here was disappointment for Britain’s Zoe Newson in the powerlifting on Thursday, but a vivid spectacle all the same as the Chinese athlete Guo Lingling set a world record in a fourth, extra “powerlift” round. Newson had been aiming for a medal at a third successive Games but fell well short of her personal best in a tense final riddled with incomplete lifts. But Lingling, who wascompeting at her first Games, gave a display of dominance, breaking the Paralympic record with her very first lift. Paralympic Games day two: GB gold rush and more – as it happened Read more Powerlifting is a bench-press weightlifting event for athletes who have impairments in their lower legs or hips. Classification is defined by weight, with the -41kg category in which Newson and Lingling compete the lightest at the Games. The competition took place in the theatre of the Tokyo International Forum and organisers immediately set about creating drama. An impeccable sequence of 80s power ballads (Huey Lewis, Whitney Houston) was followed by introductions from a boxing-style master of ceremonies. As the clock ticked down to the first of three rounds of competition, multicoloured spotlights darted round a darkened stage. “The bar is loaded …” the MC intoned and with that we were under way. Athletes are allowed to determine their own starting weights and Newson came in at the middle of the field at 94kg. Emerging on to the stage with a flex of her triceps, she completed a successful lift with no hint of difficulty. Ahead of her, the Venezuelan Clara Sarahy Fuentes Monasterio’s 97kg attempt was ruled a “no lift” by judges, leaving Newson in third place after the first round, her final position at both the London and Rio Games. Lingling, meanwhile, set off at 105kg, under the world record she set in Doha this year but ahead of the Paralympic record set in 2016. She cleared the weight with ease, with a spring in her elbows in the final movement of the press sequence. From that point the winner was clear. Zoe Newson attempts a lift in the women’s -41kg final. Zoe Newson attempts a lift in the women’s -41kg final. Photograph: Molly Darlington/Reuters Advertisement Newson, who had dropped down from the -45kg category she had competed in at previous Games and had a lack of competition in the run-up to Tokyo because of the pandemic, struggled in the second round. She did not complete the press at 97kg while Fuentes Monasterio did at her second attempt. With the Indonesian athlete Ni Nengah Widiasih into the third round with a completed weight of 96kg, Newson needed a big lift in the final round. But once again 97kg proved too much, and the 29-year-old broke down in tears away from the stage as she finished fourth. “I hope I didn’t let anyone down,” said Newson, who had won gold at the recent World Cup in Dubai, her first competition since the pandemic. “I’m a bit disappointed in my performance but I have to move on and focus on the next competition now. The Chinese winner is a good lifter with a great technique and I do look up to her.” As Newson left the stage, Venezuela claimed bronze and Indonesia silver. Lingling, meanwhile, was just getting warmed up. After failing to complete in her second round, she lifted 108kg in the third round, and once again with apparent ease. That was a world record, and more than two and a half times her bodyweight of 40.13kg. Sign up for our Tokyo 2020 briefing with all the news, views and previews for the Paralympic Games. A record lift, in powerlifting rules, means the chance to request an extra fourth round. Lingling duly did so and the MC returned eagerly to the stage to celebrate the arrival of a “power lift”. Queen’s We Will Rock You, the only music for the moment, came through the speakers. Lingling then returned to the stage and slowly, but with absolute control, lifted 109kg of iron above her. After a long wait for the judges the lift was cleared and Lingling quietly broke out into a broad smile. She had pushed the bar for her sport even higher.
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