Iran was crowned the champion of the Asian Freestyle Wrestling Championships on Sunday, ending three days of rigorous competition in the Kyrgyz capital with a haul of four gold medals and a commanding team victory.
The Iranian squad finished atop the team standings with 178 points, far ahead of second-place India 162 points and third-place Japan 127 points.
Iranian wrestlers secured a total of eight medals: four gold, one silver, and three bronze.
Milad Valizadeh kicked off Iran's gold rush in the 57 kg weight class. After receiving a first-round bye, he dominated his opponents, shutting out Ankush of India 10-0 and Fuga Sasaki of Japan 11-0 before defeating Mongolia's Monkh Erdene Batkhuyag 14-3 in the final.
Kamran Ghasempour, the seasoned campaigner, delivered another commanding performance at 86 kg. Following a first-round bye, he overwhelmed Yudai Takahashi of Japan 12-2 and whisked past Alp Arslan Beginjov of Turkmenistan 11-0 en route to the final, where he defeated India's Mukul Dahiya by technical superiority 7-0.
Mohammad Mobin Azimi was untouchable at 92 kg. He blanked Japan's Takahashi Ishiguro 9-0, defeated world bronze medalist Azamat Dauletbekov of Kazakhstan 6-0, and capped his campaign with an 11-0 shutout of Bahrain's Magomed Sharipov in the final.
In the heavyweight division of 125 kg, Amir Hossein Zare continued his dominance. After a first-round bye, he defeated Kazakhstan's Yedighe Kassymbek 7-0, China's Buhurdon 5-0 and world bronze medalist Shamil Sharipov of Bahrain 4-0 to secure gold.
Amir Ali Azarpira claimed silver at 97 kg. He defeated Uzbekistan's Sherzad Poyonov 10-0 and India's Vicky 2-0 to reach the final, where he fell to Japan's world bronze medalist Arash Yoshida 4-0.
Three Iranian wrestlers bounced back from semifinal losses to win bronze medals.
At 61 kg, Ahmad Mohammadnejad Javan rebounded from a narrow 11-9 loss to India's Olympic bronze medalist Aman to defeat South Korea's Changsu Kim 12-0.
At 70 kg, Sina Khalili recovered from a 5-1 loss to Mongolia's Tulga Tumur Ochir to shut out Uzbekistan's Shahzadbek Yarashov 10-0.
At 74 kg, Amir Mohammad Yazdani, after a narrow 7-6 loss to Japan's Yoshinosuke Aoyagi, won three consecutive matches, including a 9-3 victory over Kyrgyzstan's Eruzbek Toktombetov, to claim bronze.
Earlier in the week, Iran’s Greco-Roman team also won the Asian championship.