Nick Gwiazdowski at the 2021 World Team Trials(Photo/Sam Janicki; SJanickiPhoto.com)
The greatest heavyweight rivalry in wrestling returns as a pair of three-time World/Olympic champions in #1 Taha Akgul of Turkey and #2 Geno Petriashvili of Georgia looks to climb back atop the podium after bronze and silver medal finishes in Tokyo. Tokyo bronze medalist #3 Amir Zare of Iran has announced himself as heavyweight's premier young talent with the departure of Olympic champion Gable Steveson of the US and looks to cap his year off with world gold.
Title Contenders
Akgul has never beaten Petriashvili at a World/Olympic championships and Petriashvili has never beaten Akgul at the European championships with the record between the two sitting at 6-3 with Akgul taking the lead. While Akgul hasn't been able to pull it out late against Akgul in his matches at the 2017 and 2019 world finals, I have a feeling now Akgul will be able to pull the trigger and have what it takes to win World/Olympic title #4. Don't count out #3 Amir Zare because if his defense holds up against Akgul, he has the pace and handfighting to crowd and potentially upset the Turkish front runner. And it can't be forgotten that Zare is 1-1 with Petriashvili and led him throughout their Tokyo semifinal bout. The young Iranian is a major x-factor in this weight and Oslo can be his homecoming.
Medal Contenders
#4 Zelimkhan Khizriev (RWF) has made an absolutely standout second half of the year; winning titles at the Yarygin, Ali Aliev and winning the Russian World Team Trials wrestle-offs after failing to place at Russian Nationals. Khizriev was a known talent in Russia who broke through on the second half of the 2016-2020 quad when he took bronze at the 2019 Yarygin, beating returning world runner-up #6 Zhiwei Deng (CHN) for bronze. Khizriev has finally put it all together and with wins over #5 Baldan Tsyzhipov (RWF), #8 Nick Gwiazdowski (USA), #6 Zhiwei Deng (CHN) and #11 Shamil Sharipov (RWF), he really looks the part of someone who could breakthrough to challenge the trio of Petriashvili, Akgul, and Zare.
Two-time world bronze medalist #8 Nick Gwiazdowski of the United States has made a strong comeback this year after finishing runner-up in the US Olympic Trials to eventual Olympic champion Gable Steveson (USA). A perennial contender, Gwiazdowski has taken wins over past world medalists Parviz Hadi (IRI), Oleksandr Khotsianivski (UKR) and #6 Zhiwei Deng (CHN). Gwiazdowski has had issues in the past with match IQ and getting stuck underneath counter-minded, brick-hipped heavyweights on his low shots, but a dialed-in Gwiazdowski has routinely shown himself capable of hanging with the best and I'm excited to see what he brings to Oslo.
#9 Lkhagvagerel Munkhtur (MGL) has been around the block for a while now, alternating between Senior, Junior, and U-23 events for the past quad. Munkhtur really got his first break at the end of 2019 when he beat Greg Kerkvliet (USA) for bronze at the U-23 World Championships. But 2021 has been the year Munkhtur has really broken through into a different tier, taking 5th at the Olympics and getting ranked wins this year over #10 Dzianis Khramiankov (BLR), #14 Aiaal Lazarev (KGZ) and #17 Gennadij Cudinovic (GER). Munkhtur brings a highly physical skillset into his matches and while he doesn't boast the technical acumen the likes of Akgul or Petriashvili, his ability to leverage his natural length and size into a hard-nosed, explosive heavyweight style has shown to give guys real problems. Expect to see him continue to grow throughout this quad.
I'm very excited to see how heavyweight ends up playing out in Oslo. Between the race between Akgul and Petriashvili for World/Olympic title #4 and Zare looking better than ever in Tokyo, I'm thrilled. Add in Zelimkhan Khizriev giving Russia a real shot at their first world medalist in 6 years and you've got a weight you can't miss.
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