Nicu Vlad
Personal information | |
---|---|
Born | 1 November 1963 Piscu, Romania[1] | (age 61)
Height | 181 cm (5 ft 11 in)[1] |
Sport | |
Sport | Weightlifting |
Medal record |
Nicolae "Nicu" Vlad (born 1 November 1963) is a retired heavyweight weightlifter from Romania. He competed for Romania at the 1984, 1988, 1992 and 1996 Olympics and won a gold, a silver and a bronze medal. He won the world title in 1984, 1986 and 1990 and European title in 1985 and 1986 and set world records in the snatch in 1986 and 1993.[2] Between 1991 and 1996, he lived in Australia and competed for it internationally.[1] In 2006, he was elected member of the International Weightlifting Federation Hall of Fame.[3] He is still especially noteworthy for achieving the heaviest-ever snatch of double-bodyweight—lifting 200.5 kg in the 100 kg class.
Biography
Vlad was born in a family of three brothers and one sister in a village of Piscu in Galați County. His mother was a housewife and father worked for the national railway carrier Căile Ferate Române; he did not do any particular sport, but was a strong man weighing 100 kg at 172 cm height. After completing a school in Galați, Vlad moved to Bucharest.[4]
In 1990, Nicu and his coach, Dragomir Cioroslan came to the United States to train at various places around the country.[5]
Between 1991 and 1996, Vlad lived in Australia and competed at the 1994 Commonwealth Games winning two world championships during this time. In 1996, he returned to Romania, but still has strong ties to Australia visiting regularly as his two children continue to live there. Nicu is married to the former rower Cristina Vlad.[4]
Nicu took up weightlifting in 1978 and retired after the 1996 Olympics to become a national coach. In 2001, he was elected president of the Romanian Weightlifting Federation, and in 2004 vice president of the Romanian Olympic Committee. He also served as first vice president of the International Weightlifting Federation, (IWF).[6]
In June 2021 as Vice President of the IWF, Vlad was charged with complicity and tampering with multiple anti-doping rule violations by the International Testing Agency. It was alleged that Vlad conspired with the president of the IWF, Tamás Aján, to allow Romanian weightlifter Roxana Cocoș to compete at the 2012 Olympics despite having tested positive for anabolic steroids just 3 months earlier.[7] On 16 June 2022 Vlad received a lifetime ban from the sport of weightlifting.[8]
Romanian deadlift
Owing to Vlad, the flat-backed, semi-stiff legged barbell lift (with a form similar to a deadlift) came to be known as the Romanian deadlift. He was seen by some American lifters doing the deadlifts in the Olympic training hall prior to either winning a medal, setting a world record or both. Since he is Romanian, the exercise got dubbed the Romanian deadlift, and that is the name most people know the exercise by.
As the exercise does not involve lifting the weight off the ground, it is not technically a deadlift, but rather a powerful compound accessory movement that strengthens the same muscles.[4][9]
References
- ^ a b c Nicu Vlad. Sports-reference
- ^ Nicu Vlad. chidlovski.net
- ^ "Weightlifting Hall of Fame". International Weightlifting Federation. 8 April 2014.
- ^ a b c Mihai Mincan (9 August 2014). "INTERVIU Nicu Vlad: "Pe stadion mă aplaudau 110.000 de oameni. Şi eu aveam 20 de ani"" (in Romanian). adevarul.ro. Retrieved 27 May 2019.
- ^ "Lessons from Romania: Nicu Vlad at the Olympic Training Center". www.catalystathletics.com. Retrieved 30 April 2021.
- ^ Nicu Vlad. Romanian Olympic Committee
- ^ "International Testing Agency-ITA report on IWF: Anti-Doping Rule Violations and related allegations of misconduct from 2009 to 2019". International Testing Agency. Retrieved 25 June 2021.
- ^ "Arbitration CAS 2021/ADD/42 International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) v. Nicu Vlad, award of 16 June 2022" (PDF). jurisprudence.tas-cas.org. Retrieved 27 March 2023.
- ^ Schmitz, Jim. "Jim Schmitz on the Lifts: Romanian DeadLift". IronMind. Archived from the original on 12 January 2015. Retrieved 9 February 2012.
the "discovery" of the RDL was in my gym, The Sports Palace, in San Francisco in 1990 .. Nicu Vlad, of Romania .. proceeded to do this lift, a combination stiff-leg deadlift and regular deadlift, but actually neither. Someone watching asked what the exercise was he was doing. Nicu just shrugged his shoulders and said it was to make his back strong for the clean. Dragomir also said the same; it was just a lift that Nicu had developed for his back and clean. .. Someone taking notes asked what this lift was called. .. Nicu and Dragomir didn't have a name, so I said, "Let's call it the Romanian deadlift or RDL for short," and every one agreed