Qatar's Fares El-Bakh won gold in the men's 96kg weightlifting division at the Tokyo Olympics. AFP
Qatar's Fares El-Bakh won gold in the men's 96kg weightlifting division at the Tokyo Olympics. AFP
Qatar's Fares El-Bakh won gold in the men's 96kg weightlifting division at the Tokyo Olympics. AFP
Qatar's Fares El-Bakh won gold in the men's 96kg weightlifting division at the Tokyo Olympics. AFP

Qatar's Fares El-Bakh aims to cement weightlifting legacy at Paris Olympics


Ian Hawkey
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Follow the latest news on the 2024 Paris Olympics

For an athlete as open and sharing as Meso Hassona, there’s an unusual degree of mystery trailing him onto centre stage on the penultimate day of the Olympic Games.

Hassona, who competes under his given name Fares El-Bakh, is attempting to become Qatar’s most decorated Olympian, to add another gold to his first place in the men’s weightlifting from Tokyo three summers ago. But the key question, the stimulus to rivals led by China’s Liu Huanhua in the 102-kg category, is how fit and close to his peak the charismatic Qatari is after injury disrupted his build-up to the Games.

Fares has reported that the problems he suffered with a hip muscle in April are in the past and that Team Meso, the close family unit that channels the wisdom and confidence of generations of weightlifting excellence into the 26-year-old heir to their dynasty, are confidence of a golden performance in the south of Paris. That by the end of Saturday, Fares will be up there, with his beaming smile, at least on one of the higher steps of the podium.

Success would make history for Qatar, which has been Fares’s home through his professional rise in the sport, and for Egypt, where he was born and from where 40 summers ago his father Ibrahim El-Bakh himself first set off for an Olympics.

Ibrahim finished a respectable fifth, wearing the vest of Egypt, in those Los Angeles Games and counted two further Olympic adventures to his career honours by the time he retired to coach and settle into the demands of fatherhood.

“It’s family business,” Fares told Torokhtiy Media shortly before departing his Rome training camp for Paris. Famously so. Preparations have long been carefully overseen by his father and brother, who has also competed in the sport. There’s more. Fares’s grandfather was also a weightlifter of distinction; and the name Meso, bequeathed to him as a boy, is a daily heirloom, remembering others from a family tree full of strongmen.

A story Fares likes to tell is that, at around the age of 14, when he was showing an enthusiasm for lifting, an elastic flex in his elbows and the musculature for this most taxing of events, Ibrahim forecast a timeline that would have young Fares at his third Olympics by the year 2024.

He was accurate. As a teenager Fares went to Rio de Janeiro and finished seventh in the 85kg category at his debut Games. By the age of 20 he was the owner of junior world records at 96kg, and beginning to be known as the ‘Clean-and-Jerk King’ for his excellence in that branch of the two disciplines of competitive lifting.

He would set a fresh Olympic record for the clean and jerk - and the overall total - in that weight category in claiming his Tokyo gold.

Qatar's Fares El-Bakh in the men's 96kg weightlifting competition at the Tokyo Olympics. AFP
Qatar's Fares El-Bakh in the men's 96kg weightlifting competition at the Tokyo Olympics. AFP

But up among the 102kg giants, where Fares’ ambitions now lie, China’s Liu has been setting new benchmarks. At the International Weightlifting Federation’s World Cup in April, where injury prevented Fares from competing, Liu’s 232kg clean-and-jerk lift rewrote the record books.

Liu is the man to beat on Saturday, by which time China will almost certainly have accumulated what has become their standard, ample tally of medals across the weightlifting sections.

But Fares would be the heavyweight lifter many neutrals lean to. He’s a crowd favourite, with his evident joy in what he calls the “performance buzz”, the camera-friendly demeanour he brings to a sport that is growing, particularly in the Mena region and which, at elite level, is anxious to move on from historic issues with athletes’ doping.

After Fares’ first Games, the podium in his category would be retrospectively adjusted after the third-placed Gabriel Sincraian was stripped of his bronze medal for testing positive for excess testosterone.

Fares meanwhile presents as the wholesome, human and passionate face of the sport. “We’re not just robots who lift weights,” he told Dune magazine. He’s marketable, mischievous at times and with a flair for the challenge. “You have to risk,” he said of the aggressive push to higher targets that, some observers suggested, had contributed to his injury in the spring. “Without risk, you never gain, and you’ll never improve.”

Come the weekend, he anticipates “a really nice battle” with Liu and against a range of of high-calibre contenders in his category, among whom Armenia’s Garik Karapetyan and Akbar Djuraev, from Uzbekistan are also tipped for medals.

As ever, the aim is “to make the family proud.” And the legacy? “I want to be remembered as a guy who gets up on the stage with a smile, and who made it to the top.”

TERMINAL HIGH ALTITUDE AREA DEFENCE (THAAD)

What is THAAD?

It is considered to be the US's most superior missile defence system.

Production:

It was created in 2008.

Speed:

THAAD missiles can travel at over Mach 8, so fast that it is hypersonic.

Abilities:

THAAD is designed to take out  ballistic missiles as they are on their downward trajectory towards their target, otherwise known as the "terminal phase".

Purpose:

To protect high-value strategic sites, such as airfields or population centres.

Range:

THAAD can target projectiles inside and outside the Earth's atmosphere, at an altitude of 150 kilometres above the Earth's surface.

Creators:

Lockheed Martin was originally granted the contract to develop the system in 1992. Defence company Raytheon sub-contracts to develop other major parts of the system, such as ground-based radar.

UAE and THAAD:

In 2011, the UAE became the first country outside of the US to buy two THAAD missile defence systems. It then stationed them in 2016, becoming the first Gulf country to do so.

The specs
  • Engine: 3.9-litre twin-turbo V8
  • Power: 640hp
  • Torque: 760nm
  • On sale: 2026
  • Price: Not announced yet
Global Fungi Facts

• Scientists estimate there could be as many as 3 million fungal species globally
• Only about 160,000 have been officially described leaving around 90% undiscovered
• Fungi account for roughly 90% of Earth's unknown biodiversity
• Forest fungi help tackle climate change, absorbing up to 36% of global fossil fuel emissions annually and storing around 5 billion tonnes of carbon in the planet's topsoil

Key facilities
  • Olympic-size swimming pool with a split bulkhead for multi-use configurations, including water polo and 50m/25m training lanes
  • Premier League-standard football pitch
  • 400m Olympic running track
  • NBA-spec basketball court with auditorium
  • 600-seat auditorium
  • Spaces for historical and cultural exploration
  • An elevated football field that doubles as a helipad
  • Specialist robotics and science laboratories
  • AR and VR-enabled learning centres
  • Disruption Lab and Research Centre for developing entrepreneurial skills
Lexus LX700h specs

Engine: 3.4-litre twin-turbo V6 plus supplementary electric motor

Power: 464hp at 5,200rpm

Torque: 790Nm from 2,000-3,600rpm

Transmission: 10-speed auto

Fuel consumption: 11.7L/100km

On sale: Now

Price: From Dh590,000

UK's plans to cut net migration

Under the UK government’s proposals, migrants will have to spend 10 years in the UK before being able to apply for citizenship.

Skilled worker visas will require a university degree, and there will be tighter restrictions on recruitment for jobs with skills shortages.

But what are described as "high-contributing" individuals such as doctors and nurses could be fast-tracked through the system.

Language requirements will be increased for all immigration routes to ensure a higher level of English.

Rules will also be laid out for adult dependants, meaning they will have to demonstrate a basic understanding of the language.

The plans also call for stricter tests for colleges and universities offering places to foreign students and a reduction in the time graduates can remain in the UK after their studies from two years to 18 months.

MATCH INFO

Asian Champions League, last 16, first leg:

Al Ain 2 Al Duhail 4

Second leg:

Tuesday, Abdullah bin Khalifa Stadium, Doha. Kick off 7.30pm

Electric scooters: some rules to remember
  • Riders must be 14-years-old or over
  • Wear a protective helmet
  • Park the electric scooter in designated parking lots (if any)
  • Do not leave electric scooter in locations that obstruct traffic or pedestrians
  • Solo riders only, no passengers allowed
  • Do not drive outside designated lanes
ELIO

Starring: Yonas Kibreab, Zoe Saldana, Brad Garrett

Directors: Madeline Sharafian, Domee Shi, Adrian Molina

Rating: 4/5

What to watch out for:

Algae, waste coffee grounds and orange peels will be used in the pavilion's walls and gangways

The hulls of three ships will be used for the roof

The hulls will painted to make the largest Italian tricolour in the country’s history

Several pillars more than 20 metres high will support the structure

Roughly 15 tonnes of steel will be used

Updated: August 09, 2024, 1:03 PM`