Thursday, 1 November 2012

Monster Beats the Brisbane lifter Outlet Sale


Kelly finished 16th in the 105kg-plus division   Monster Beats Outlet       on day 11 at London's ExCe arenal, where favourite and Iranian world record holder Berdad Salimikordasiabi won gold.

Out of 20 competitors the result doesn't sound like much, but after a rushed preparation and a recent quad injury, his total lift of 381kg was a dream performance.

It was a dramatic finish for the Brisbane lifter too - having upped the ante with his third and final attempt by adding 15kg when others were mostly jumping by 5kg.

"I was actually surprised I snuck underneath it," Kelly said.

"I didn't really have any idea what weights I'd be getting.

"After the build-up, it's one of the better performances I've done."

In Beijing, the monster weightlifter finished ninth with a lift of 386kg, and won gold in Delhi at the 2010 Commonwealth Games with 397kg.

Had Kelly had a solid run-up leading into the   Monster Beats   Games, he and his team believe they would have been pushing over the 400kg mark and into PB territory.

Instead, the 151kg tank says he'll push on and aim to defend his Commonwealth title in two years.

Meanwhile, the 28-year-old denied suggestions a last-minute kerfuffle over the attendance of mate and former Australian team coach Michael Keelan had affected his result.

Keelan - a good friend of Kelly's - was dumped from the weightlifting squad for London in favour of Kelly's personal coach and that of female lifter Seen Lee.
Mike "The Mouth" Matusow, a well-known professional player who came in sixth in 2001 and 87th last year, had been considered a favorite but was the first to go. He had no regrets.

"I played the six best days of poker in my life," Matusow said. "I'm going to bed happy."

Penn law student Brad Kondracki finished eighth and Daniel Bergsdorf, a Swedish truck driver, was seventh. Scott Lazar was sixth, Irishman Andrew Black took fifth and Aaron Kanter wrapped up fourth,  ttp://www.beatsmonstersaustralia.com/      followed by Barch.

About 13 hours into the round, officials dumped the first-place prize in thick stacks of hundreds on a table near the players, causing shouts of "Oh, my God!" For the first time in the tournament, the remaining gamblers saw their elusive goal -- guarded by security men with shotguns.

No comments:

Post a Comment