TOKYO (Aug. 2, 2021) – Sarah Robles (+87kg; Desert Hot Springs, Calif.; Team USA/Team Houston) became the first U.S. woman to win two Olympic weightlifting medals when she claimed bronze Monday night at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020.
Competing in the Tokyo International Forum in the women’s +87kg, Robles went three-for-three in the Snatch. Her final lift of 128kg tied the American record set by Olympic medalist Cheryl Haworth in 2003.
Robles lifted 154kg on her second Clean and Jerk attempt. Her total of 282kg sealed the Olympic bronze, her second consecutive after also earning that color medal five years ago at the Olympic Games Rio 2016.
That medal was the first by an American in the sport in 16 years.
She also made history the following year by sweeping the Snatch, Clean and Jerk and total medals at the 2017 IWF World Championships, becoming the first U.S. world champion in the sport in 23 years.
China’s Li Wenwen won the gold in Tokyo with an Olympic record total of 320kg, followed by Great Britain’s Emily Campbell’s 283kg (just one kilogram ahead of Robles).
Robles’ bronze medal in Tokyo will be remembered for many reasons.
In addition to being the first U.S. woman to win two Olympic medals in the sport, she is the first American to win two Olympic weightlifting medals in 57 years. In 1964, when the Games were last held in Tokyo, Isaac Berger won his third medal and Norb Schemansky his fourth.
Robles is also the oldest U.S. women’s weightlifter to medal at the Olympic Games; she turned 33 one day prior to her competition on Aug. 1. She is the second-oldest U.S. woman to compete in weightlifting at the Olympic Games.
Robles is just the second U.S. woman to compete at three Olympic Games. Only Schemansky has more Olympic appearances among U.S. weightlifters.
Combined with Kate Nye’s silver medal earned Sunday in the women’s 76kg, this is the first time USA Weightlifting has earned two medals at an Olympic Games in 21 years.
This is also the first time the U.S. has medaled in weightlifting at consecutive Olympic Games in 53 years (1964, 1968).
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