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Victor Zangiev

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Victor Zangiev
BornVictor Dzantemirovich Zangiev
(1962-05-26) 26 May 1962 (age 62)
Kazakh SSR, Soviet Union
Height6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
Weight247 lb (112 kg)
Medal record
Representing the  Soviet Union
Men's freestyle wrestling
World Cup
Silver medal – second place 1985 Toledo +100 kg
Junior World Championships
Gold medal – first place 1981 Vancouver +100 kg
Junior European Championships
Gold medal – first place 1982 Leipzig +100 kg
Billed fromTbilisi, Georgian SSR, U.S.S.R.
Trained byAntonio Inoki
NJPW Dojo
Debut1989
Retired1994

Victor Dzantemirovich Zangiev (Template:Lang-ru, Template:Lang-os; born 26 May 1962) is a retired Soviet and Russian freestyle wrestler of Ossetian origin, who wrestled professionally in Japan, where he became the cultural inspiration for the Zangief character of the Street Fighter series.[1]

Amateur wrestling career

Victor Zangiev was an amateur wrestler from the Soviet Union. In 1981, he reversed the first seat in the 100 kg class for the Junior World Championships in freestyle wrestling. In 1985, he won two major amateur wrestling titles, the U.S.-Soviet Cup Championships and the World Cup Championships. In 1988, Zangiev won the Soviet Championships.

Professional wrestling career

New Japan Pro-Wrestling (1989–1990)

In 1989, Zangiev, along with several other amateurs, were invited by Antonio Inoki to train in his dojo and wrestle professionally in his promotion, New Japan Pro-Wrestling. Debuting on 22 February at Sumo Hall, Zangiev wrestled two exhibition matches, first against Salman Hashimikov (which ended in a time-limit draw), then against Osamu Matsuda, whom he defeated. In April 1989, he participated in a tournament to determine the new IWGP Heavyweight Champion at New Japan's first show at the Tokyo Dome; he defeated Buzz Sawyer in the quarterfinals, but lost to Shinya Hashimoto in the semifinals. Zangiev would continue wrestling in the mid-card, before leaving at the tail end of 1990.

Before their departure, he and Hashimikov were chosen to represent the Soviet Union for the Pat O'Connor International Tag Team Tournament at Starrcade '90: Collision Course for World Championship Wrestling; they defeated the Canadian team of Danny Johnson and Troy Montour in the quarterfinals, but lost to Masa Saito and The Great Muta in the semifinals.

UWF International (1994)

In April 1994, Zangiev returned to Japan, this time with the shoot-style UWF International. Like in NJPW, he didn't compete for championships, he mainly wrestled in mid-card single and tag team matches. In October 1994, he left UWFi and retired from professional wrestling.

Championships and accomplishments

References