Weightlifter Nooh breaks Commonwealth Games record

20-year-old lifts highest-ever weight by junior in his category as he registered 395kg

PHOTO COURTESY: PAKISTAN WEIGHTLIFTING FEDERATION

KARACHI:
Pakistan's weightlifter Nooh Dastagir Butt managed to smash a record at the Commonwealth Games 2018 by registering the highest-ever weight by a junior in the +105kg event while also earning the country its second medal at the event on Monday.

Nooh won a bronze after he bettered his previous record of 389kg at the Commonwealth Weightlifting Championship that also took place in Gold Coast, Australia last year.

At the Games, he lifted a total of 395kg to make a junior record, edging past India's Gurdeep Singh, but falling behind New Zealand's David Liti, who lifted 403kg, and Lauititi Lui (400kg) for the top two spots.

The Gujranwala-based athlete didn’t avail his other chances however and caved in to pressure. He got 173kg in snatch but failed there in the next two attempts, and lifted 222kg in clean & jerk again, missing the next two attempts.

"If Nooh had managed to get five of his six attempts successful, he could've got us the gold," Pakistan Weightlifting Federation Vice-President Rashed Malik, who has had a major hand in developing the new crop of athletes, told The Express Tribune. "The pressure of the competition got to him but despite the missing he lifted enough weights to get the medal. This shows his calibre; we just need to work harder. Nooh is 20 and this is also his last year as a junior, we are glad he made the record."

Nooh missed out on silver by a difference of just five kilograms as the country’s fastest improving weightlifter aims to qualify for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.


The 20-year-old has been training vigorously to achieve that feat, and is among the seven weightlifters to represent the country at the Games.

Weightlifters to the rescue

This is just the second medal for Pakistan in the Games, with Nooh’s fellow weightlifter Talha Talib also breaking a record in the 62kg event while clinching bronze.

"We were competing in five categories and claimed medals in two of them," said Malik.

The youngsters have been working hard to achieve their goals since 2014 and out of a Pakistani contingent of 56 athletes, these two are the only ones to have delivered any medals so far.

Pakistan are currently on 26th position in the rankings table.
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