Emzarios Bentinidis
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Representing Georgia | ||
Men's wrestling | ||
European Championships | ||
1999 Tampere | 69 kg | |
2000 Tampere | 69 kg |
Emzarios Bentinidis (born Emzar Bedineishvili on August 16, 1975 in Tbilisi) is a male freestyle wrestler from Georgia. He represented Georgia at the 2000 Summer Olympics and Greece in the 2004 Summer Olympics. Representing Greece, he also participated in Men's freestyle 74 kg at 2008 Summer Olympics. He lost in the quarterfinal to Soslan Tigiev from Uzbekistan.
He won a bronze medal at 2008 European Wrestling Championships. He is currently the coach of India wrestler Bajrang Punia who won a bronze medal at Tokyo 2020.[1]
References
- ^ Bajrang Punia's coach Shako upbeat about upcoming US stint sportstar.thehindu.com. Retrieved 5 August 2021
External links
- Wrestler bio on beijing2008.com
- Emzarios Bentinidis at the International Wrestling Database
- Emzarios Bentinidis at Olympedia
- v
- t
- e
- 1929: Erik Malmberg (SWE)
- 1930: Károly Kárpáti (HUN)
- 1931: Hans Minder (SUI)
- 1933: Wolfgang Ehrl (SUI)
- 1934: Wolfgang Ehrl (GER)
- 1935: Károly Kárpáti (HUN)
- 1937: Heinrich Nettesheim (GER)
- 1946: Celal Atik (TUR)
- 1949: Servet Meriç (TUR)
- 1966: Zarbeg Beriashvili (URS)
- 1967: Zarbeg Beriashvili (URS)
- 1968: Enyu Valchev (BUL)
- 1969: Enyu Valchev (BUL)
- 1970: Ismail Yuseinov (BUL)
- 1972: Ismail Yuseinov (BUL)
- 1973: Nasrula Nasrulayev (URS)
- 1974: Ivan Vasilev (BUL)
- 1975: Ijaku Gaidarbekov (URS)
- 1976: Alekssandr Matveyev (URS)
- 1977: Šaban Sejdi (YUG)
- 1978: Ivan Yankov (BUL)
- 1979: Nikolay Petrenko (URS)
- 1980: Saypulla Absaidov (URS)
- 1981: Miho Dukov (BUL)
- 1982: Boris Budayev (URS)
- 1983: Kamen Penev (BUL)
- 1984: Arsen Fadzayev (URS)
- 1985: Arsen Fadzayev (URS)
- 1986: Abdula Magomedov (URS)
- 1987: Arsen Fadzayev (URS)
- 1988: Arsen Fadzayev (URS)
- 1989: Nikolai Kasabov (BUL)
- 1990: Fevzi Şeker (TUR)
- 1991: Georg Schwabenland (GER)
- 1992: Georg Schwabenland (GER)
- 1993: Zaza Zazirov (UKR)
- 1994: Vadim Bogiev (RUS)
- 1995: Vadim Bogiev (RUS)
- 1996: Vadim Bogiev (RUS)
- 1997: Arayik Gevorgyan (ARM)
- 1998: Yüksel Şanlı (TUR)
- 1999: Zaza Zazirov (UKR)
- 2000: Emzarios Bentinidis (GEO)
- 2001: Ahmet Gülhan (TUR)
- 2002: Zaur Botayev (RUS)
- 2003: Irbek Farniev (RUS)
- 2004: Makhach Murtazaliev (RUS)
- 2005: Serafim Barzakov (BUL)
- 2006: Makhach Murtazaliev (RUS)
- 2007: Albert Batyrov (BLR)
- 2008: Ramazan Şahin (TUR)
- 2009: Andriy Stadnik (UKR)
- 2010: Jabrayil Hasanov (AZE)
- 2011: Jabrayil Hasanov (AZE)
- 2012: Alan Gogayev (RUS)
- 2013: David Safaryan (ARM)
- 2014: Magomed Kurbanaliev (RUS)
- 2015: Toghrul Asgarov (AZE)
- 2016: Frank Chamizo (ITA)
- 2017: Ilyas Bekbulatov (RUS)
- 2018: Haji Aliyev (AZE)
- 2019: Haji Aliyev (AZE)
- 2020: Kurban Shiraev (RUS)
- 2021: Zagir Shakhiev (RUS)
- 2022: Iszmail Muszukajev (HUN)
- 2023: Vazgen Tevanyan (ARM)
- 2024: Islam Dudaev (ALB)
- 66 kg: 1929–1937
- 67 kg: 1946–1961
- 70 kg: 1962–1967
- 68 kg: 1969–1995
- 69 kg: 1997–2001
- 66 kg: 2002–2013
- 65 kg: 2014–present
This article about a Georgian Olympic medalist is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e
This article about a Greek Olympic medalist is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e
This biographical article relating to a Greek sport wrestler or wrestling coach is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e