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GSP wrestling for Canada in the 2012 Olympics?

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  • GSP wrestling for Canada in the 2012 Olympics?

    Cagewriter Mon Nov 16, 2009 2:55 pm EST

    Georges St. Pierre wants to wrestle in the Olympics? It's not that easy
    By Maggie Hendricks

    Georges St. Pierre said he's going to try to wrestle for Canada in 2012. Competing for your country in the Olympics is an amazing feat, and a worthy goal for a competitor like St. Pierre. There is one problem, though. Canada is already pretty well stocked with wrestlers at 74 kg (163 lbs.), the weight GSP would likely compete at.

    Matt Gentry, an NCAA champion for Stanford University, represented Canada at the 2008 Olympics at 74 kg. Now an assistant coach at Stanford, Gentry plans to try for the Olympics again in 2012. He points out that having GSP in the mix could strengthen Canada's delegation, but it isn't easy to get there.

    "Evan McDonald is the number one guy in Canada at that weight. If St. Pierre comes in, there's going to be a lot of depth at that weight," Gentry told Cagewriter. "That kind of depth is only going to make our country better. It will make the representative who ends up competing more tested, and they'll have to work harder to earn that spot, which will pay off in the long run."

    McDonald wrestled for Canada in the world championships this past September. If GSP were to try to wrestle in the Olympics, he would need to get through both Gentry and McDonald. With such little freestyle wrestling experience, it could be difficult.

    "He does have good takedowns, he does have good blast doubles, but it's hard to make the comparison," Gentry said. "But [MMA fighters] stand upright. I've seen those blast doubles, and he's certainly a horse in terms of conditioning, but it is pretty different. It's such a technical sport."

    Yes, St. Pierre is very adept at using wrestling during fights. However, there is a huge difference between taking down a striker like Thiago Alves at will and trying to do the same against Buvaisar Saitiev, the Russian gold medalist at GSP's weight class and one of the most dominant wrestlers of the past decade.

    Just qualifying your country's weight class for the Olympics is a difficult feat. It requires the wrestler to take a top eight placing at the 2011 World Championships, win their continental championship -- for GSP, it would be the Pan-American Championships -- or win one of the two qualifying tournaments. How hard is that? Only one country, Russia, qualified wrestlers in every weight class for Beijing. Out of eighteen weight classes, Canada qualified ten of them in 2008.

    Making Canada's team is also a time-intensive feat. GSP would need to start with the Canadian national championships in 2011 to become part of the ladder of competitors for the Olympic Trials. After that, GSP would need to win the Canadian Olympic Trials, usually held in December of the year before the Olympics. This would tie up GSP for more than a year.

    Still, Gentry isn't going to look past St. Pierre if he does try for the Olympics.

    "He's a competitor, I'm sure that he'll be tough to beat, no matter what he's competing in."
    So Dana will let GSP try to wrestle for his country but he won't let Fedor compete in the Russian Sambo championships???

    Anyway, it will be a very difficult task for GSP to make the team. If he does that, then that shows you why it is so easy for him to take the guys down in the UFC.
    "He woke up because I kept punching him in the face." --Thiago Alves

    "I'm telling you, once your car's been stolen, it never runs the same again. It's like a guy sleeping with your girl. He leaves his mark all over her."- Drama (Entourage)

  • #2
    Re: GSP wrestling for Canada in the 2012 Olympics?

    See gsp will blow dana fedor wont,lol j/k and yeah it will be hard to make the team unless he has some pull which he mihgt being the mma icon in canada
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    • #3
      Re: GSP wrestling for Canada in the 2012 Olympics?

      He has been training with these guys for years now....who knows. He definitely has the skill to at least give it a shot.
      "He woke up because I kept punching him in the face." --Thiago Alves

      "I'm telling you, once your car's been stolen, it never runs the same again. It's like a guy sleeping with your girl. He leaves his mark all over her."- Drama (Entourage)

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      • #4
        Re: GSP wrestling for Canada in the 2012 Olympics?

        I hope he makes it, on his own skill obviously. I am a big fan of the olympics and think that if you have a shot at competing than you should take it. I wonder what the next weight class up from 163 is? seems like he could fit in that one better and it may have less competition.

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        • #5
          Re: GSP wrestling for Canada in the 2012 Olympics?

          International (Olympic) Weight Classes
          [edit] For Men's Freestyle and Greco-Roman
          Currently, men's freestyle and Greco-Roman wrestling is divided into four main age categories internationally: schoolboys, cadets, juniors, and seniors.[1]

          Schoolboys (young men ages 14–15; or age 13 with a medical certificate and parental authorization) competing in freestyle and Greco-Roman do so in one of the following 10 weight classes[2]:

          29 to 32 kg (64 to 70 lbs)
          35 kg (77 lbs)
          38 kg (84 lbs)
          42 kg (93 lbs)
          47 kg (104 lbs)
          53 kg (117 lbs)
          59 kg (130 lbs)
          66 kg (146 lbs)
          73 kg (161 lbs)
          73 to 85 kg (161 to 187 lbs)
          Cadets (young men ages 16–17; or age 15 with a medical certificate and parental authorization) competing in freestyle and Greco-Roman do so in one of the following 10 weight classes[2]:

          39 to 42 kg (86 to 92 lbs)
          46 kg (101 lbs)
          50 kg (110 lbs)
          54 kg (119 lbs)
          58 kg (128 lbs)
          63 kg (139 lbs)
          69 kg (152 lbs)
          76 kg (167 lbs)
          85 kg (187 lbs)
          85 to 100 kg (187 to 220 lbs)
          Juniors (young men ages 18 to 20; or age 17 with a medical certificate and parental authorization) competing in freestyle and Greco-Roman do so in one of the following eight weight classes[2]:

          46 to 50 kg (101 to 110 lbs)
          55 kg (121 lbs)
          60 kg (132 lbs)
          66 kg (145 lbs)
          74 kg (163 lbs)
          84 kg (185 lbs)
          96 kg (211 lbs)
          96 to 120 kg (211 to 264 lbs)
          Seniors (men ages 20 and up) competing in freestyle and Greco-Roman wrestling do so in one of the following seven weight classes[2]:

          50 to 55 kg (110 to 121 lbs)
          60 kg (132 lbs)
          66 kg (145 lbs)
          74 kg (163 lbs)
          84 kg (185 lbs)
          96 kg (211 lbs)
          96 to 120 kg (211 to 264 lbs)
          For men, there is also a special category for some freestyle and Greco-Roman competitions, "Veterans", for men ages 35 and older, that presumably wrestle in the same weight classes and seniors.[1]
          ..“Your desire to change must be greater than your desire to stay the same.”





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          • #6
            Re: GSP wrestling for Canada in the 2012 Olympics?

            he was training with their team for previous fights. this isnt the first time I have heard this rumor. joe rogan was saying something about it.
            Badasz1@Hushmail.com

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