Mihály Deák-Bárdos

Mihaly Deak Bárdos ( born January 30, 1975 in Miskolc ) is a Hungarian wrestler in the Greco- Roman style. His club is Vasas Budapest. He is 1.95 meters tall and wrestles in the class up to 120 kilograms.

Career

Deák Bárdos ranking Initially in both Greco-Roman and freestyle. In the Junior European Championships in 1993 and two years later at the World Championships the espoir he started in free style. In 1997, he wrestled at the European Senior Championships in Greco-Roman style in which he starts to date.

In 1997 he was at the European Championships in Kouvola eleventh. A few months later, he competed at the World Championships in Wroclaw. He won his first three fights. With Piotr Kotok from Ukraine he got into the fourth round of a tough opponent, but he defeated him 1-0 and moved into the final, where he faced Alexander Karelin. After 3:35 minutes, the fight was over, hopelessly stood at 00:13 in residue after Deák Bárdos. In 1998, he finished fourth at the European Championships, the World Championships in ninth place.

At the European Championships in 1999 Deak Bardos had enormous Lospech. In the first round he met the virtually unbeatable Alexander Karelin, who later became the European Championship secured. The fight was stopped prematurely when the score was 0:4 for Karelin. Counter Dimitri Debelka from Belarus, he was also no chance of winning and he was 15 of 15 participants. The World Cup tournament in Athens began Deák Bárdos with a win over the Romanians Ioan Ticala. However, towards the equally well -assessed American Dremiel D. Byers he lost with 1:4. In the fourth round he shouldered the Israeli Youri Evseytchik shortly before the end of the fight. His opponent in the fifth round was Héctor Milián, 0:4 lost to Deák Bárdos on points.

The Olympia 2000, he began with third place at the European Championships in Moscow. At the Olympic Games, where he was set for the second round, he again met on time Karelin. Karelin won this time after 1:48 minutes. In the second round he defeated while his second major opponent Sergei Mureiko, but the victory was almost out and Deák Bárdos difference in eleventh from the tournament.

In 2001 he celebrated his by then probably the greatest success. At the European Championships in Istanbul, he was European champion and traveled with high expectations to Patras to the world championships. He got off to a good start. He won four times in a row and qualified for the final. His opponent was dortiger Rulon Gardner. Mihaly Deak Bárdos and the Americans fought a typical heavyweight fight, but from the Gardner after 9 minutes with 2:0 as the winner went out.

In 2002, he had been beaten up once more in the final. The Russian Yuri Patrikeyev was stronger in the final of the European Championships in Seinäjoki. It all started very well at the World Championships in Moscow. He won among others against the Finns Juha Ahokas ( 3-0) and against Yuri Patrikeyev 2-1 after extra time. The final he played against Dremiel Byers; Deák Bárdos was the third time in a row, the final not win, because Byers won 3-0.

The pitch at Turnierendkämpfen continued in 2003. At the European Championships in Belgrade, he sat down again four times in a row, partly clear by. In the final, however, Juha Ahokas revenge for the defeat at the World Championships last year, 5-2. But already at the world championships in the same year Deák Bárdos Ahokas defeated again. Later he came back to the finals, but lost to Chassan Barojew with 1:3. At the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens Deák Bárdos finally finished only 10th place

In the following years he started continue for Hungary, but without notable success. At the World Cup 2008 tournament in Hungary Szombathely he was first, before his long-time rival Dremiel Byers. In the same year he was in Beijing for his third Olympic participation eighth. In 2009 he was able to fight at European Championship in Vilnius on the Träppchen. After he first defeated by Sweden Jalmar Sjöberg, he won his next two fights and eventually won bronze.

Achievements

  • 2000, 3rd place European Championships in Moscow, GR, up to 130 kg, behind Alexander Karelin and Sergei Mureiko and before Yuri Evseytchik, David Vála, Czech Republic, Eddy Bengtsson and Georgi Saldadse
  • 2000 11th Place, OS in Sydney, GR, up to 130 kg, with victory over Sergei Mureiko and a defeat against Alexander Karelin
  • 2001 1st place European Championships in Istanbul, GR, up to 130 kg, before Fatih Bakir, Turkey, Sergei Mureiko, Juha Ahokas, Finland, Alexei Kolesnikov, Russia and Youri Evseytchik
  • 2001, 2nd place, World Championships in Patras, GR, up to 130 kg, with victories over Young-Jin Yang, South Korea, Alireza Garibi, Iran, Eddy Bengtsson and Xenophon Koutsioubas, Greece and a final defeat by Rulon Gardner, USA
  • 2002, 2nd Place, EM in Seinäjoki, GR, up to 120 kg, with wins over Giuseppe Giunta, Italy, Helger Hallik, Estonia, Yekta Yilmaz Gul, Turkey and Youri Evseytchink and a final defeat by Yuri Patrikeyev, Russia
  • 2002, 2nd place, World Cup in Moscow, GR, up to 120 kg, with wins over Woo Park, South Korea, Juha Ahokas, Georgi Tsurtsumia, Kazakhstan and Yuri Patrikeyev and a final defeat Dremiel Byers
  • 2003 2nd place European Championships in Belgrade, GR, up to 120 kg, with wins over Yannick Szczepaniak, France, Alexander Gedzyun, Latvia, Dimitri Debelka, Belarus and Fatih Bakir, Turkey and a final defeat by Juha Ahokas
  • 2003, 2nd place, World Cup in Créteil, GR, up to 120 kg, with wins over David Vala, Giuseppe Giunta, Juha Ahokas and Mindaugas Mizgaitis, Lithuania and a final defeat Barojew Khasan, Russia
  • 2004 10th Place, OS in Athens, GR, up to 120 kg, with a win over Juha Ahokas and a defeat against Sajad Barzi, Iran
  • 2005 7th Place, EM in Varna, GR, up to 120 kg, with a win over Yannick Szczepaniak and defeats Sergei Arthjukin, Russia and Xenefon Koutsioubas
  • 2005, 2nd place, World Championships in Budapest, GR, up to 120 kg, with wins over Naoki Sawada, Japan, Sergei Arthjukin and Mindaugas Mizgaitis and a final defeat Mijaín López, Cuba
  • 2006, 3rd place, World Cup in Budapest, GR, up to 120 kg, behind Mijaín López and Chassan Baroew
  • 2006 5th Place, WM in Guangzhou, GR, up to 120 kg, with wins over Aleksander Chernetski, Ukraine, Gwang - Seo Kim, South Korea and Masoud Hashemzadeh, Iran and defeats Mijaín López and İsmail Güzel, Turkey
  • 2007, 5th place, World Cup in Baku, GR, up to 120 kg, after victories over Nurbek Ibragimov, Kyrgyzstan, Milos Dejanovic, Montenegro and Aleksander Tschernetski and defeats Mijaín López and Yuri Patrikeyev
  • 2008, 1st place, World Cup in Szombathely, GR, up to 120 kg, before Dremiel Byers
  • 2008 18th Place, EM in Tampere, GR, up to 120 kg, after a defeat against David Vala
  • 2008 8th Place, OS in Beijing, GR, up to 120 kg, after a victory over Ari Taub, Canada and a defeat against Yannick Szczepaniak, France
  • 2009, 5th place, World Cup in Clermont- Ferrand, GR, up to 120 kg, including behind winner Mijain Lopez Nunez and Yuri Patrikeyev
  • 2009, 3rd place European Championships in Vilnius, GR, up to 120 kg, after a defeat against Jalmar Sjöberg, Sweden and wins over Ivan Ivanov, Bulgaria and Aleksander Anuchin, Russia
  • 2009 5th Place, Golden Grand Prix in Baku, GR, up to 120 kg, including behind winner Masoud Hashemzadeh and Dremiel D. Byers
  • 2009 8th place World Championships in Herning, GR, up to 120 kg, after beating Rocco Ficara, Italy and Lukasz Banak, Poland and defeats Dremiel D. Byers and Jalmar Sjöberg
  • 2009, 7th place, World Cup in Yerevan, GR, up to 120 kg, Winner: Yuri Patrikeyev before Riza Kayaalp
  • 2010, 3rd place, Golden Grand Prix in Szombathely, GR, up to 120 kg, behind Riza Kaayalp, Turkey and Radomir Petkovic, Serbia
  • 2010 10th Place, EM in Baku, GR, up to 120 kg, after a victory over Heiki Nabi, Estonia and a defeat against Johan yours, Sweden
  • 2010, 3rd place, Golden Grand Prix in Baku, GR, up to 120 kg, behind Riza Kaayalp and Babak Ghorbani Goldasteh, Iran
  • 2010 18th Place, WM in Moscow, GR, up to 120 kg, after a defeat against Riza Kaayalp
  • 2011 2nd place Golden Grand Prix, GR, up to 120 kg, behind Nurmachan Tinalijew, Kazakhstan and before Anton Doc, Croatia
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