Tragedy in the world of sports. The boy who impressed everyone has died. Photo



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Dzhambulat Khatokhov was only 21 years old when he died. In the last shoot in July 2019, the young man had dropped from 194 kilograms to 172.5 after three months of training.

A Russian sumo wrestler who was once called the toughest kid in the world died at the age of 21. Khatokhov’s weight continued to grow over the years, reaching 180 kilograms when he was just 13 years old.

Betal Gubzhev, who heads the sumo organization in Russia’s southern Kabardino-Balkaria region, announced Khatokhov’s death on Tuesday in an Instagram post. He did not say anything about the cause of death, although Russian media reported that the young Khatokhov had kidney problems before.

Russian sumo wrestler Dzhambulat Khatokhov, who joined Guinness World Records in 2003 as the toughest kid in the world, has died.  Photo: TMZ

“The heaviest child in the world” died at age 21

At the age of two, Dzhambulat Khatokhov was already 34 kilograms, years. And by the age of 13, the weight of the Russian athlete had reached 180 kilograms. He practiced sumo and wrestling and became a sumo referee.

Although a doctor tried to explain Khatokhov’s weight gain-related health problems to his mother, Nelya, she refused to believe such a thing, saying: “My son is not sick, he is unique.” “If others think differently, it depends on them”his mother concluded.

Dzhambulat Khatokhov, once dubbed the world's heaviest boy, died at age 21 in Nalchik and is shown at age 9 with fellow fighters.

Dr. Ian Campbell was open with Nelya about the risks of not controlling Khatokhov’s weight: His weight increases the risk of diabetes, cancer and heart disease, said Campbell, who expressed concern that Nelya did not want her son to lose weight.

“Due to the fact that he is so tough and so young, his life expectancy is likely to be greatly shortened,” the doctor said at the time.

Dzhambulat Khatokhov with his mother Nelya

Sumo-dead-09

Campbell tried to uncover the mystery behind Khatokhov’s weight and considered whether he had a genetic condition or whether he was being given anabolic steroids. Nelya denied having given him the infant growth hormone again.

The former athlete’s last Instagram post dates from February 2020, when he refereed a sumo contest for children, people write.
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