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Strongman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Competitor in strength athletics
This article is about performers and athletes. For an authoritarian political leader, seePolitical strongman. For other uses, seeStrongman (disambiguation).

Strongman is a competitivestrength sport which tests athletes' physical strength and endurance through a variety of heavy lifts and events. Strongman competitions are known for their intensity, pushing athletes to their physical and mental limits.[1] In modern strongman, athletes compete to score points based on their relative position in an event.[2] An athlete who engages in the sport of strongman is also called a 'strongman'.[3] They are often regarded as some of the strongest men of the world.

Etymology

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Many sources state that strongman is a man who performs remarkable feats possessing enormous amounts of strength.[4][5] In the 19th century, the term 'strongman' was referred to an exhibitor of strength duringcircus performances.[6]

History

[edit]
A 19th century Strongman doing abent press using a circus dumbbell.

Modern strongman generally credits its origins to circus strongmen who became popular in the 19th and 20th centuries. In the first half of the 20th century, strongmen performed various feats of strength such as thebent press (not to be confused with thebench press, which did not exist at the time), supporting large amounts of weight held overhead at arm's length, steel bending, chain breaking, etc. They needed to have large amounts of wrist, hand, andtendon strength for these feats, as well as prodigiousoblique strength.[7] Athletes includingLouis Cyr,Apollon,Donald Dinnie, andArthur Saxon are credited as major innovators in the sport. Many events today, including the Cyr dumbbell, Apollon's axle clean-and-press, Dinnie stones, and Saxon bar deadlift bear their names.

In the late 20th century, the termstrongman evolved to describe one who competes instrength athletics – a more modern eclectic strength competition in which competitors display their raw functional strength through exercises such as deadlifts, squats, overhead log lifts, lifting stones, toting refrigerators, pulling heavy vehicles and tossing or loading weights. With the advent of theWorld's Strongest Man competition, strongman began to be formalized as a competitive sport rather than a non-competitive spectacle. Since the advent of the modern sport, competitions includingArnold Strongman Classic,Europe's Strongest Man,Strongman Champions League,World's Ultimate Strongman,World's Strongest Viking,World Muscle Power Classic,Fortissimus,Pure Strength,Rogue Invitational,Shaw Classic,Giants Live,IFSA World Championships,Strongman Super Series andWorld Strongman Challenge have adopted a standardized format based on the original World's Strongest Man.[3]

More than 30 countries also hold national-level strongman competitions.[8] Local competitions featuring amateur athletes are also common.

Modern format

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In its modern format, a strongman competition will typically consist of several events (ranging from as few as five to as many as eight at the international level) testing different aspects of strength. These may include static lifts such as adeadlift,overhead press, orsquat or a dynamic event involving moving with weight. Athletes may, for example, pick up a heavy apparatus and carry it for a certain distance or drag a vehicle attached by a harness.

Strongman competitions score competitors by comparing their relative place in an event and awarding more points to competitors with better finishes. Typically, first place in an event will receive a number of points equal to the number of competitors. For example, if an athlete finishes first in the deadlift in a competition with 10 competitors, they will receive 10 points, with second receiving nine, and so on, until last place receives only one point.

Most competitions award zero points if an athlete could not complete a lift or start the event--if, for example, an athlete could not pick up a stone in a stone-carrying event, they would be awarded zero points. Competitions will also normally split points based on ties, adding up the combined points for their places and averaging them out. For example, if two athletes finish tied for first in a 10-athlete competition, the scores for first and second (10 and 9 points) will be added up and divided by two, resulting in each athlete being awarded 9.5 points.

Training

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Training for strongman involves building overall strength in the gym and training with competition implements to gain familiarity. In the gym, it is necessary to train the entire body for strength, especially with variants of thesquat,deadlift, andoverhead press. Explosive power is also important, which is developed byweightlifting style lifts and cardiovascular conditioning. Additionally, grip strength must be developed and it is also imperative to improve mental toughness and pain tolerance.[9]

Although you can do general strength training, at a typical gym, training with a strongman regimen requires equipment not typically found in a gym. Some equipment used in a strongman competition would have to be found custom-made or at a strongman gym. Some of these equipment includes natural stones, tree trunk logs, farmers walk frames, yokes, kegs and various sorts of vehicles.

Another part of a strongman's training is its intense diet regime. The biggest strongman competitors would need to ingest around 8,000 - 10,000 calories a day.

Events

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Brian Shaw performing the Rogue Elephant bar rawdeadlift at the 2017Arnold Strongman Classic

Though competitive strongman events are ever-changing, there are a number of staples that frequently appear on the international stage,[10] including:

Notable strongmen

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Traditional strongmen

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The strongmen are listed according to the chronological order of their birth.

  • Roy van Rumph
  • Modern Strongmen

    [edit]
    Main article:List of strongmen

    The following 75 strongmen have reached the podium (1st, 2nd or 3rd place) ofWorld's Strongest Man since 1977 and/orWorld Muscle Power Classic from 1985 to 2004 and/orArnold Strongman Classic since 2002. They are listed according to the chronological order of their podium appearance.

    24 of them have won the World's Strongest Man (WSM), 11 have won the World Muscle Power Classic (WMPC) and 9 have won the Arnold Strongman Classic (ASC).

    7 men have won both WSM & WMPC (Kazmaier, Capes, Sigmarsson, Reeves, Magnússon, Ahola, Karlsen). 5 men have won both WSM & ASC (Savickas, Shaw, Björnsson, Licis, Hooper).

    Additionally, the following 50 strongmen have reached either 4th or 5th places ofWorld's Strongest Man and/orWorld Muscle Power Classic and/orArnold Strongman Classic:

    International Accolades

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    • The table below summarizes the 50 most decorated strongmen in modern history with the most number ofinternational wins in their careers (1st places only/ open weight and age categories only).[11]

      Active  Retired

    #NameCountryActiveCompetitionsWinsWin %
    1Žydrūnas SavickasLithuaniaLithuania1996–20221477953.74%
    2Mariusz PudzianowskiPolandPoland2000–2009614370.49%
    3Hafþór Júlíus BjörnssonIcelandIceland2010–693144.93%
    4Brian ShawUnited StatesUSA2007–2023652741.54%
    5Aivars ŠmaukstelisLatviaLatvia2014–762634.21%
    6Krzysztof RadzikowskiPolandPoland2005–20191122421.43%
    7Ervin KatonaSerbiaSerbia2003–2015991717.17%
    8Hugo GirardCanadaCanada1998–2008371540.54%
    9Dainis ZagerisLatviaLatvia2009–2022871517.24%
    10Mitchell HooperCanadaCanada2022–231460.87%
    11Jón Páll SigmarssonIcelandIceland1982–1992291344.82%
    12Magnús Ver MagnússonIcelandIceland1987–2005481225.00%
    13Magnus SamuelssonSwedenSweden1995–2008631219.05%
    14Jouko AholaFinlandFinland1994–2002221150.00%
    15Riku KiriFinlandFinland1987–1999251144.00%
    16Mateusz KieliszkowskiPolandPoland2014–441125.00%
    17Oleksii NovikovUkraineUkraine2016–451124.44%
    18Mikhail KoklyaevRussiaRussia2005–2014501122.00%
    19Matjaz BelsakSloveniaSlovenia2014–2020641117.19%
    20JF CaronCanadaCanada2007–2023731013.70%
    21Geoff CapesUnited KingdomEnglandUK /England1979–198820945.00%
    22Svend KarlsenNorwayNorway1996–200667913.43%
    23Bill KazmaierUnited StatesUSA1979–199018844.44%
    24Derek PoundstoneUnited StatesUSA2006–201722836.36%
    25Martins LicisUnited StatesUSA2015–24833.33%
    26Vytautas LalasLithuaniaLithuania2007–201830826.67%
    27Kelvin de RuiterNetherlandsNetherlands2011–40820.00%
    28Janne VirtanenFinlandFinland1998–200950816.00%
    29Laurence ShahlaeiUnited KingdomEnglandUK /England2007–202155814.55%
    30Travis OrtmayerUnited StatesUSA2005–202351713.72%
    31Manfred HoeberlAustriaAustria1990–199618633.33%
    32Vasyl VirastyukUkraineUkraine2002–200828621.43%
    33Andrus MurumetsEstoniaEstonia2003–200940615.00%
    34Rayno NelSouth AfricaSouth Africa2023–6583.33%
    35Adam RoszkowskiPolandPoland2021–19526.32%
    35Flemming RasmussenDenmarkDenmark1995–200119526.32%
    37Mykhailo StarovUkraineUkraine2004–200624520.83%
    38Pavlo KordiyakaUkraineUkraine2017–25520.00%
    39Evan SingletonUnited StatesUSA2018–29517.24%
    40Johannes ÅrsjöSwedenSweden2007–201739512.82%
    41Mikhail ShivlyakovRussiaRussia2011–202144511.36%
    41Stojan TodorchevBulgariaBulgaria2005–201744511.36%
    43Raivis VidzisLatviaLatvia2002–200946510.87%
    43Jarek DymekPolandPoland2000–201046510.87%
    45Oskar ZiółkowskiPolandPoland2020–13430.77%
    46Mike BurkeUnited StatesUSA2011–201519421.05%
    47Didzis ZariņšLatviaLatvia2011–23417.39%
    48Trey MitchellUnited StatesUSA2016–27414.81%
    49Tom StoltmanUnited KingdomScotlandUK /Scotland2016–32412.50%
    50Glenn RossUnited KingdomNorthern IrelandUK /Northern Ireland1997–201133412.12%

    - As of 1 January 2025

    Incorrect usage

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    Strongman is often incorrectly used to describe a person who doespowerlifting,weightlifting orbodybuilding. Due to the circus and entertainment background, nineteenth-century bodybuilders were expected to mingle with the crowd during intermission and perform strength feats like card tearing, nail bending, etc. to demonstrate strength as well as symmetry and size.

    Strongwoman

    [edit]
    Main article:Strongwoman

    The sport also extends to female competitors. From 2000s onwards, women's competitions were held internationally and from late 2010s, they received mainstream attention thanks to competitions such asWorld's Strongest Woman,Arnold Strongwoman Classic andRogue Invitational.

    See also

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    References

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    1. ^Maanas, Aaromal (2 November 2022)."Who is the World's Strongest Man? Ranking the top five Strongest Men in History".Sportskeeda. Retrieved2 November 2022.
    2. ^"About Strongman - competitors are tested for their pure strength".Robert Wood for Topend Sports Website. Retrieved10 September 2024.
    3. ^ab"The origins of Strongman sport, a story of strength and challenge".Kingsbox. 15 June 2023. Retrieved10 September 2024.
    4. ^"Strongman".www.collinsdictionary.com. Retrieved10 September 2024.
    5. ^"Strongman".www.dictionary.com. Retrieved10 September 2024.
    6. ^"STRONGMAN".ERA-FIT Ltd Bespoke Fitness Systems. Retrieved2019-09-05.[permanent dead link]
    7. ^"Notable Strongmen and their fascinating feats of strength". 20 May 2017.
    8. ^"STRONGMAN CONTESTS".strongmanarchives.com. Retrieved2022-04-13.
    9. ^"Strongman Training at Home".Andre Adams. Retrieved10 September 2024.
    10. ^"Strongman Events". strongman.org. Retrieved2012-12-28.
    11. ^"Strongman Archives - Athletes".Strongman Archives. April 5, 2022. RetrievedApril 6, 2022.

    External links

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