Canada's Erica Wiebe reeling after last-second, quarter-final loss at wrestling worlds

Erica Wiebe of Stittsville, Ont., was visibly upset following Wednesday's quarter-final loss in the dying seconds at the world wrestling championships in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan.

Olympian's teammate Linda Morais to fight for gold in 59kg women's division

Canada's Erica Wiebe must finish in the top two in her weight class at this weekend's qualification tournament to earn the right to defend her 2016 Olympic gold medal. ((Tibor Illyes/MTI via Associated Press/File)

Erica Wiebe of Stittsville, Ont., was visibly upset following Wednesday's quarter-final loss in the dying seconds at the world wrestling championships in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan.

The 2016 Olympian led 3-1 on points with fewer than five seconds remaining, but Epp Maee of Estonia scored a takedown before time ran out to prevail 4-3 in the 76-kilogram bout.

"When you train so hard and you make mistakes mentally, you don't wrestle for the full six minutes, that's what happens," Wiebe said.

"This year, I've gone through a lot of challenges, mentally, physically, emotionally. I honestly thought I was going to be better than that today."

Wiebe, who won a bronze medal at the senior Pan American championships in April, had defeated Aiperi Kyzy of Kyrgyzstan 5-0 in the 1/8 final, and Hungary's Zsanett Nemeth 5-1 in the qualification round.

Wiebe, 30, still has a chance to secure a spot for Canada at the 2020 Olympics at the Pan Am Olympic qualifying tournament or world Olympic qualifier, assuming she wins at Canadian trials in December, according to Wrestling Canada.

Meanwhile, Canada's Linda Morais advanced to Thursday`s 59 kg final in the after a 3-1 defeat of Mongolia's Shoovdor Baatarjav 3-1.

2-time world university champ

"It's so surreal, I'm so excited," said Morais, who will meet Liubov Ovcharova of Russia in the final. "This year has been amazing so far and I'm hoping to end it with gold. It was a tough match, physically I felt OK, but mentally it was such a challenge.

"Going match after match against incredible opponents is so tough."

Morais also beat Tetiana Omelchenko of Azerbaijan and Ukraine's Anhelina Lysak on Tuesday.

A two-time world university champion, Morais also won bronze at 60 kg at the 2016 world championships.

In other matches Wednesday:

  • Jade Parsons of Orillia, Ont., lost 6-2 to Russian Olga Khoroshavtseva in a 55 kg repechage, preventing her from fighting in the bronze-medal bout.
  • Hannah Taylor (57 kg) of Cornwall, P.E.I., and Jessica Brouillette (65 kg) of Barrie, Ont., also were eliminated from medal contention.

With files from The Canadian Press