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WRESTLING ORIGIN
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With
the possible exception of track and field (athletics), wrestling
is the most ancient sport known to have been continuously
practised competitively. Wrestling was introduced into the
ancient Olympics in 708 BC, shortly after the Games' recorded
history began in 776 BC. Wrestling pre-dates the ancient
Olympic Games. Cave drawings of wrestlers from 3000 BC in
the Sumero-Akkadian civilisation have been found. Similar
wall paintings exist from ancient Egyptian civilisations
circa 2400 BC.
There
are literally hundreds of styles of wrestling world-wide today,
with many nations having indigenous forms. Among these are
Glíma wrestling in Iceland, Schwingen wrestling in
Switzerland, and Cumberland wrestling in Britain. But there
are four main forms of amateur competitive wrestling practised
internationally today: Greco-Roman wrestling, freestyle wrestling,
judo wrestling and sombo wrestling. Judo is considered a separate
sport at the Olympics. Sombo is a combination of freestyle
and judo and is most popular in the republics of the former
Soviet Union, but it has not yet been contested in the Olympics.
Freestyle wrestling is similar to American collegiate style,
or folkstyle wrestling. Holds are relatively unlimited, provided
they are not dangerous, and can be applied to any part of
the body. Greco-Roman wrestling limits holds to the upper
body.

OLYMPIC
HISTORY
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Wrestling
was on the programme at the first modern Olympics in 1896,
and 1900 was the only year that wrestling did not feature
on the programme at all. Both freestyle and Greco-Roman wrestling
have been consistently contested at the Olympics since 1920.
Prior to that (except in 1908), only one form was used, usually
Greco-Roman. Today the dominant country in wrestling is Russia,
especially in the Greco-Roman style. The United States is
close to the Russians in freestyle, however. Other countries
which produce top international wrestlers include Iran, Turkey
and Mongolia, and wrestling is the national sport of these
three nations.
At the
2000 Games in Sydney the wrestling programme underwent a change.
Since 1972, wrestling has had 10 classes in both freestyle
and Greco-Roman, but during the Sydney Games only eight classes
were contested in each style. The weights also changed slightly,
and the lightest class, usually termed light-flyweight, has
basically been eliminated.
When the modern Olympic Games resumed in Athens in 1896, organisers
considered wrestling so historically significant that it became
a focus of the Games. They remembered tales of wrestling competition
in 708 BC, of oiled bodies fighting on sand in the ancient
Games. Greco-Roman wrestling was deemed a pure reincarnation
of ancient Greek and Roman wrestling.
Eight
years later, Olympic officials added a second category with
far less history and far less grandeur, but great popularity.
Commonly known as "catch as catch can", freestyle
wrestling had become the staple of 19th-century fairs and
festivals in Great Britain and the United States, a form of
professional entertainment. Like Greco-Roman wrestling, it
became a staple of the Games themselves.
In Greco-Roman
competition, now dominated by Russia, wrestlers use only their
arms and upper bodies to attack. In freestyle, where Olympic
medallists in 1996 represented 17 different countries, wrestlers
also use their legs and may hold opponents above or below
the waist.

WEIGHT
CATEGORIES
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| Weight
Categories for Men |
| 55kg |
| 60kg |
| 66kg |
| 74kg |
| 84kg |
| 96kg |
| 120kg |
|
Weight
Categories for Women |
| 48kg** |
51kg |
| 55kg
** |
59kg |
| 63kg
** |
67kg |
| 72kg
** |
**
Olympic weights |

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