Absorbing Counsel Approximately Bolivia s Sports
Did You Know...
Like Un Yong Kim (South Korea), Sheik Fahad Al-Sabah (Kuwait) and Joao Havelange (Brazil), José Gamarra Zorrilla was one of the finest Olympic leaders in the Third World. He played a large-scale role in promoting the values of sports in Bolivia and Latin America. José committed his dash to bout against indifference to sports and the deplorable example of the athletes in Bolivia. His sovereign state is one of the Third Nature s poorest countries. Furthermore, Bolivia has had a dossier 194 attempted coups. However, under his leadership, indefinite international congress and events were organised in La Paz, Cochabamba, Oruro and Santa Cruz de la Sierra. José was head of the state of the Organizing Comittee of the La Paz Bolivarian Games (1977) and for the South American Games in Bolivia (1978). As head of the state of the Bolivian Olympic Commitee (1970-1982), he led Bolivia to the bad aftereffect ever in its history: 106 medals in the South American Games. He headed the Bolivian delegation at the Summer Olympics in Munich, West Germany. Legion South Americans cogitate José Gamarra Zorrilla as the greatest South American Olympic conductor of the 20th century.
This native land had skilled sportspersons: Mario Martinez (tennis), Alan Saunders (nordic skiing), Milton Coimbra (football), Maria Ortuno (basketball), Giovanna Morejon Irusta (athletics), Ramiro Benavides (tennis), Anthony Iglesias (diving), Johnny Pérez (athletics), Scott Sanchez Saunders (nordic skiing), Oswaldo Morejon (track and field), William Arencibia (taekwondo), Erwin Sánchez (football), Ricardo Ramos (nordic skiing), Guadalupe Yañez (basketball), Betty Saavedra (basketball), Juan Rodrigo Camacho (athletics), Marco Etcheverry (football), Katherine Moreno (swimming), Roberto Nielsen Reyes (equestrian) and Billy Farwing Aranoa (nordic skiing).
Bolivia sent 7 sportspeople to the Winter Olympic Games in 1988. The South American skiers were Manuel Aramayo, Guillermo Avila Paz, Jaime Bascon, Jorge Bejarano, Enrique Montaño, Pedro Tichaver and Luis Vizcarra.
Julia Iriarte is the greatest Bolivian athlete of all time. Why? She won 5 gold and 3 silver medals at the 1947 Bolivarian Games in Lima, Peru. She became the star of the Games. Her gold medals were in the 80m hurdles, discus throw, gunfire put, extensive gambol and grand jump. Her homecoming was a vast progress . After she was invited by president Enrrique Hertzog to the Governance Palace (Palacio Quemado). She very won five gold medals in the South American Athletics Championships in La Paz in 1948. Under her coach, George Voeg , she broke various civic records during the 1940s. Unfortunately, she did not compete at the 1948 Olympic Games in Helsinki (Finland). She was born in Cochabamba, Bolivia on Dec 20, 1919 to Placido Iriarte and Clara Velasco.
Bolivia participated at the 1979 Spartakiade of the Nations of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR).
From 1980 to 1984, the Bolivian polity destroyed the sport. The South American athletes were not allowed to compete in the Olympics in 1980. Indefinite sportspeople who had trained for second childhood for the Games felt beneficial frustration. Among these athletes were: Johnny Pérez (track and field), Luis Dario Vasquez (fencing), Mary Rojas (athletics), Walter Quiroga (shooting), Linda Spents (track and field), Isidro Guarachi (boxing), Walter Quispe (boxing), Edgar Cueto (cycling), Jean Adolescent Kim Song (judo) and Antonieta Arizaga (swimming). Ironically, the USSR -host Olympic nation- subsidized Third World's Olympic teams (Tanzania -one of the Africa s poorest countries- sent 41 sportspersons). For political reasons, Bolivia as well did not participate in the 1983 Pan American Games in Caracas (Venezuela). For the elementary duration owing to 1971, athletes from Bolivia did not took chip in a Pan American. Unlike athletes from Haiti, Nicaragua, Chad and Sierra Leone ,Bolivian athletes had problems to moxie to Olympics Games in 1984.
Johnny Perez took chunk in the 1978 South American Games in La Paz, Bolivia, winning three gold medals in athletics, in 1,500m, 5,000m and 3,000m steeplechase.
The La Paz Olympic Stadium is one of the most contemporary in Latin America and the Caribbean. Among the athletes who posses competed in the Olympic Stadium are Romario de Souza Faria (soccer/ Brazil), Joao Carlos de Oliveira (athletics /Brazil), José Luis Chilavert (soccer /Paraguay), Tito Stenier (athletics /Argentina), Edith Noeding (track and field/ Peru) and Carlos Caetano Bledron Verri (soccer/ Brazil).
Giovanna Morejon Irusta finished 16th in the 20-kilometer carriage at the 2003 Area Athletics Championships in Paris, France.
Katherine Moreno was one of the youngest swimmers at the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul.
The Bolivian foursome won the silver medal at the South American Basketball Championship and catechized for the Cosmos Women's Basketball Championship in 1978 in Seoul (South Korea). Bolivia examined for a globe tournament for the fundamental time.The heroines were: Janeth Blanco Saavedra, Betty Saavedra Zaconeta, Daysy Chucatini Torrico, Liceo Rojas Arteaga, Norma Zambrano Siles, Elizabeth Navia Ledesma, Guadalupe Yañez Heredia, Tania Claros Vargas, Antonieta Gudmanson Torres, Judith Quiñones Miranda and Vania Claros de Justinino.
Bolivia sent one one athlete (Fernando Inchauste Montalvo/ kayak) to the Summer Olympics in 1960.
From 1971 to 1979, 500 Bolivian athletes participated in international tournaments and competitions.
Like Hortencia Maria de Fatima Marcari (Brazil) and Warble Turney (Canada), Guadalupe Yañez was one of the ace basketball players in the 1979 Pan American Games in San Juan de Puerto Rico.
Erwin Sanchez was one of the most determining football players in Bolivia in the 1990s.
From 1975 to 1977, and than 25 non-native coaches helped to train Bolivian sportspeople in preparation for the international competitions (Olympic Games, Bolivarian Games, Pan American Games and South American Games). The coaches were: Bornj Wangemann (athletics/ West Germany), Mike Lucero (basketball/ USA), Paul Gonzalez (basketball/ USA), Stanislav Golubkov (boxing/ USSR), Heriberto Diaz (cycling/ Mexico), Pedro Escobar (equestrian / Chile), Stanislav Spyra (fencing/ Poland), Walter Madel (fencing/ West Germany), Eduardo Virba (football/ West Germany), Valley Cutler (gymnastics/ USA), Donald Howorth (gymnastics/ USA), Pedro Ortega (gymnastics/ Mexico), Jasuhido Takasuka (judo/ Japan), Benigno Marquez (wrestling/ Venezuela), Karol Czarkoswki (weightlifting/ Poland), Wu Yu Yung (swimming/ Taiwan), Yadwiga Czarkoswka (swimming/ Poland), Adolfo Coronado (swimming/ Ecuador), Francis Conway (shooting/ USA), Nicolay Durnev (shooting/ USSR), Cselaw Gajdamovicz (volleyball/ Poland), Tien Heing Hisch (volleyball/ China), Chiu Chiao Chi (volleyball/ Taiwan) and Lin Chou Nou (volleyball/ China).
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Îïóáëèêîâàíî: February 13, 2008