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Weightlifting at the 1956 Summer Olympics – Men's 56 kg

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Men's 56 kg
at the Games of the XVI Olympiad
VenueRoyal Exhibition Building
Date23 November 1956
Competitors16 from 13 nations
Winning total342.5 kg WR
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Charles Vinci  United States
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Vladimir Stogov  Soviet Union
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Mahmoud Namjoo  Iran
← 1952
1960 →

The men's 56 kg weightlifting competitions at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne took place on 23 November at the Royal Exhibition Building.[1] It was the third appearance of the bantamweight class.[2]

Each weightlifter had three attempts at each of the three lifts. The best score for each lift was summed to give a total. The weightlifter could increase the weight between attempts (minimum of 5 kg between first and second attempts, 2.5 kg between second and third attempts) but could not decrease weight. If two or more weightlifters finished with the same total, the competitors' body weights were used as the tie-breaker (lighter athlete wins).[1]

Records

[edit]

Prior to this competition, the existing world and Olympic records were as follows.

World record Press  Vladimir Stogov (URS) 107.5 kg 1956
Snatch  Charles Vinci (USA) 102.5 kg Munich, West Germany 12 October 1955
Clean & Jerk  Chen Ching Kai (CHN) 133 kg 1956
Total  Vladimir Stogov (URS) 335 kg Munich, West Germany 12 October 1955
Olympic record Press  Joseph De Pietro (USA) 105 kg London, United Kingdom 9 August 1948
Snatch  Ivan Udodov (URS) 97.5 kg Helsinki, Finland 25 July 1952
Clean & Jerk  Ivan Udodov (URS) 127.5 kg Helsinki, Finland 25 July 1952
Total  Ivan Udodov (URS) 315 kg Helsinki, Finland 25 July 1952

Results

[edit]
Rank Athlete Nation Body
weight
Press (kg) Snatch (kg) Clean & Jerk (kg) Total
1 2 3 Result 1 2 3 Result 1 2 3 Result
1st place, gold medalist(s) Charles Vinci  United States 56.00 100 105 105 105 =OR 100 105 107.5 105 OR 127.5 132.5 135 132.5 342.5 WR
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Vladimir Stogov  Soviet Union 56.00 100 105 107.5 105 =OR 97.5 102.5 105 105 OR 127.5 132.5 132.5 127.5 337.5
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Mahmoud Namjoo  Iran 56.00 95 100 105 100 95 100 102.5 102.5 125 130 130 130 332.5
4 Yu In-ho  South Korea 55.70 82.5 87.5 90 90 90 95 95 95 130 135 140 135 WR 320
5 Kim Hae-nam  South Korea 55.70 85 90 90 85 95 100 100 95 120 125 127.5 127.5 307.5
6 Yoshio Nanbu  Japan 55.60 82.5 82.5 87.5 87.5 90 95 97.5 97.5 115 120 125 120 305
7 Reg Gaffley  South Africa 56.00 85 92.5 97.5 97.5 85 90 92.5 90 110 117.5 122.5 117.5 305
8 Yukio Furuyama  Japan 55.80 85 90 92.5 90 87.5 92.5 92.5 87.5 115 120 125 125 302.5
9 Song Re-nado  Republic of China 55.10 85 85 90 85 77.5 82.5 85 85 105 112.5 117.5 117.5 287.5
10 Gaston Gaffney  South Africa 55.70 82.5 87.5 92.5 87.5 80 85 87.5 85 112.5 117.5 117.5 112.5 285
11 Aw Chu Kee  Burma 56.00 85 85 85 85 80 85 85 80 110 110 115 110 275
12 Valli Asari Mookan  India 55.00 72.5 80 82.5 80 75 80 85 80 107.5 112.5 112.5 112.5 272.5
13 Charles Henderson  Australia 55.50 72.5 77.5 77.5 72.5 85 90 90 85 105 110 115 115 272.5
13 Michael Swain  Guyana 55.50 75 80 82.5 80 82.5 87.5 87.5 82.5 110 115 115 110 272.5
15 Habib Rahman  Pakistan 55.70 75 80 82.5 80 72.5 72.5 75 90 95 97.5 97.5 177.5
16 Pedro Landero  Philippines 55.70 95 95 95 Retired

As weigh-in time approached, Vinci was one and a half pounds overweight. After an hour of running and sweating he was still seven ounces over the limit with 15 minutes to go. Fortunately, a severe last-minute haircut did the trick, and Vinci went on to win the gold medal.[3]

New records

[edit]
Press 105 kg  Charles Vinci (USA)
 Vladimir Stogov (URS)
=OR
Snatch 105 kg  Charles Vinci (USA)
 Vladimir Stogov (URS)
OR
Clean & Jerk 135 kg  Yu In-ho (KOR) OR
Total 342.5 kg  Charles Vinci (USA) WR

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Official Report, p. 634.
  2. ^ "Weightlifting at the 1956 Melbourne Summer Games: Men's Bantamweight". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 26 December 2019.
  3. ^ Wallechinsky, David (1984). The Complete Book of the Olympics. England: Penguin Books. p. 628. ISBN 0140066322.