly defated Turkey, 6-4. 

In the fifth-place match, Georgia defeated Iran’s Shohadaye Modafe Haram, 6-4, while Ukraine beat Serbia, 8-2 in the seventh-place bout. 

Click HERE for full results of the final day of the 2018 Greco-Roman World Clubs Cup.

Day One: Greco-Roman World Clubs Cup Wrap 

Weekly FIVE! In Social Media 

1. REPOST: @usawrestling you don’t wanna miss this one! ???@btslosangeles#wrestlelikeagirl
2. Over the next two weeks @unitedworldwrestling will share our most popular videos and photos from 2018. 
#FrankChamizo VS  #JordanBurroughs
@beatthestreets 
В течении следующих двух недель мы будем делиться с вами лучшими публикациями 2018 года. 
#ФрэнкЧамизо VS  #ДжорданБарроуз
#thebestof2018
#лучшееиз2018
3. Over the next two weeks @unitedworldwrestling will share our most popular videos and photos from 2018. 
#DavidTaylor ? @kadircaliskan
В течении следующих двух недель мы будем делиться с вами лучшими публикациями 2018 года. 
#ДэвидТэйлор
#thebestof2018
#лучшееиз2018
4. Best photos of 2018 GR World Clubs Cup in Iran, Ardabil city.

Phtos by @alireza_akbari_62 
بهترین تصاویر از مسابقات کشتی فرنگی باشگاه های جهان در اردبیل
5. Check out the 2019 Ranking Series events! Link in stories!

Trained in Japan and USA, Yoneoka hopes to coach Norway to global success

By Ken Marantz

TOKYO, Japan (July 20) -- Yurie YONEOKA has taken her share of knocks along her lifelong path in wrestling, but she always seems to land on her feet. This time it has planted her onto a second different continent.

Yoneoka, a Japanese who competed collegiately in the United States before becoming a coach there, has been hired as head coach of the Norwegian national women’s team, which hopes some of the success of her home country can rub off after decades of slim results.

Norway, which was among the top nations in women’s wrestling in the early 1990s, has not produced a women’s world champion since Gudren HOELE won the last of her five world golds in 1998 at 56kg, and its last world medal of any kind was a bronze in 2005 by Lene AANES at 59kg.

The 29-year-old Yoneoka was hired on an initial two-year contract, but with eyes on producing results at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics. That’s a tall task in itself, as Norway has only had one woman qualify in wrestling for the Olympics in its history when Signe Marie STORE made the field at 69kg at the 2016 Rio Games but finished 18th.

YoneokaYurie YONEOKA talks with the press during a recent trip back to Japan. (Photo: Japan Wrestling Federation)

“We have a six-year goal which is Los Angeles [2028],” Yoneoka said during an interview in Tokyo earlier this month when she returned to attend a wedding. “But we have to take baby steps. So the first thing is to medal at the European Championships at the senior level, and the junior [U20] level as well.

“We will hopefully get a World Championships medal. That's the closest way to get to the Olympics,” she said, referring to the direct Olympic qualifying places available at the World Championships.

Yoneoka, who ultimately would like to land an executive position at United World Wrestling so she can advance the standing of women and Japan, found out about the Norway opening from a notice on the UWW website. She immediately applied and, after an extended interview process, was hired in June.

"At the time I was coaching at the university in the United States and I was looking to take a step up for a more high-level coaching job,” she says. “My [ultimate] goal in my life is working at United World Wrestling. So I was thinking what are the good steps to reach my goal, and I was thinking higher-level coaching would be a very good opportunity.”

YoneokaYurie YONEOKA addresses members of the Norwegian national team for the first time during a brief visit last month. (Photo courtesy of Yurie Yoneoka)

Norway has a current senior star in two-time European champion Grace BULLEN, but she has yet to meet expectations in terms of world medals and Olympic qualifying. Yoneoka said her focus will be more on developing the next generation of wrestlers.

“My main focus, which the federation asked me, is mostly on U20,” she says. “But I will do a lot of camps to collect the girls and bond together regardless of age. For U17 and U15, I will probably still coach and go to the competition if I am available, but not super-focused, more like support.”

Yoneoka is looking to centralize the national team operations in Oslo and has already set up a training camp for September. She has only briefly met team members and is still waiting for a work visa and a place to live.

Having been exposed to the sport both in Japan and the United States, Yoneoka feels she brings a broad perspective to Norway and can allow team members to find the style that best suits them.

“While making the most of each individual’s own style, I believe it is vital to add to what they do well, rather than completely change their wrestling,” Yoneoka said in an earlier interview on the JWF website. “Six years will go by before you know it. If there is even the slightest feeling of hesitation, the goal will get further away.”

Looking at the differences, “Japanese style is very focused on basics, and they have high technique. Very good conditioning,” Yoneoka says. “The American style is very powerful, with big dynamic movement. They love to show stuff. And they have a lack of conditioning. Of course, they haven't done a lot of freestyle, so that's probably one point. The European style is very mixed, which I would say is very balanced between Japanese style and American style.”

YoneokaYurie YONEOKA, center on right, poses with University of Providence teammates after placing sixth at the 2019 U.S. national collegiate championships. (Photo courtesy of Yurie Yoneoka)

Coming to America

Although Yoneoka never competed at a World or Asian Championships on any level herself, she was a better-than-average high school wrestler, placing third at the national high school championships in an era that would produce several future Olympic champions.

But later disillusionment with her college program in Japan set in motion a journey that would bring her to one of the most rural and off-the-beaten-path parts of America.

As with the Norway job, Yoneoka’s interest in a jump across the Pacific was sparked by an online notice, this one on the Japan Wrestling Federation website in 2013. There was a call out for Japanese wrestlers interested in competing collegiately in the U.S.

Behind the project was Tadaaki HATTA, a former NCAA champion and U.S. national team coach who has long served as a link between the two countries.

In the past, a few Japanese males like Hatta have gone over to U.S. universities, most notably Yojiro UETAKE, who went undefeated at Oklahoma State in the 1960s and became a two-time Olympic champion, and Sanshiro ABE, who won an NCAA title at Penn State in 1996 and competed at that year's Atlanta Olympics.

But Yoneoka still remains the only woman to take the plunge. And it was not easy getting there. Yoneoka first had to pass the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), a formidable hurdle given that “[English] was the subject I always got the worst grade at school. I was always at the bottom in the class. So I literally started from the ‘This is a pen’ level."

Talk about perseverance. Yoneoka failed the test 14 times -- 14 times! -- over a four-year period before finally earning a passing score. During that time, she worked part-time jobs as a receptionist at a dry cleaning shop and as a staff member at Costco.

Yoneoka had been recruited to attend Jamestown University in North Dakota, and the school patiently waited for her to pass the TOEFL test. "We kept in touch and [the school] was always supportive of what I was doing," she said.

Unfortunately, after she finally to Jamestown, she was unable to compete in her first year for reasons she still doesn't understand. The next year, coach Tony DEAND took a new job at the University of Providence in Great Falls, Montana, and took Yoneoka with him. And once again, she was declared ineligible to compete for a season. When Deand left after just one season, Yoneoka remained at Providence.

While going abroad to study afforded her more freedom than she had back in Japan, Yoneoka became too busy as a student-athlete to get caught up in the social scene. "I didn't party a lot at all," she says. "I had to make money, too, because I didn't get a full grant. I had to work on campus at the Starbucks, for only like two or three shifts [a week]."

She described her routine as "morning practice, go to class, work and practice. That was it."

In the end, her junior year was the only one in which she had a full competitive season. She won titles at the Spokane Open and the Battle of the Rockies, then finished sixth at the 2019 Women’s Collegiate Wrestling Association Championships at 116 pounds (52.6kg). She was ranked third in the nation at 109 (49.5 kg) in her senior year, only to have the 2020 championships canceled due to the pandemic.

After graduating with a degree in sociology, she was hired as an assistant coach at Providence, making her the first-ever Japanese woman to coach on the collegiate level in the United States.

She says it was difficult to leave Providence and the team to take the job with the Norwegian team, but says the response was positive. "It was pretty hard, especially for girls who I built a really good relationship with," she says. "They were very sad, but they were happy for me that I got the job."

YoneokaYurie YONEOKA, second from right, stands on the medal podium after placing third at the 2010 Junior Queens Cup. To her right is champion Risako KAWAI, now a two-time Olympic gold medalist. (Photo courtesy of Yurie Yoneoka)

Sweet bribe launches career

Yoneoka’s entry into the wrestling world was basically the result of a bribe. The culprit: Her father. The enticement: Chocolate.

Born in Tokyo, Yoneoka’s family moved to nearby Kashiwa, Chiba Prefecture, while she was a toddler. Her father, who was a dedicated amateur handball player, was looking for a sport for his four-year-old daughter when he spotted a poster at the local civic sports center. It was for a local kids wrestling club.

“He was like, 'This is it,’” Yoneoka recalls. “But I was a very, very shy girl and he was like, 'Do you want to go because I will buy you chocolate.' And I love chocolate. So chocolate is the only reason I went into wrestling.”

She still remembers her first day in the sport. "It was a very hard practice. [My father] threw me into the practice, and I had to do the whole practice on the first day. I almost cried."

But with a mix of determination and stubbornness that would get her through trying times later in life, Yoneoka stuck with it and showed potential. She developed a love for the sport and continued until being forced to stop briefly because of one of Japan's main social problems -- bullying, which she suffered in junior high school.

"I got bullied heavily and I couldn't go to school for awhile," she says. "So I had to stop wrestling as well because the wrestling team was practicing at that junior high. A few months later, I just changed schools."

Determined to get back into the sport, she passed the entrance exams for Saitama Sakae High School in neighboring Saitama Prefecture. It is among the top schools for wrestling in the Kanto region, which includes Tokyo and the surrounding prefectures, but also one that is also academically oriented.

"I wanted to be the best wrestler that I could ever be, and my dream was to go to the Olympics, too," Yoneoka says. "[I thought], where can I go to achieve that goal? There were only a few selective schools in the Kanto area because [women's] wrestling was still developing.

"Sakae was a very good school which has a pretty good academic program, too. My parents only wanted me to put my best [effort] into both academics and athletics. [They said] if you go in the advanced program of study, you can keep wrestling. I studied and got into the school."

Aside from the curriculum, going to Sakae meant enduring another hardship -- a two-hour train commute from her home in Kashiwa. "Those three years were probably one of the hardest times in my life," she says. "Practice started at 7 [a.m.], so I had to wake up before 5 and hop on the train for two hours."

YoneokaYurie YONEOKA poses with members of Norway's U15 team. (Photo courtesy of Yurie Yoneoka)

In 2010, Yoneoka placed third in the U17 division of the Junior Queens Cup at 49kg, a weight class won by future two-time Olympic champion Risako KAWAI. The next year, she won a bronze medal at the National High School Championships in that weight class, which was won by Nanami IRIE, a future world silver medalist.

To get an idea of how competitive the 2011 high school nationals were, the champions of three other weight classes would go on to become Olympic champions --Kawai, Eri TOSAKA and Sara DOSHO. Yoneoka met Tosaka at a wrestling camp during junior high school and they remain friends to this day.

"That was really tough," Yoneoka said of the competition. "I was actually very insecure about my wrestling. It [gave] me the power to push through, that I had to be better every day. But I was insecure that I could make it."

While the Big Three would all eventually go on to collegiate powerhouse Shigakkan University, Yoneoka was pressed by her coach to stay in the Kanto region and attend Toyo University. She never fully fit into the program and, after an undistinguished three years, dropped out during her senior year after the opportunity to go to the States came up.

"The wrestling community is pretty tight, and my high school coach pushed me to go to Toyo University," she says. "I liked it as a university, but the team situation was not what I had imagined or what I desired. It wasn't the best situation for me as an athlete.

"I didn't regret quitting the team, but I had a strong feeling that I shouldn't quit wrestling itself. I was feeling devastated about wrestling. I was like, what should I do with my life? All I had done with my life was wrestling. In very, very good timing I saw the advertisement by Tadaaki Hatta."

Having seen their daughter spend the last six years or so in the United States, what did her parents think about her career path now taking her to Norway?

"My parents were first of all surprised," she says. "But they know even if they say something, I will still do whatever I want to. For my parents, it was like, 'Alright go ahead.'

"My friends were like, 'Norway? I thought you were living in the U.S. forever.'"

Yoneoka looks forward to that first time one of her Norwegian wrestlers faces a Japanese opponent on the mat.

"I feel like I will be proud of the Norwegian to be competing against a Japanese because obviously, the Japanese wrestlers are the best," she says. "But I think that will be good for me to learn some things as well, and I have so much respect for the Japanese wrestling federation and wrestlers. It will be a little bit nostalgic, but it will be a good feeling."

Looking at the big picture, it is also about gaining acceptance for women in the sport.

"In the States, there are still issues that women's wrestling gets really disrespected by men's wrestlers or even just men," she says. "It's a big issue and I feel like girls have to stand up for themselves still, which is pretty sad.

"In Norway, there is a big equality system, like men and women have to be equal. I think it's good, but still, in the wrestling community, it's a tough fight. Of course, I will stand up for myself and for my girls as well as for my future as a woman. That's one of my goals."