Hamza Yerlikaya

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Medal record
Men's Greco-Roman Wrestling
Olympic Games
Gold 1996 Atlanta, Georgia, USA 82 kg
Gold 2000 Sydney, Australia 85 kg
World Championships
Gold 1993 Stockholm, Sweden 82 kg
Gold 1995 Prague, Czechoslovakia 85 kg
Silver 1997 Wrocław, Poland 85 kg
Gold 2005 Budapest, Hungary 96 kg
World Cup
Gold 1997 Tehran, Iran 85 kg
Silver 2002 Cairo, Egypt 96 kg
Gold 2006 Budapest, Hungary 96 kg
European Championships
Silver 1993 Istanbul, Turkey 82 kg
Gold 1996 Budapest, Hungary 82 kg
Gold 1997 Kouvola, Finland 85 kg
Gold 1998 Minsk, Belarus 85 kg
Gold 1999 Sofia, Bulgaria 85 kg
Gold 2001 Istanbul, Turkey 85 kg
Gold 2002 Seinäjoki, Finland 84 kg
Gold 2005 Varna, Bulgaria 96 kg
Gold 2006 Moscow, Russia 96 kg
Mediterranean Games
Bronze 1993 Languedoc-Roussillon, France 82 kg
Gold 1997 Bari, Italy 85 kg
World Espoir Championships
Bronze 1995 Tehran, Iran 82 kg
European Espoir Championships
Gold 1994 Istanbul, Turkey 82 kg
World Juniors Championships
Silver 1992 Santiago de Cali, Colombia 74 kg
Gold 1993 Götzis, Austria 81 kg
Gold 1994 Budapest, Hungary 88 kg
World Cadets Championships
Gold 1992 Istanbul, Turkey 76 kg

Hamza Yerlikaya (born June 6, 1976 in Kadıköy, Istanbul) is a Turkish Graeco-Roman style wrestler. He is a two time (in 1996 and 2000) Olympic champion and the only Turkish wrestler to ever become European champion eight times. He was named The Wrestler of the century in 1996 by the International Federation of Associated Wrestling Styles (FILA).

A sports complex in Gaziosmanpaşa district of Istanbul is named after him.

Currently, he is a deputy of the ruling Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi.

Contents

[edit] Early life

His family was originally from Sivas, but they moved to Istanbul three months prior to Hamza's birth. His father Mustafa Yerlikaya is also a wrestler but was no longer active by the time Hamza was born. He started wrestling at age of 11 encouraged by his father and inspired by his elder brother Muttalip Yerlikaya who is also a wrestler with international success.

[edit] International wrestling career

Hamza Yerlikaya's first international competition was in 1991 World Cadets Wrestling Championships in Québec, Canada, in which he got the fourth place. His first senior international event was the 1993 European Wrestling Championships in Istanbul where he got the second place, losing to Thomas Zander in the finals. He surprised some of the spectators who thought this was a coincidence by winning the gold medal in 1993 World Wrestling Championship in Stockholm, Sweden at the age of 17, and hence becoming the youngest ever World Champion in wrestling.

As his age allowed, in some years he participated in seniors, juniors as well as cadets events. He won the World Championship again in 1995 and went on to win his first Olympic gold medal in Atlanta 1996 at the age of 20. He repeated his success four years later in Sydney 2000 and carried the flag for Turkey at the Sydney 2000 opening ceremony. Since then he has won three more World Championships (2002, 2003 and (at 96 kg) 2005). He has won the European Seniors Championship eight times (1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2005 and 2006).

He competed in 84 kg Men's Greco-Roman Wrestling for Turkey in 2004 Summer Olympic Games in Athens, Greece and got 4th place.

In April 2007, he withdrew from international competition due to emergency surgery to correct neck fractures, some of which were estimated to have been as much as four years old and never treated. [1]

[edit] Affiliations and coaching

  • Between years 1986-1996 he was in Istanbul Demirspor club and was coached by Salih Bora and Muzaffer Aydin.
  • He did his military service in 1996-1997 and is the only Turkish athlete that won a medal in Olympic Games during military service.
  • He was coached by Salih Bora since 1997.
  • In years 1998-1999 he was in Emlakbank club.
  • Since 1999 he is wrestling for Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality.
  • Hakki Basar started coaching him in 2004.

[edit] Major international achievements

In reverse chronological order:

All listed events are Greco-Roman style wrestling.

[edit] External links and references

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