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Naim Süleymanoğlu (also Naim Suleimanov and Naum Shalamanov, born January 23, 1967 at Ptichar, Bulgaria) is a World and Olympic Champion in weightlifting. He won three Olympic Championships, seven World Championships and 6 European Championships and
improved World Records 46 times.
Of Turkish descent but born in Bulgaria, Naim Suliemanov was a boy wonder who set his first world record in weightlifting at
age 16. Due to his small stature, he was nicknamed "The Pocket Hercules." He missed his first chance at Olympic success in 1984
when Bulgaria joined the Soviet boycott of the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics.
Soon afterward, the Communist regime in Bulgaria forced its Turkish minority to adopt Bulgarian names, and he was then known
internationally as Naum Shalamanov.
While on a trip to the World Championships in Sydney in 1986, Suleimanov defected.
He resurfaced in Turkey, where he applied for citizenship. He also changed his name
from the Bulgarian Suleimanov/Shalamanov to the Turkish Süleymanoğlu.
A battle over which country he would represent in the 1988 Seoul Olympics arose. The Bulgarian government asked for, and
received, $1,000,000 from Turkey to allow Süleymanoğlu to compete for Turkey.
The 4'11" (150 cm) Süleymanoğlu did not disappoint, winning the lightweight title at the 1988 Summer Olympics. He retired
after winning the world championship in 1989 at the age of 22. After the fall of Communism in Bulgaria, his family was able to
join him in Turkey.
The allure of competition was too strong, and Süleymanoğlu returned in 1991 and he won a second Olympic gold medal at
Barcelona in 1992. Between the Olympiads, Süleymanoğlu continued to win
world titles and set records.
The 1996 Olympic Games were to be his swan song. He announced his retirement again, effective after the Atlanta Olympics. Not to disappoint, Süleymanoğlu won a third Olympic gold medal.
Once again, Süleymanoğlu retired, only to be lured back. He returned to competition in 1999 but the great champion was
not the same. He failed to win a medal at Sydney in 2000 and retired for a final time at age 33. He appeared on the cover of
Time and was the first weightlifter to lift more than 3 times his body weight.
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