Tamás Gáspár
Medal record | ||
---|---|---|
Representing Hungary | ||
Men's Greco-Roman wrestling | ||
World Championships | ||
1986 Budapest | 100 kg | |
1981 Oslo | 100 kg | |
1985 Kolbotn | 100 kg | |
European Championships | ||
1984 Jönköping | 100 kg | |
1983 Budapest | 100 kg |
Tamás Gáspár (born 19 July 1960) is a Hungarian wrestler and world champion in Greco-Roman wrestling.
World championships
Gáspár received a silver medal at the 1981 FILA Wrestling World Championships in Oslo, and at the 1985 FILA Wrestling World Championships in Kolbotn. He won a gold medal at the 1986 FILA Wrestling World Championships in Budapest.
Olympics
Gáspár competed at the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow where he finished 9th in Greco-Roman wrestling, the heavyweight class.[1] At the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul he finished 8th in the heavyweight class.[1]
Awards
Gáspár was elected Hungarian Sportsman of the Year 1984 for winning a gold medal at that year's European Championships.
References
- ^ a b Profile: Tamás Gáspár sports.reference.com (Retrieved on 19 December 2008)
Awards | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by | Hungarian Sportsman of The Year 1984 | Succeeded by |
- v
- t
- e
- 1904: Rudolf Arnold (AUT)
- 1905: Søren Jensen (DEN)
- 1907: Hans Egeberg (DEN)
- 1908: Hans Egeberg (DEN)
- 1909: Anton Schmitz (AUT)
- 1910: Gustav Sperling (GER)
- 1911: Yrjö Saarela (FIN)
- 1913: Anders Ahlgren (SWE)
- 1920: Heinrich Bock (GER)
- 1921: Johan Salila (FIN)
- 1922: Ernst Nilsson (SWE)
- 1950: Bertil Antonsson (SWE)
- 1953: Bertil Antonsson (SWE)
- 1955: Aleksandr Mazur (URS)
- 1958: Ivan Bogdan (URS)
- 1961: Ivan Bogdan (URS)
- 1962: István Kozma (HUN)
- 1963: Anatoly Roshchin (URS)
- 1965: Nikolay Shmakov (URS)
- 1966: István Kozma (HUN)
- 1967: István Kozma (HUN)
- 1969: Nikolay Yakovenko (URS)
- 1970: Pelle Svensson (SWE)
- 1971: Pelle Svensson (SWE)
- 1973: Nikolay Balboshin (URS)
- 1974: Nikolay Balboshin (URS)
- 1975: Kamen Goranov (BUL)
- 1977: Nikolay Balboshin (URS)
- 1978: Nikolay Balboshin (URS)
- 1979: Nikolay Balboshin (URS)
- 1981: Roman Wrocławski (POL)
- 1982: Andrey Dimitrov (BUL)
- 1983: Andrey Dimitrov (BUL)
- 1985: Igor Rostorotsky (URS)
- 1986: Tamás Gáspár (HUN)
- 1987: Guram Gedekhauri (URS)
- 1989: Gerhard Himmel (FRG)
- 1990: Sergey Demyashkevich (URS)
- 1991: Héctor Milián (CUB)
- 1993: Mikael Ljungberg (SWE)
- 1994: Andrzej Wroński (POL)
- 1995: Mikael Ljungberg (SWE)
- 1997: Gogi Koguashvili (RUS)
- 1998: Gogi Koguashvili (RUS)
- 1999: Gogi Koguashvili (RUS)
- 2001: Aleksandr Bezruchkin (RUS)
- 2002: Mehmet Özal (TUR)
- 2003: Martin Lidberg (SWE)
- 2005: Hamza Yerlikaya (TUR)
- 2006: Heiki Nabi (EST)
- 2007: Ramaz Nozadze (GEO)
- 2009: Balázs Kiss (HUN)
- 2010: Amir Aliakbari (IRI)
- 2011: Elis Guri (BUL)
- 2013: Nikita Melnikov (RUS)
- 2014: Artur Aleksanyan (ARM)
- 2015: Artur Aleksanyan (ARM)
- 2017: Artur Aleksanyan (ARM)
- 2018: Musa Evloev (RUS)
- 2019: Musa Evloev (RUS)
- 2021: Mohammad Hadi Saravi (IRI)
- 2022: Artur Aleksanyan (ARM)
- 2023: Gabriel Rosillo (CUB)
- 1904: +75 kg
- 1905: +80 kg
- 1907: +85 kg
- 1908–1909: +75 kg
- 1910: +85 kg
- 1911: +83 kg
- 1913–1922: +82.5 kg
- 1950–1961: +87 kg
- 1962–1967: +97 kg
- 1969–1995: 100 kg
- 1997–2001: 97 kg
- 2002–2013: 96 kg
- 2014–2017: 98 kg
- 2018–present: 97 kg
This biographical article relating to a Hungarian sport wrestler or wrestling coach is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e