63. Where is the
passage likely to appear?
A. In a popular newspaper. B. In a farming magazine
C. On the website. D. In a document of the UN.
C
One kilogram--that was all it took to crown(给……加冕) the world's
strongest man.
German weightlifter Matthias Steiner pulled
ahead of Russian rival Evgeny Chigishev to win the Olympic men's +105 kg weightlifting gold medal on
Tuesday.
Steiner lifted a total of 461kg, 203kg in the snatch(抓举) and 258kg
in the clean and jerk(挺举), to beat
Chigishev by a single kilogram. The German won the battle of giants in his last
lift, winning his country's first gold medal in the event at this year's Games.
Steiner's winning lift was also the last
effort of the sport for this Olympics at which China earned eight of the 15
golds.
Steiner was born in Austria and represented
his country of birth at the Athens Olympics four years ago, placing seventh in
the lower 105kg
category, but had a falling out with Austria's weightlifting federation
afterwards.
He applied for German citizenship in 2005
and got married, but his career went into deep freeze(困境)as he could not compete without a passport. He finally obtained the
document last January.
The German, who turns 26 on Monday, had come
to these Games on a mission to win the title for his wife Susann, who died in a
car accident in July last year. The German team said he used the personal
tragedy to motivate himself to win the gold medal.
Chigishev was the strongest in the snatch
session Tuesday. He kissed his fists after a 210-kg lift that gave him a 7-kg
advantage over fourth-placed Steiner going into the second event -- the clean
and jerk. He let out a victorious roar after clearing 250 kg in his last lift, but the glory was short-lived
as Steiner stunned(使瞠目)everyone
with his final, winning clean and jerk effort.
Steiner had finished seventh in the 2004
Olympics in the 105kg
weight category, and took the gold in the 2008 European Championship +105kg snatch competition, bronze in the
clean and jerk and silver overall, with a total weight of 446kg.
World champion Viktors Scerbatihs of Latvia
settled for bronze.