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An Olympic karateka looked destined for gold but KO'd his opponent, got disqualified, and settled for silver

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Saudi Arabian karateka Tareg Hamedi knocks out Olympics gold medal opponent Sajad Ganjzadeh but got disqualified for doing so, winning silver instead.
Tareg Hamedi knocked Sajad Ganjzadeh out cold.
  • An awesome karate knockout took place at the Olympic Games on Saturday.
  • The only problem was that it was illegal, and so the guy who threw the kick was disqualified.
  • He lost the Olympic final, and so the man who was unconscious got the gold medal instead.
  • Visit Insider's homepage for more stories.

A Saudi Arabian karateka called Tareg Hamedi looked destined for the Olympic title as he was cruising in the gold medal match against Sajad Ganizadeh, of Iran.

Hamedi, 23, was leading 4-1 in Saturday's high-stakes event at the Tokyo Games, and knocked Ganizadeh out cold with a brutal high kick to the neck after a minute of competition.

In many other combat sports, that would be it. Hamedi would win the championship, and perhaps go on to even bigger things.

But in karate, at the Olympics, Hamedi got disqualified.

Ganjzadeh, who had been beaten to the floor, was motionless on the canvas. And so medical professionals rushed to the mat, placed him on a stretcher, and removed him from the main Nippon Budokan area.

Though Ganjzadeh was unconscious, he was adjudged to be the winner as officials decided Hamedi broke the rules of the game by inflicting an unchecked attack, injuring his opponent.

Tareg Hamedi looks dejected as Sajad Ganjzadeh, who was unconscious, went on to win the gold medal by way of disqualification.

Ganjzadeh had made a sufficient recovery to return for the medal ceremony later Saturday, collecting the gold medal, even though he had been rendered unconscious in the match.

Hamedi received the silver medal.

Photos show that neither looked particularly pleased with the result.

Tareg Hamedi of Saudi Arabia, and Sajad Ganjzadeh of Iran, collect their medals after the karate final.

"I'm happy about the gold medal but I'm sad that I had to win it like this," Ganjzadeh said at a post-match press conference.

Ganjzadeh and Hamedi were competing in the men's kumite +75-kilogram event.

Ryutaro Araga of Japan and Ugur Aktas of Turkey won the bronze medals.

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