Anatoly Pisarenko
Soviet weightlifter (born 1958)
Olympic medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Representing the ![]() | ||
Men's weightlifting | ||
World Championships Total | ||
![]() | 1981 Lille | +110 kg |
![]() | 1982 Ljubljana | +110 kg |
![]() | 1983 Moscow | +110 kg |
European Championships Total | ||
![]() | 1981 Lille | +110 kg |
![]() | 1982 Ljubljana | +110 kg |
![]() | 1983 Moscow | +110 kg |
![]() | 1984 Vittorio | +110 kg |
USSR Weightlifting Championships Total | ||
![]() | 1980 Moscow | +110 kg |
![]() | 1982 Dnipropetrovsk | +110 kg |
![]() | 1983 Moscow | +110 kg |
![]() | 1984 Minsk | +110 kg |
Summer Spartakiad of the USSR Total | ||
![]() | 1983 Moscow | +110 kg |
Anatoly Grigor'evich Pisarenko (Ukrainian: Анатолій Григорович Писаренко, Russian: Анатолий Григорьевич Писаренко; born January 10, 1958) is a former Olympic weightlifter for the USSR. He was born in Kyiv, where he trained at Dynamo.
Pisarenko held multiple world records in the snatch and clean and jerk, and was named weightlifting's "most iconic athlete" by Weightlifting House in 2023.[1] After Pisarenko was caught with Aleksandr Kurlovich in possession of steroids by the Canadian customs in 1985, he was given a lifetime ban by the Soviet Weightlifting Federation.[2]
Major results
Year | Venue | Weight | Snatch (kg) | Clean & Jerk (kg) | Total | Rank | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | Rank | 1 | 2 | 3 | Rank | |||||
World Championships | ||||||||||||
1981[a] | ![]() | +110 kg | 187.5 | ![]() | 237.5 | ![]() | 425 | ![]() | ||||
1982[a] | ![]() | +110 kg | 197.5 | ![]() | 247.5 | ![]() | 445 | ![]() | ||||
1983[a] | ![]() | +110 kg | 205 | ![]() | 245 | ![]() | 450 | ![]() | ||||
European Championships | ||||||||||||
1984 | ![]() | +110 kg | 200 | ![]() | 250 | ![]() | 450 | ![]() |
- a This tournament was counted as European Weightlifting Championships of the corresponding year.
World records by Anatoly Pisarenko
He set thirteen World records in career.[3]
Year | Lift type | Result | Weight class | Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
1981 | Snatch | 201.5 kg | Super heavyweight | Podolsk |
1981 | Total (2) | 447.5 kg | Super heavyweight | Podolsk |
1982 | Snatch | 202.5 kg | Super heavyweight | Dnipropetrovsk |
1982 | Clean and jerk | 258.0 kg | Super heavyweight | Frunze |
1982 | Clean and jerk | 258.5 kg | Super heavyweight | Dnipropetrovsk |
1982 | Total (2) | 450.0 kg | Super heavyweight | Frunze |
1982 | Total (2) | 455.0 kg | Super heavyweight | Frunze |
1982 | Total (2) | 457.5 kg | Super heavyweight | Dnipropetrovsk |
1983 | Snatch | 203.0 kg | Super heavyweight | Odessa |
1983 | Snatch | 205.0 kg | Super heavyweight | Moscow |
1983 | Snatch | 206.0 kg | Super heavyweight | Moscow |
1983 | Clean and jerk | 260.5 kg | Super heavyweight | Allentown |
1984 | Clean and jerk | 265.0 kg | Super heavyweight | Varna |
References
- v
- t
- e
World Champions in Weightlifting – Men's Super Heavyweight
- 1969:
Joseph Dube (USA)
- 1970:
Vasily Alekseyev (URS)
- 1971:
Vasily Alekseyev (URS)
- 1972:
Vasily Alekseyev (URS)
- 1973:
Vasily Alekseyev (URS)
- 1974:
Vasily Alekseyev (URS)
- 1975:
Vasily Alekseyev (URS)
- 1976:
Vasily Alekseyev (URS)
- 1977:
Vasily Alekseyev (URS)
- 1978:
Jürgen Heuser (GDR)
- 1979:
Sultan Rakhmanov (URS)
- 1980:
Sultan Rakhmanov (URS)
- 1981:
Anatoly Pisarenko (URS)
- 1982:
Anatoly Pisarenko (URS)
- 1983:
Anatoly Pisarenko (URS)
- 1984:
Dean Lukin (AUS)
- 1985:
Antonio Krastev (BUL)
- 1986:
Antonio Krastev (BUL)
- 1987:
Aleksandr Kurlovich (URS)
- 1989:
Aleksandr Kurlovich (URS)
- 1990:
Leonid Taranenko (URS)
- 1991:
Aleksandr Kurlovich (URS)
- 1993:
Ronny Weller (GER)
- 1994:
Aleksandr Kurlovich (BLR)
- 1995:
Andrei Chemerkin (RUS)
- 1997:
Andrei Chemerkin (RUS)
- 1998:
Andrei Chemerkin (RUS)
- 1999:
Andrei Chemerkin (RUS)
- 2001:
Jaber Saeed Salem (QAT)
- 2002:
Hossein Rezazadeh (IRI)
- 2003:
Hossein Rezazadeh (IRI)
- 2005:
Hossein Rezazadeh (IRI)
- 2006:
Hossein Rezazadeh (IRI)
- 2007:
Viktors Ščerbatihs (LAT)
- 2009:
An Yong-kwon (KOR)
- 2010:
Behdad Salimi (IRI)
- 2011:
Behdad Salimi (IRI)
- 2013:
Ruslan Albegov (RUS)
- 2014:
Ruslan Albegov (RUS)
- 2015:
Lasha Talakhadze (GEO)
- 2017:
Lasha Talakhadze (GEO)
- 2018:
Lasha Talakhadze (GEO)
- 2019:
Lasha Talakhadze (GEO)
- 2021:
Lasha Talakhadze (GEO)
- 2022:
Lasha Talakhadze (GEO)
- 2023:
Lasha Talakhadze (GEO)
- +110 kg (1969–1991)
- +108 kg (1993–1997)
- +105 kg (1998–2017)
- +109 kg (2018–)