Just so you know, in powerlifting the eternal battle between “classical” and “sumo” has no meaning. The amazing Galina Abramova pulled her 255 kg in the weightlifting category up to 67.5. Yes - heels almost together, toes apart, hands on the outside of the hips. And the no less incredible Yuri Belkin, with his 440, is in perfect sumo. Stephy Cohen - also in sumo, but a stunning 235 kg in a weight not exceeding 56 kg. What about Strongs? These have long overcome the “supersonic barrier”. Benedicht Magnusson pulled 460 in powerlifting alone, and even more in straps and overalls.
Strongest
“The strongest man on the planet” - that’s what they called him at one time. US athlete Paul Anderson, who was involved in weightlifting and competed more than 50 years ago, still has unbroken records in strength exercises.
In Las Vegas, he managed to squat 526 kg three times in a row. He did this every day for several weeks and said that this weight was his normal working weight, and not his maximum. He did this without any athletic equipment, and barefoot. For example, the modern record was set by Doni Thompson, who squatted 590 kg. And in 1975, Don Reinhodt set a record in the squat without equipment with a weight of 423.5 kg - this record has not yet been broken by anyone.
Another amazing achievement Anderson achieved was lifting weights with one right hand. He lifted 136 kg 11 times. He did such exercises with special dumbbells.
It’s possible to tear off almost three tons of weight!
He set one of the most incredible world records in lifting weights from racks. Anderson was able to lift 2844 kg of weight, which exceeded the records set before him by almost a ton.
Andy Bolton, an English weightlifter, also set incredible world records in weightlifting. He set three world records: squat with a weight of 550.5 kg, deadlift - 457.5 kg, total triathlon - 1273 kg. Andy became the first man on the planet to deadlift more than 453.6 kg (1,000 lbs).
In the deadlift, we should note the successes of Benedikt Magnusson. In the spring of 2011, wearing the equipment, he set a world record in weightlifting and lifted a weight of 460 kg at the Ronnie Coleman classic tournament.
As for the bench press, one cannot fail to mention the achievement of the American athlete Ryan Kennelly. Without equipment, he bench presses 297 kg. A lot of? In equipment in 2008, Ryan bench pressed 478.6 kg! So far, no one can break this world record in weightlifting.
Iran ahead
In an exercise such as the snatch, in the open weight category, world weightlifting records belong only to athletes from Iran. And it is noteworthy that the last two belong to a teacher and his student. So, in 2003, Hossein Reza Zadeh set a world record by making a snatch with a barbell weight of 213 kg. And in 2011, his student Bedhad Salimi surpassed his teacher and managed to make a snatch at the National Tournament, which was held in Iran, with a weight of 214 kg. At the same time, Hossein’s world weightlifting record in the clean and jerk remained unbroken - no one managed to lift a weight greater than 263 kg.
Despite the development of training systems, as well as sports supplements used by weightlifters, so far no one has been able to surpass the result of the Soviet athlete Leonid Taranenko, who in 1988 achieved a weight in the clean and jerk of 266 kg. Then in the double event he gained 475 kg.
Also unsurpassed is the result of the Turkish athlete N. Suleymanoglu, who in the same 1988 was able to push a barbell weighing 190 kilograms, thereby setting a new world record in weightlifting. Doesn't seem like much? Your opinion will change when you find out in what category the athlete performed at that time - up to 60 kg. That is, the Turk was able to lift a weight that was more than three times his own!
Strength records
- Alexander Zass
- Bruce Lee
- Milo
- Albion athletes
- Russian bogatyrs
- How the steel rose
- Unbeatable records
- Exotic feminization
- Pyramid of Dikul
- Krasnoyarsk Hercules
- Masutasu Oyama
Alexander Zass (Iron Samson)
This happened in 1938 in the English city of Sheffield. In front of the crowd, a truck loaded with coal ran over a man sprawled on the cobblestone street. People screamed in horror. But the next second there was a cry of delight: “Glory to the Russian Samson!” . And the man to whom the storm of jubilation was felt, stood up from under the wheels as if nothing had happened, bowed to the audience with a smile. Alexander Zass , who performed under the pseudonym Samson , has not left the circus posters of many countries . His repertoire of power routines was amazing:
- he carried a horse or a piano around the arena with a pianist and dancer located on the lid;
- caught with his hands a 9-kilogram cannonball flying out of a circus cannon from an eight-meter distance;
- he tore a metal beam with assistants sitting at its ends from the floor and held it in his teeth;
- having threaded the shin of one leg into the loop of a rope fixed under the dome, he held a platform with a piano and a pianist in his teeth;
- lying with his bare back on a board studded with nails, he held a stone weighing 500 kilograms on his chest, which was hit by those from the public with sledgehammers;
- in the famous attraction “Projectile Man” he caught with his hands an assistant flying out of a circus cannon and describing a 12-meter trajectory above the arena;
- he broke the links of chains with his fingers;
- He hammered nails into 3-inch boards with his unprotected palm, and then pulled them out, grasping the head with his index finger.
Alexander Zass's performances were triumphant. This is explained not only by the original athletic numbers, most of which could not be repeated by any athlete, but also by the fact that he was not like many strongmen of that time, who had massive figures and great weight. His height is 167.5 cm , weight is 80 kg , chest circumference is 119 centimeters , biceps are 41 centimeters each . He liked to say that big biceps are not always an indicator of strength. Just like a big belly does not mean good digestion . The main thing is willpower , strong tendons and the ability to control your muscles . Very often Samson had to answer the question of how he achieved such power. He replied that this was the result of purposeful work, enormous tension of all spiritual and physical forces. If you trace the entire life path of Alexander Zass , you can see that it consisted of constant training and a strict regime. In one photograph, where Samson is captured sitting at a table near a samovar, there is his note: “5 minutes of rest,” but he was then 74 years old, and he continued to work, although not in the strength genre, but as a trainer, but often included in their performances are power tricks. So, at the age of seventy, he carried two lions around the arena on a special yoke! Of course, Alexander Zass had enormous natural strength, which is what distinguished his ancestors in general. Once in his native Saransk he visited the circus with his father. The boy especially liked the mighty strongman who broke chains and bent horseshoes. At the end of his performance, the artist, as was customary at that time, addressed the audience, inviting them to repeat his tricks. Alas, no one was able to bend a horseshoe or lift a ball barbell with a thick bar off the ground. And suddenly Alexander’s , Ivan Petrovich Zass , rose from his seat and entered the arena. Alexander knew that his father was very strong. Sometimes he demonstrated his strength to the guests. And so the strong man handed the horseshoe to his father. To the surprise of the public, the horseshoe in the hands of Zass Sr. began to unbend. Then Ivan Petrovich tore the huge barbell off the platform and, straightening his torso, raised it above his knees. The audience applauded like crazy. The circus strongman was embarrassed. He called the uniformist over to him. He ran backstage and brought a silver ruble. The artist raised his hand with a ruble and said: “But this is for your feat and for a drink!” The father took the ruble, then rummaged in his pocket, pulled out a three-ruble ruble, and handed it to the athlete along with the ruble, saying: “I don’t drink! But take it, but drink only tea!” Since then, his son lived only in the circus. In the backyard of the house, with the help of adults, I installed two horizontal bars, hung trapeze bars, got hold of household weights, made a primitive barbell, and began to train with incredible persistence. I tried to repeat what I saw. Having mastered the “sun” (large rotation) on the horizontal bar, he began to fly from one bar to another, doing backflips not only on the floor, but also on a horse. I did one-arm pull-ups several times. But all these activities were unsystematic. He convinced his father to order books on physical development from Moscow. And soon a book by the then famous athlete Evgeniy Sandov, “Strength and How to Become Strong,” arrived. The author talked about his athletic career, about victories over famous athletes, and even about fighting a huge lion, which before the fight was given a muzzle and special huge mittens on its paws. Sandow several times , but he threw him off each time. Then came eighteen exercises with dumbbells, that is, what was especially necessary for Alexander . And he began to study according to the Sandov system - his idol. But he soon realized that exercises with dumbbells alone could not develop the strength that a professional strongman needs. He turns for help to the famous athletes Pyotr Krylov and Dmitriev-Morro, who did not ignore the young man’s request, and soon Zass received methodological recommendations from these athletes. Krylov recommended exercises with weights, and Dmitriev - with a barbell. He squeezed two-pound weights simultaneously and alternately (“mill”), pressed them upside down, and juggled. With the barbell I performed mainly bench presses, clean and jerks, and overhead presses. With his own weight of 66 kg, young Zass twisted (press with torso deviation) with his right hand 80 kg. But most of all he was attracted by the power tricks that he saw in the circus. And he visited the circus constantly. His sports props began to be replenished with horseshoes, chains, metal rods, and nails. And then he realized that repeated attempts to perform a trick - breaking a chain or bending a thick metal rod - bring tangible results in the development of physical strength. In essence, these were the now widely known isometric exercises. Thus, purely empirically (based on experience), Alexander Zass came to the conclusion that athletic strength can be developed by combining dynamic exercises with isometric ones in training. He later published his isometric system, and the pamphlet created a sensation. Once in the circus, Zass at one time worked as an assistant to the legendary trainer Anatoly Durov, then as an athlete Mikhail Kuchkin, and he often told his assistant: “Someday, Sasha, you will become a famous strongman, I have never seen anyone who was so strong , like you, having such a small height and weight.” In general, Zass worked in the circus for about sixty years and almost forty of them with athletic acts.
In 1914, world war broke out. Alexander Zass was drafted into the 180th Vindavsky Cavalry Regiment. One day an incident occurred that amazed even those who were well aware of Alexander’s . One day he was returning from another reconnaissance mission, and suddenly, already close to the Russian positions, they noticed him and opened fire. The bullet shot through the horse's leg. The Austrian soldiers, seeing that the horse and rider had fallen, did not pursue the cavalryman and turned back. Zass , making sure that the danger had passed, did not want to leave the wounded horse. There was still half a kilometer left to his regiment, but this did not bother him. Having shouldered the horse, Zass brought it to his camp. Time will pass, he will remember this episode and will include carrying a horse on his shoulders in his repertoire. In one of the battles, Zass was seriously wounded by shrapnel in both legs. He was captured, and the Austrian surgeon began amputation. But Zass begged not to do this. He believed in his powerful body and the therapeutic gymnastics that he developed for himself. And he recovered! Soon he, along with other prisoners, was sent to heavy road work. He made several unsuccessful escapes, after which he was severely punished. The third escape was remarkable. Having escaped from the camp, Alexander found himself in the city of Kaposvár in southern Hungary, where the Schmidt Circus, known throughout Europe, was on tour. Presenting himself before the owner of the circus, Zass openly told him about his misfortune, as well as about his work in Russian circuses. Immediately the director suggested that he break the chain and bend a thick metal rod. Of course, hungry and tired, Zass was not in good athletic shape, but through an effort of will he coped with the task. He was taken to the circus, and soon the news of the amazing athlete spread throughout the city. But one day the military commandant came to his performance. He became interested in why such a strong young athlete was not serving in the Austrian army. That same evening it turned out that Samson was a Russian prisoner of war. He was taken to the basement of the fortress, into a damp, dark room. But his strength and will were not broken. He made a new escape by breaking the chain connecting the handcuffs and breaking down the bars. Now he gets to Budapest, where he gets a job as a loader at the port, and then at the circus arena. The wrestler, world champion Chaya Janos , whom Alexander met back in Russia, helped him. Zass with sympathy . He took him to the village to his relatives, where Alexander’s gradually recovered. He then competed for three years in a wrestling troupe led by Chai Janos , alternating mat wrestling with athletic performances.
One day, Janos introduced the Russian strongman to the famous Italian impresario Signor Pasolini Zass's athletic capabilities . The Italian offered to conclude a contract. Zass's European tour begins , his fame grows. Finally, he comes to England, where his performances generally aroused fantastic interest. Famous athletes such as Edward Aston, Thomas Inch, Pullum began to try their hand at repeating Zass' , but not a single attempt was successful. Mr Pullum, director of the famous Camberwell Weightlifting Club and editor-in-chief of the sports magazine Health and Strength, wrote of him: “A man has arrived straight into the heart of England, capable of performing feats that common sense refuses to believe. If he had been a huge fellow, his performances might have been perceived as believable. But pay attention at least to the chest excursion (the difference between inhalation and exhalation) of this short man. It is equal to 23 centimeters, which says a lot to specialists. Therefore, I say that he not only has unprecedented physical strength, not only a magnificent artist, but also a man who uses his mind as well as his muscles.” And here is what the poster of the famous Alhambra hall, where Alexander Zass : “In Manchester, during construction work, Samson, suspended with one leg from a crane, lifted a metal beam from the ground with his teeth, and was carried to the top of the building by a crane, in while the crowd stood below with their mouths open. If the Russian had opened his mouth, the crowd would never have been able to tell what they saw.” Posters and newspapers did not lag behind. Daily Telegraph: “ Mr Samson is certainly the strongest man on earth. You can believe this when you see how easily he ties iron rods into knots.”
Manchester Guardian: "According to the advertisements, he is the strongest man on Earth, and after we have seen him for ourselves ... this statement can be considered irrefutable."
Health and Strength Magazine: “In Samson we have a strongman whose achievements are completely open to scrutiny. Truly, his muscles are made of steel."
At the end of his life, Alexander Zass invented a hand dynamometer, designed and manufactured a circus cannon for the “Projectile Man” attraction . Samson died in 1962. He was buried near London, in the small town of Hockley.
Bruce Lee
In addition to the fact that he fought well, he pinned the US 110kg champion Van Williams . The result of such targeted training was the forearms. Powerful, amazing strength. They felt as hard as a baseball bat. Van Williams spoke . One day Bruce offered to fight him. I sat down at the table with the idea of playing along with him as a friend. I was 112 kg then. How could I compete with Bruce seriously! However, it turned out that I did not have enough strength to overcome the resistance of his hand! Moreover, I could not move his hand even a millimeter. In a conversation with Herb Jackson, Lee jokingly said that he could become the World Arm Wrestling Champion. about Bruce Lee , but with a weight of 65 kg, he picked up 2 dumbbells of 37 kg each and held them on outstretched arms for 20 seconds.
Milo
The famous Hellenic athlete Milo from the city of Croton lived in the 6th century BC. He was unbeatable in strength training and wrestling for twenty years, winning the overall winner's crown at the Olympic Games six times. He developed phenomenal strength, which became proverbial, almost according to modern principles of training: duration, continuity, gradual increase in load. Milo first lifted the bull on his shoulders when he was a calf, and subsequently carried him around the stadium arena every day. As the bull grew, so did Milo's strength . The end of the attraction is for the needs of the ancient public. Having lowered the bull to the ground, the athlete killed him with a punch between the eyes. Milo stood on a disk greased with lard or oil, and none of the spectators could push him off this slippery pedestal. A stone weighing 136 kilograms was thrown six meters. He put six people in a chariot, lifted it on his head and carried it around the arena. But he saved the most amazing of his tricks for last. Milo squeezed a ripe pomegranate in his palm and invited those who wanted to take it out. No one succeeded. The athlete unclenched his hand - the pomegranate was completely intact and not even dented: to such an extent, by tensing the muscles of his fingers, he was able to simultaneously relax the muscles of his palm. During the war between his native Croton and the city of Sybaris, Milo was elected commander. Like Hercules, the famous hero, dressed in a lion's skin, fought with a huge club in his hands, replacing an entire squad. The death of the strongman was tragic. Having gone into the forest to get firewood for his old mother, he hammered wedges into the crack of a thick trunk and tried to tear it in two with his hands. But the released wedges fell to the ground, and the tree pinched the fingers. Milo did not take into account that with age, even champions lose strength. He was unable to free his hands and found himself chained to the trunk. Helpless, hungry and exhausted, the famous athlete was torn to pieces by wild animals. Milo of Croton died , to whom a marble monument was erected and whose name was included six times in the lists of winners of ancient Olympia. Milon of Croton wrote the scientific treatise “Physics” and became famous as a singer - throughout his life he confirmed the ideal of harmony of body and soul. This ideal was put forward by Pythagoras, known to us from school, an Olympic champion and an excellent fist fighter. The father of medicine, the ancient Greek physician Hippocrates, had phenomenal physical strength and stood out among the Hellenic wrestlers and horsemen. The winners of the highest awards for sporting valor were the famous philosophers Plato and Socrates, and the tragic poets Sophocles and Euripides. Many of the most prominent philosophers and poets, statesmen and generals of Ancient Greece (remember, for example, Pindar and Alcinades) were outstanding athletes and winners of Olympic competitions. The combination of greatness of strength and nobility of spirit was demonstrated by the ancient Greek hero Polydamus of Thessaly. He was relaxing with friends in a cave when the earthquake began. Polydamus supported the vault until his companions left the cave, but he himself was covered with stones. It is known about this athlete that he killed a lion with his bare hands, which in ancient times was considered something of a standard for the title of master of sports.
Albion athletes
Cornish farmer Payne had a son, Anthony . Already as a child, he was distinguished by his extraordinary strength: he could put one of his peers on each arm and run up a steep hill with them. Being a huntsman, he went to hurry the servant, who was supposed to bring firewood on a donkey. He shouldered the donkey, the firewood, and the servant - and brought it all home. As you remember, a test of strength in ancient times was an exercise with a lion, and in the Middle Ages it was replaced with a harmless donkey. What degradation! Strength was not the privilege of only tall people. Owen Farrell, 113 centimeters tall , toured Ireland . He danced with two adults under his arm. And he walked freely, carrying four people. Thomas Topham , born in London in 1710, enjoyed great fame His tricks were amazing. On May 20, 1731 (this number shocked the audience so much that even the exact date of its performance was preserved) at a performance in Derby Topham lifted three barrels of water with a total weight of 863 kilograms on a belt thrown over his shoulders and neck.
Russian bogatyrs
The strength of heroes in Rus' is traditionally combined with selfless courage. During the battle in 1240, when our army under the command of Alexander Nevsky victoriously repelled the Swedes, the Novgorod warriors showed courage and extraordinary strength. Gavrilo Oleksich , Sbyslav Yakunovich and Yakov Polovchanin , who went down in history, especially distinguished themselves . Working magnificently with battle axes and swords, they crashed into the thick of the enemies and paved the way for the entire army. Interest in people of outstanding stature and heroic strength was persistent. Peter I issued personalized decrees, according to which heroes were wanted throughout Rus'. This is understandable - courageous people who reliably held weapons in powerful hands were always needed by the Fatherland. Orlovsky , a man of enormous stature and phenomenal strength, lived in St. Petersburg He could juggle a two-handed sword while holding it with three fingers. Having gone to someone's home and not finding the owner, Orlovsky would leave a poker tied in a knot as a sign of his visit. This is what they wrote about the captain of the frigate “Raphael” Vasily Lukin , who died in the Battle of Athos during the war between Russia and Turkey: “His strength was amazing, but it was difficult to force Lukin to use it - only in a cheerful hour among friends. He easily broke horseshoes, could hold pound cannonballs in his outstretched hands for half an hour, press a nail into a ship wall with one finger; could fold a massive silver plate into a pipe so that it was impossible to determine what it was originally. Once, defending his sailors from drunken, riotous English sailors, Lukin killed a dozen brawlers on the spot, and the rest shamefully retreated from the scene of the massacre.” In the second half of the 19th century, wrestling of a purely forceful nature gained popularity. Poddubny , Zaikin , Shemyakin , Gakkenshmidt , Kashcheev had gigantic strength . Everyone knew the leading athletes, young and old. The pages of magazines were full of photographs of strongmen, their portraits were exhibited in store windows, and products were advertised with their names. In those years, there was still no orderly assessment of strength, and athletes came up with various feats such as bending a poker, lifting stones, and horses. They tore chains in front of the audience, tore apart a folded deck of cards with their fingers, weaved patterns from nails...
How the steel rose
It was difficult to say who was stronger until an objective opportunity for an answer appeared - the barbell. A standard projectile, lifted according to strictly defined rules. And here the heroes of our Motherland proved that they are fully worthy of their mighty ancestors: domestic weightlifters are, without a doubt, the strongest in the world. The largest number of records in weightlifting was set by the Soviet athlete Vasily Alekseev - 80 world records. He was the first to lift 600 kilograms in triathlon. Olympic champion Yuri Vlasov set 28 world records . Other Russian heroes performed in the international arena to match them - A. Voronin , N. Kolesnikov , Yu. Vardanyan , D. Riegert , L. Zhabotinsky , Yu. Zaitsev and many others. So we can rightfully say: our athletes today are the strongest people on the planet.
Unsurpassed records
As the crowd watched, a truck loaded with coal ran over a man sprawled on the cobblestones. This trick was demonstrated by Alexander Zass (Samson) . With his own weight of no more than 80 kg, he carried a horse weighing up to 400 kg on his shoulders. He lifted an iron beam with his teeth, at the ends of which two assistants sat, the total weight was 265 kg. For fun, he could lift a taxi and drive it like a wheelbarrow, break horseshoes and break chains. He lifted 20 people on the platform. Grigory Kashcheev walked around the circus arena, shouldering 12 two-pound weights (384 kg), and once lifted a forty-pound (640 kg) beam. Pyotr Krylov , the King of Kettlebells, pressed 114.6 kg with his left hand and bent rails on his shoulders. He set several world records in weightlifting: bench press on a wrestling bridge - 134 kg, bench press with a two-pound weight with his left hand - 86 times, spread his straight arms to the sides, holding a weight weighing 41 kg in each. Yakub Chekhovskaya demonstrated a sensational strength trick in 1913 - he carried six soldiers of the Guards regiment (at least 400 kg) around the arena at arm's length, for which he was awarded an honorary gold belt. This record number has not yet been repeated by any athlete in the world. World champion in French wrestling Nikolai Vakhturov threw a two-pound weight over a railway carriage, and world champion in wrestling Ivan Zaikin lifted a 40-bucket barrel of water onto his back and carried it around the arena. Athlete Hermann Gerner , holding 50 kg in each hand, ran 100 meters in 18.4 seconds. Athlete Ludwig Chaplinsky , as a joke, jumped over the dining table (80 cm high and wide) with a ram in his hands, and athlete Pyotr Yankovsky, as a bet, squeezed three-pound weights into his palm while sitting on the floor. Georg Hackenschmidt lifted an iron core weighing over 585 kg twice in a row, lifting it from the platform by 10 centimeters. The greatest weight ever lifted by a person is 2844 kilograms. He was held on the shoulders of American weightlifter Paul Anderson . The great Leonardo da Vinci , of course, is familiar to each of us. But few people know that, possessing enormous strength, he swung with one hand such church bells that only four people could swing at the same time.
Exotic feminization
Lidiya Rybakova (her weight is 68 kg) lifted a barbell weighing 900 kg from the ground. At the age of 33, on March 4, 1990, she started off and dragged a LAZ bus with 48 passengers in the cabin with a total weight of 10 tons 850 kilograms along the asphalt.
In December 1991, 20-year-old Svetlana Gavrilina Before her record, Svetlana studied... ballet for seven years. Her height is 164 cm, weight is 56 kilograms. Now she confidently lifts 500 kg on her belt, as well as a bar attached to her belt, on which 7 adult men are sitting. On April 15, 1895, American Josephine Blatt (1869-1923) held a load of 1,616 kilograms slung over her shoulders. This women's weight lifting record has not been broken to this day.
Pyramid of Dikul
Valentin Ivanovich Dikul (born in 1947) is an outstanding athlete of our time. He performed two unique strength acts in the circus arena: holding a metal “pyramid” weighing a ton on his body, and holding a Volga car on his back (the load was 1570 kilograms). The uniqueness of these numbers is also in the fact that the athlete performed them after a serious spinal injury - he could not move for almost seven years and, with the help of exercise equipment of his own design, managed to restore his previous form. Now V.I. Dikul heads the Center for Rehabilitation of Patients with Spinal Injury and Consequences of Cerebral Palsy.
Krasnoyarsk Hercules
Klementy Bul was born in 1888 in Achinsk;
Soon the family moved to Krasnoyarsk. In 1911, for the first time he had the opportunity to participate in an international classical wrestling tournament held in St. Petersburg. The tournament brought together the best European wrestlers: the great Grigory Kashcheev, the Dutchman Van Riel, the Volga hero Nikolai Vakhturov. The high-profile titles did not bother the Siberian; in 16 fights he emerged victorious and won the title of champion. Buhl has established himself as an unsurpassed master of wrestling techniques. Being a heavyweight, he acted with extraordinary ease; his style was even compared to acrobatics. Boul met with the best carpet masters of that time - Poddubny , Shemyakin , Zaikin , Lurikh . In the final of the match, which took place in the arena of the Kursk circus in October 1928, he fought with Ivan Poddubny himself. Within an hour, Buhl was able to withstand the six-time world champion and won a well-deserved victory. Subsequently, Klementy Bul did not know defeat in the championships in classical wrestling, and in the mid-30s he switched to coaching. In the Dynamo society, he trained dozens of first-class wrestlers, including European champion Konstantin Koberidze .
Klementy Iosifovich Bul died in 1953, at the age of 66.
Masutasu Oyama
This man, 1000 photos, trained 12 hours a day, lived in the mountains for 3 years, fought 270 fights without a single defeat, a fight with him rarely lasted more than three rounds (it’s good that they fought with gloves), and usually lasted no more than 10 seconds . In live combat, he killed a person with one blow; if the person blocked, the limb would break. Demonstrating the capabilities of a person, Oyama fearlessly went into battle with a bull and cut off the horns of the enraged animal with a blow of his hand. He took part in fights with the strongest wrestlers and boxers of that time, and always emerged victorious. For his incredible strength and talent, admiring Americans dubbed Oyama “the hand of God.” Then they looked at him as a miracle, something supernatural. It took years for the secret of the great master to be revealed to all of us - any person who practices Kyokushin karate . All you need is desire and perseverance in achieving your goal. During his life, he killed 52 bulls, 3 of them died on the first blow.
In 1957 in Mexico, at the age of 34, he was on the verge of death when a bull gored Oyama . Oyama managed to knock down the bull and cut off its horn. He was bedridden for 6 months recovering from a usually fatal wound. The Humane Society of Japan protested Oyama's fighting with animals after Oyama announced his intention to fight with a tiger and a bear, although the bulls killed by Oyama were intended for slaughter. Here is a list of exercises that Oyama performed every day:
During a period of short but fruitful asceticism in the mountains, Oyama lived according to a strictly developed regime, which often appears in biographies of the master and serves as an edification to frivolous students:
- 4 o'clock in the morning - rise. Meditation with closed eyes - 10 min. Running in the mountains - 2 hours.
- 7 am - cooking.
- 8 a.m. - meal, combining breakfast and lunch.
- 9 a.m. – start of training. Perform a set of five exercises ten times:
- lift a sixty-kilogram barbell 20 times;
do push-ups on your fingers 20 times;
- do 20 handstand push-ups;
- do pull-ups on the bar 20 times;
- deliver 20 punches from the right and left to the makiwara.
- 11 a.m. - performing kata.
- 2 pm weight lifting. Lift a sixty-kilogram barbell 20 times, then gradually increase the load.
- Do 1000 push-ups: 200 times on two fingers, 200 times on four fingers, 400 times on five fingers. Before each complex, take a short break. Sometimes, for variety, do 1000 push-ups with fists, with a break after 500.
After completing each complex, do breathing exercises and immediately begin the next complex. After completing this complex ten times, rest for up to 11 hours.
- development of sparring techniques;
In addition to this eloquent document, we note that many kempo devotees and enthusiasts adhered to such a daily routine not for a year or two, but for twenty, thirty years or their entire lives.
In 1952, Oyama went on tour across the United States, where he created a sensation and completely dismayed the public by demonstrating superhuman performances. In fact, how should American spectators react when a visiting master pounded huge cobblestones like porcelain, tore off the necks of beer bottles without the bottles falling off, beat himself on the knuckles with a hammer, punched thick boards with his hands and feet, (about 30 cm) tiles laid in fifteen to twenty layers and three or four bricks lying on top of each other? Oyama traveled throughout the United States for a year, demonstrating his karate skills live and on national television. For his students, Oyama developed a whole cascade of breathtaking tricks that embody the highest achievements of karate on a physical level:
- punching a sheet of thin rice paper suspended on two threads with blows of the fist and fingers;
- splitting a board (or brick) suspended on a rope with blows of the fist, elbow, edge of the palm, edge of the foot and forefoot from a standing position on the ground or while jumping;
- splitting several inch boards in the hands of two assistants with all possible blows of the hands and feet, including jumping at a height of about two meters;
- splitting a one-inch board floating in a barrel of water;
- splitting up to twenty layers of tiles with hands, feet and head;
- splitting three bricks laid on top of each other with a “hand-sword” or “iron hammer” blow;
- splitting with a sword-hand blow three ice slabs, each three inches thick, stacked one above the other at intervals;
- breaking through an ice block with your hand and head;
- splitting massive cobblestones with the base of the edge of the palm;
- cutting off the neck of a standing bottle;
- penetration with a “hand-spear” blow into a tightly tied bundle of bamboo rods;
- piercing a suspended cow carcass with a hand-spear blow.
Weights are lighter than feathers to them
Let's touch on kettlebell lifting a little. World champion in this sport Pavel Lesnykh, who lives in the Altai Territory, never tires of setting new records. In 2007, Pavel set a world record by pushing a 36 kilogram weight 1030 times. He completed it in exactly an hour and a half.
And this is truly a monumental achievement, since the previous record, which was set by Vyacheslav Khoronenko, the “Belarusian King of Kettlebells,” was 1020 jerks with a weight of 32 kilograms.
In addition, Pavel managed to push a weight weighing 41 kg 209 times, as well as hold a weight weighing 52 kg for 30 minutes, thereby setting new world weightlifting records.
Another Russian athlete, Ivan Denisov, a multiple champion of Russia and the world in kettlebell lifting, managed to set no fewer world records. He set a world record for the long cycle kettlebell clean and jerk. Pushing a 32-kilogram weight in 2007, he managed to achieve a result of 109 points. And in 2005, Ivan was able to score 387 points in the double event, which consists of the clean and jerk and snatch. At the same time, he scored 175 points in the clean and jerk, and 220 points in the snatch.
Historical records
Men (1998–2018)
[15]
Event | Write down | Athlete | Nation | date | Meet | Place | Link |
56 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 139 kg | Wu Jingbiao | China | November 21, 2015 | World Championship | Houston, United States | [16] |
Push and Snatch | 171 kg | Uhm Yun-chul | North Korea | November 21, 2015 | World Championship | Houston, United States | [16] |
General | 307 kg | Long Qingquan | China | August 7, 2016 | Olympic Games | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | [17] |
62 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 154 kg | Kim Un Guk | North Korea | September 21, 2014 | Asian Games | Incheon, South Korea | [18] |
Push and Snatch | 183 kg | Chen Lijun | China | November 22, 2015 | World Championship | Houston, United States | [16] |
General | 333 kg | Chen Lijun | China | November 22, 2015 | World Championship | Houston, United States | [16] |
69 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 166 kg | Liao Hui | China | November 10, 2014 | World Championship | Almaty, Kazakhstan | [19] |
Push and Snatch | 198 kg | Liao Hui | China | October 23, 2013 | World Championship | Wroclaw, Poland | [20] |
General | 359 kg | Liao Hui | China | November 10, 2014 | World Championship | Almaty, Kazakhstan | [19] |
77 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 177 kg | Lu Xiaojun | China | August 10, 2016 | Olympic Games | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | [21] |
Push and Snatch | 214 kg | Nijat Rahimov | Kazakhstan | August 10, 2016 | Olympic Games | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | [22] |
General | 380 kg | Lu Xiaojun | China | October 24, 2013 | World Championship | Wroclaw, Poland | [20] |
85 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 187 kg | Andrey Rybakov | Belarus | September 22, 2007 | World Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | [23] |
Push and Snatch | 220 kg | Kianoush Rostami | Iran | May 31, 2016 | Fajr Cup | Tehran, Iran | [24] |
General | 396 kg | Kianoush Rostami | Iran | August 12, 2016 | Olympic Games | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | [25] |
94 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 189 kg | Sohrab Moradi | Iran | August 25, 2022 | Asian Games | Jakarta, Indonesia | [26] |
Push and Snatch | 233 kg | Sohrab Moradi | Iran | December 3, 2022 | World Championship | Anaheim, United States | [27] |
General | 417 kg | Sohrab Moradi | Iran | December 3, 2022 | World Championship | Anaheim, United States | [27] |
105 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 200 kg | Andrey Aramnov | Belarus | August 18, 2008 | Olympic Games | Beijing, China | |
Push and Snatch | 246 kg | Ilya Ilyin | Kazakhstan | December 12, 2015 | President's Cup | Grozny, Russia | [28] |
General | 437 kg | Ilya Ilyin | Kazakhstan | December 12, 2015 | President's Cup | Grozny, Russia | [28] |
+105 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 220 kg | Lasha Talakhadze | Georgia | December 5, 2022 | World Championship | Anaheim, United States | [27] |
Push and Snatch | 263 kg | Hossein Rezazadeh | Iran | August 25, 2004 | Olympic Games | Athens, Greece | |
General | 477 kg | Lasha Talakhadze | Georgia | December 5, 2022 | World Championship | Anaheim, United States | [27] |
Men (1993–1997)
[29]
Event | Write down | Athlete | Nation | date | Meet | Place | Link |
54 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 132.5 kg | Khalil Mutlu | turkey | July 20, 1996 | Olympic Games | Atlanta, United States | |
Push and Snatch | 160.5 kg | Lan Shizhang | China | December 6, 1997 | World Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
General | 290.0 kg | Khalil Mutlu | turkey | November 18, 1994 | World Championship | Istanbul, turkey | |
59 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 140.0 kg | Hafiz Suleymanoglu | turkey | May 3, 1995 | Europe championship | Warsaw Poland | |
Push and Snatch | 170.0 kg | Nikolay Peshalov | Bulgaria | May 3, 1995 | Europe championship | Warsaw Poland | |
General | 307.5 kg | Tang Lingsheng | China | July 21, 1996 | Olympic Games | Atlanta, United States | |
64 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 150.0 kg | Wang Guohua | China | May 12, 1997 | East Asian Games | Busan, South Korea | |
Push and Snatch | 187.5 kg | Valerios Leonidis | Greece | July 22, 1996 | Olympic Games | Atlanta, United States | |
General | 335.0 kg | Naim Suleymanoglu | turkey | July 22, 1996 | Olympic Games | Atlanta, United States | |
70 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 163.0 kg | Wang Jianhui | China | July 9, 1997 | Asian Championship | Yangzhou, China | |
Push and Snatch | 195.5 kg | Zhang Xugang | China | December 9, 1997 | World Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
General | 357.5 kg | Zhang Xugang | China | July 23, 1996 | Olympic Games | Atlanta, United States | |
76 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 170.0 kg | Ruslan Savchenko | Ukraine | November 16, 1993 | World Championship | Melbourne, Australia | |
Push and Snatch | 208.0 kg | Pablo Lara | Cuba | April 20, 1996 | Szekszard Cup | Szekszard, Hungary | |
General | 372.5 kg | Pablo Lara | Cuba | April 20, 1996 | Szekszard Cup | Szekszard, Hungary | |
83 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 180.0 kg | Pyrros Dimas | Greece | July 26, 1996 | Olympic Games | Atlanta, United States | |
Push and Snatch | 214.0 kg | Zhang Yun | China | July 12, 1997 | Asian Championship | Yangzhou, China | |
General | 392.5 kg | Pyrros Dimas | Greece | July 26, 1996 | Olympic Games | Atlanta, United States | |
91 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 187.5 kg | Alexey Petrov | Russia | July 26, 1996 | Olympic Games | Atlanta, United States | |
Push and Snatch | 228.5 kg | Akakios Kakiasvilis | Greece | May 6, 1995 | Europe championship | Warsaw Poland | |
General | 412.5 kg | Alexey Petrov | Russia | May 7, 1994 | Europe championship | Sokolov, Czech Republic | |
99 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 192.5 kg | Sergey Syrtsov | Russia | November 25, 1994 | World Championship | Istanbul, turkey | |
Push and Snatch | 235.0 kg | Akakios Kakiasvilis | Greece | July 28, 1996 | Olympic Games | Atlanta, United States | |
General | 420.0 kg | Akakios Kakiasvilis | Greece | July 28, 1996 | Olympic Games | Atlanta, United States | |
108 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 200.0 kg | Timur Taymazov | Ukraine | November 26, 1994 | World Championship | Istanbul, turkey | |
Push and Snatch | 236.0 kg | Timur Taymazov | Ukraine | July 29, 1996 | Olympic Games | Atlanta, United States | |
General | 435.0 kg | Timur Taymazov | Ukraine | November 26, 1994 | World Championship | Istanbul, turkey | |
+108 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 205.0 kg | Alexander Kurlovich | Belarus | November 27, 1994 | World Championship | Istanbul, turkey | |
Push and Snatch | 262.5 kg | Andrey Chemerkin | Russia | December 14, 1997 | World Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
General | 462.5 kg | Andrey Chemerkin | Russia | December 14, 1997 | World Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand |
Men (1973–1992)
Event | Write down | Athlete | Nation | date | Meet | Place | Link |
52 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 121.0 kg | He Zhuoqiang | China | May 29, 1992 | Silver Dragon Tournament | Cardiff, United Kingdom | |
Push and Snatch | 155.5 kg | Ivan Ivanov | Bulgaria | September 27, 1991 | World Championship | Donaueschingen, Germany | |
General | 272.5 kg | Ivan Ivanov | Bulgaria | September 16, 1989 | World Championship | Athens, Greece | |
56 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 135.0 kg | Liu Shubin | China | September 28, 1991 | World Championship | Donaueschingen, Germany | |
Push and Snatch | 171.0 kg | Neno Terziyski | Bulgaria | September 6, 1987 | World Championship | Ostrava, Czechoslovakia | [30] |
General | 300.0 kg | Naim Suleymanov | Bulgaria | May 11, 1984 | Varna, Bulgaria | [30] | |
60 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 152.5 kg | Naim Suleymanoglu | turkey | September 20, 1988 | Olympic Games | Seoul, South Korea | |
Push and Snatch | 190.0 kg | Naim Suleymanoglu | turkey | September 20, 1988 | Olympic Games | Seoul, South Korea | |
General | 342.5 kg | Naim Suleymanoglu | turkey | September 20, 1988 | Olympic Games | Seoul, South Korea | |
67.5 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 160.0 kg | Israel Militosyan | Soviet Union | September 18, 1989 | World Championship | Athens, Greece | |
Push and Snatch | 200.5 kg | Mikhail Petrov | Bulgaria | September 8, 1987 | World Championship | Ostrava, Czechoslovakia | |
General | 355.0 kg | Mikhail Petrov | Bulgaria | May 12, 1987 | world Cup | Seoul, South Korea | |
75 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 170.0 kg | Angel Genchev | Bulgaria | November 12, 1987 | Miskolc, Hungary | ||
Push and Snatch | 215.5 kg | Alexander Varbanov | Bulgaria | May 12, 1987 | world Cup | Seoul, South Korea | |
General | 382.5 kg | Alexander Varbanov | Bulgaria | February 20, 1988 | world Cup | Plovdiv, Bulgaria | |
82.5 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 183.0 kg | Asen Zlatev | Bulgaria | December 7, 1986 | world Cup | Melbourne, Australia | |
Push and Snatch | 225.0 kg | Asen Zlatev | Bulgaria | November 12, 1986 | World Championship | Sofia, Bulgaria | |
General | 405.0 kg | Yurik Vardanyan | Soviet Union | September 14, 1984 | Friendship Games | Varna, Bulgaria | |
90 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 195.5 kg | Blagoy Blagoev | Bulgaria | May 1, 1983 | world Cup | Varna, Bulgaria | |
Push and Snatch | 235.0 kg | Anatoly Khrapaty | Soviet Union | April 29, 1988 | Europe championship | Cardiff, United Kingdom | |
General | 422.5 kg | Victor Solodov | Soviet Union | September 15, 1984 | Friendship Games | Varna, Bulgaria | |
100 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 200.5 kg | Niku Vlad | Romania | November 14, 1986 | World Championship | Sofia, Bulgaria | |
Push and Snatch | 242.5 kg | Alexander Popov | Soviet Union | March 5, 1988 | Friendship Cup | Tallinn, Soviet Union | [31] |
General | 440.0 kg | Yuri Zakharevich | Soviet Union | March 4, 1983 | Friendship Cup | Odessa, Soviet Union | [32] |
110 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 210.0 kg | Yuri Zakharevich | Soviet Union | September 27, 1988 | Olympic Games | Seoul, South Korea | |
Push and Snatch | 250.5 kg | Yuri Zakharevich | Soviet Union | April 30, 1988 | Europe championship | Cardiff, United Kingdom | |
General | 455.0 kg | Yuri Zakharevich | Soviet Union | September 27, 1988 | Olympic Games | Seoul, South Korea | |
+110 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 216.0 kg | Antonio Krastev | Bulgaria | September 13, 1987 | World Championship | Ostrava, Czechoslovakia | |
Push and Snatch | 266.0 kg | Leonid Taranenko | Soviet Union | November 26, 1988 | Samboy Chips Cup | Canberra, Australia | |
General | 475.0 kg | Leonid Taranenko | Soviet Union | November 26, 1988 | Samboy Chips Cup | Canberra, Australia |
Men (1920–1972)
Event | Write down | Athlete | Nation | date | Meet | Place | Link |
52 kg | |||||||
Click | 120.5 kg | Adam Gnatov | Soviet Union | July 11, 1972 | Baltic Cup | Riga, Soviet Union | |
Snatch | 105.0 kg | Aung Gyi | Burma | August 27, 1972 | Olympic Games | Munich, West Germany | |
Push and Snatch | 132.5 kg | Charlie Deptios | Indonesia | August 27, 1972 | Olympic Games | Munich, West Germany | |
General | 342.5 kg | Sandor Holzreiter | Hungary | September 12, 1970 | World Championship | Columbus, United States | |
56 kg | |||||||
Click | 128.5 kg | Mohammad Nasiri | Iran | July 10, 1972 | Tehran, Iran | ||
Snatch | 115.0 kg | Koji Miki | Japan | October 23, 1972 | Kagoshima, Japan | ||
Push and Snatch | 150.0 kg | Mohammad Nasiri | Iran | October 13, 1968 | Olympic Games | Mexico City, Mexico | |
General | 377.5 kg | Imre Feldi | Hungary | August 28, 1972 | Olympic Games | Munich, West Germany | |
60 kg | |||||||
Click | 137.5 kg | Imre Feldi | Hungary | March 4, 1972 | Pre-Olympic competitions | Ulm, West Germany | |
Snatch | 125.5 kg | Yoshinobu Miyake | Japan | October 28, 1969 | Matsuura, Japan | ||
Push and Snatch | 157.5 kg | Norayr Nurikyan | Bulgaria | August 29, 1972 | Olympic Games | Munich, West Germany | |
General | 402.5 kg | Dito Shanidze | Soviet Union | April 12, 1972 | National Championships | Tallinn, Soviet Union | |
67.5 kg | |||||||
Click | 157.5 kg | Mladen Kuchev | Bulgaria | August 30, 1972 | Olympic Games | Munich, West Germany | |
Snatch | 137.5 kg | Waldemar Basanowski | Poland | April 23, 1971 | National Championships | Lublin, Poland | |
Push and Snatch | 177.5 kg | Mukharbiy Kirzhinov | Soviet Union | August 30, 1972 | Olympic Games | Munich, West Germany | |
General | 460.0 kg | Mukharbiy Kirzhinov | Soviet Union | August 30, 1972 | Olympic Games | Munich, West Germany | |
75 kg | |||||||
Click | 166.5 kg | Alexander Kolodkov | Soviet Union | March 19, 1972 | Bollnas, Sweden | ||
Snatch | 147.5 kg | Mohamed Taraboulsi | Lebanon | November 11, 1972 | Beirut, Lebanon | ||
Push and Snatch | 187.5 kg | Victor Kurentsov | Soviet Union | October 16, 1968 | Olympic Games | Mexico City, Mexico | |
General | 485.0 kg | Yordan Bykov | Bulgaria | August 31, 1972 | Olympic Games | Munich, West Germany | |
82.5 kg | |||||||
Click | 178.5 kg | Gennady Ivanchenko | Soviet Union | May 18, 1972 | Riga, Soviet Union | ||
Snatch | 160.0 kg | David Riegert | Soviet Union | December 24, 1972 | USSR Cup | Sochi, Soviet Union | |
Push and Snatch | 201.0 kg | David Riegert | Soviet Union | December 24, 1972 | USSR Cup | Sochi, Soviet Union | |
General | 527.5 kg | Valery Shariy | Soviet Union | May 14, 1972 | Moscow, Soviet Union | ||
90 kg | |||||||
Click | 198.0 kg | David Riegert | Soviet Union | July 13, 1972 | Baltic Cup | Riga, Soviet Union | |
Snatch | 167.5 kg | David Riegert | Soviet Union | July 13, 1972 | Baltic Cup | Riga, Soviet Union | |
Push and Snatch | 210.5 kg | Vasily Kolotov | Soviet Union | July 13, 1972 | Baltic Cup | Riga, Soviet Union | |
General | 562.5 kg | David Riegert | Soviet Union | July 13, 1972 | Baltic Cup | Riga, Soviet Union | |
110 kg | |||||||
Click | 213.5 kg | Yuri Kozin | Soviet Union | July 14, 1972 | Baltic Cup | Riga, Soviet Union | |
Snatch | 175.5 kg | Pavel Pervushin | Soviet Union | December 25, 1972 | USSR Cup | Sochi, Soviet Union | |
Push and Snatch | 222.5 kg | Jaan Talts | Soviet Union | May 20, 1972 | Europe championship | Constanta, Romania | |
General | 590.0 kg | Valery Yakubovsky | Soviet Union | May 14, 1972 | Moscow, Soviet Union | ||
+110 kg | |||||||
Click | 236.5 kg | Vasily Alekseev | Soviet Union | April 15, 1972 | National Championships | Tallinn, Soviet Union | |
Snatch | 180.0 kg | Vasily Alekseev | Soviet Union | July 24, 1971 | Moscow, Soviet Union | ||
Push and Snatch | 237.5 kg | Vasily Alekseev | Soviet Union | April 15, 1972 | National Championships | Tallinn, Soviet Union | |
General | 645.0 kg | Vasily Alekseev | Soviet Union | April 15, 1972 | National Championships | Tallinn, Soviet Union |
Women (1998–2018)
[33]
Event | Write down | Athlete | Nation | date | Meet | Place | Link |
48 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 98 kg | Yang Lian | China | October 1, 2006 | World Championship | Santo Domingo, Dominican | |
Push and Snatch | 121 kg | Nurkan Taylan | turkey | September 17, 2010 | World Championship | Antalya, turkey | [34] |
General | 217 kg | Yang Lian | China | October 1, 2006 | World Championship | Santo Domingo, Dominican | |
53 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 103 kg | Li Ping | China | November 14, 2010 | Asian Games | Guangzhou, China | [35] |
Push and Snatch | 134 kg | Zulfiya Chinshanlo | Kazakhstan | November 10, 2014 | World Championship | Almaty, Kazakhstan | [19] |
General | 233 kg | Hsu Shu-ching | Chinese Taipei | September 21, 2014 | Asian Games | Incheon, South Korea | [36] |
58 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 112 kg | Boyanka Kostova | Azerbaijan | November 23, 2015 | World Championship | Houston, United States | [16] |
Push and Snatch | 142 kg | Guo Hsin-chun | Chinese Taipei | August 21, 2022 | Universiade | Taipei, Taiwan | [37] |
General | 252 kg | Boyanka Kostova | Azerbaijan | November 23, 2015 | World Championship | Houston, United States | [16] |
63 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 117 kg | Svetlana Tsarukaeva | Russia | November 8, 2011 | World Championship | Paris, France | [38] |
Push and Snatch | 147 kg | Deng Wei | China | August 9, 2016 | Olympic Games | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | [39] |
General | 262 kg | Deng Wei | China | August 9, 2016 | Olympic Games | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | [40] |
69 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 123 kg | Oksana Slivenko | Russia | October 4, 2006 | World Championship | Santo Domingo, Dominican | |
Push and Snatch | 157 kg | Zarema Kasaeva | Russia | November 13, 2005 | World Championship | Doha, Qatar | |
General | 276 kg | Oksana Slivenko | Russia | September 24, 2007 | World Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
75 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 135 kg | Natalya Zabolotnaya | Russia | December 17, 2011 | President's Cup | Belgorod, Russia | [41] |
Push and Snatch | 164 kg | Kim Un Joo | North Korea | September 25, 2014 | Asian Games | Incheon, South Korea | [42] |
General | 296 kg | Natalya Zabolotnaya | Russia | December 17, 2011 | President's Cup | Belgorod, Russia | [41] |
90 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 130 kg | Victoria Shaimardanova | Ukraine | August 21, 2004 | Olympic Games | Athens, Greece | |
Push and Snatch | 160 kg | Hripsime Khurshudyan | Armenia | September 25, 2010 | World Championship | Antalya, turkey | |
General | 283 kg | Hripsime Khurshudyan | Armenia | September 25, 2010 | World Championship | Antalya, turkey | |
+90 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 155 kg | Tatyana Kashirina | Russia | November 16, 2014 | World Championship | Almaty, Kazakhstan | [19] |
Push and Snatch | 193 kg | Tatyana Kashirina | Russia | November 16, 2014 | World Championship | Almaty, Kazakhstan | [19] |
General | 348 kg | Tatyana Kashirina | Russia | November 16, 2014 | World Championship | Almaty, Kazakhstan | [19] |
- Hripsime Khurshudyan[43] failed a doping test in competition, and the IWF canceled the results, but still considers them a record.
Women (1993–1997)
[29]
Event | Write down | Athlete | Nation | date | Meet | Place | Link |
46 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 81.5 kg | Jiang Yingsu | China | May 11, 1997 | East Asian Games | Busan, South Korea | |
Push and Snatch | 105.5 kg | Xing Fen | China | July 8, 1997 | Asian Championship | Yangzhou, China | |
General | 185.0 kg | Guan Hong | China | April 4, 1996 | Asian Championship | Yachiyo, Japan | |
50 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 88.0 kg | Jiang Baoyu | China | July 3, 1995 | Asian Championship | Busan, South Korea | |
Push and Snatch | 110.5 kg | Liu Xiuhua | China | October 3, 1994 | Asian Games | Hiroshima, Japan | |
General | 197.5 kg | Liu Xiuhua | China | October 3, 1994 | Asian Games | Hiroshima, Japan | |
54 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 93.5 kg | Yang Xia | China | July 9, 1997 | Asian Championship | Yangzhou, China | |
Push and Snatch | 117.5 kg | Meng Xianjuan | China | December 8, 1997 | World Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
General | 207.5 kg | Yang Xia | China | July 9, 1997 | Asian Championship | Yangzhou, China | |
59 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 100.0 kg | Zou Feie | China | May 13, 1997 | East Asian Games | Busan, South Korea | |
Push and Snatch | 125.0 kg | Hasaraporn Suta | Thailand | October 13, 1997 | Southeast Asian Games | Jakarta, Indonesia | |
General | 220.0 kg | Chen Xiaomin | China | October 4, 1994 | Asian Games | Hiroshima, Japan | |
64 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 107.5 kg | Chen Xiaomin | China | July 10, 1997 | Asian Championship | Yangzhou, China | |
Push and Snatch | 131.0 kg | Chen Yanqing | China | December 10, 1997 | World Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
General | 235.0 kg | Li Hongyun | China | November 22, 1994 | World Championship | Istanbul, turkey | |
70 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 105.5 kg | Xiang Fenglan | China | December 11, 1997 | World Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
Push and Snatch | 130.5 kg | Xiang Fenglan | China | December 11, 1997 | World Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
General | 235.0 kg | Xiang Fenglan | China | December 11, 1997 | World Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
76 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 107.5 kg | Hua Ju | China | December 12, 1997 | World Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
Push and Snatch | 140.5 kg | Hua Ju | China | December 12, 1997 | World Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
General | 247.5 kg | Hua Ju | China | December 12, 1997 | World Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
83 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 117.5 kg | Tang Weifang | China | December 13, 1997 | World Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
Push and Snatch | 143.0 kg | Tang Weifang | China | December 13, 1997 | World Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
General | 260.0 kg | Tang Weifang | China | December 13, 1997 | World Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
+83 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 112.5 kg | Wang Yanmei | China | July 14, 1997 | Asian Championship | Yangzhou, China | |
Push and Snatch | 155.0 kg | Li Yajuan | China | November 20, 1993 | World Championship | Melbourne, Australia | |
General | 260.0 kg | Li Yajuan | China | November 20, 1993 | World Championship | Melbourne, Australia |
Women (1988–1992)
Event | Write down | Athlete | Nation | date | Meet | Place | Link |
44 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 77.5 kg | Xing Fen | China | December 21, 1992 | Asian Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
Push and Snatch | 102.5 kg | Xing Fen | China | December 21, 1992 | Asian Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
General | 180.0 kg | Xing Fen | China | December 21, 1992 | Asian Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
48 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 83.0 kg | Liao Shuping | China | December 21, 1992 | Asian Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
Push and Snatch | 105.5 kg | Liao Shuping | China | December 21, 1992 | Asian Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
General | 187.5 kg | Liu Xiuhua | China | May 17, 1992 | World Championship | Varna, Bulgaria | |
52 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 87.5 kg | Peng Liping | China | May 18, 1992 | World Championship | Varna, Bulgaria | |
Push and Snatch | 115.0 kg | Peng Liping | China | May 18, 1992 | World Championship | Varna, Bulgaria | |
General | 202.5 kg | Peng Liping | China | May 18, 1992 | World Championship | Varna, Bulgaria | |
56 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 95.0 kg | Zhang Jiuhua | China | December 22, 1992 | Asian Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
Push and Snatch | 120.0 kg | Zhang Jiuhua | China | December 22, 1992 | Asian Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
General | 215.0 kg | Zhang Jiuhua | China | December 22, 1992 | Asian Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
60 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 100.0 kg | Su Yuanhong | China | December 22, 1992 | Asian Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
Push and Snatch | 125.0 kg | Li Hongyun | China | May 20, 1992 | World Championship | Varna, Bulgaria | |
General | 222.5 kg | Li Hongyun | China | May 20, 1992 | World Championship | Varna, Bulgaria | |
67.5 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 105.0 kg | Lei Li | China | December 22, 1992 | Asian Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
Push and Snatch | 132.5 kg | Lei Li | China | December 22, 1992 | Asian Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
General | 237.5 kg | Lei Li | China | December 22, 1992 | Asian Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
75 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 107.5 kg | Hua Ju | China | May 22, 1992 | World Championship | Varna, Bulgaria | |
Push and Snatch | 140.0 kg | Xing Shuwen | China | December 23, 1992 | Asian Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
General | 242.5 kg | Zhang Xiaoli | China | October 3, 1991 | World Championship | Donaueschingen, Germany | |
82.5 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 110.5 kg | Zang Lina | China | December 23, 1992 | Asian Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
Push and Snatch | 145.0 kg | Zang Lina | China | December 23, 1992 | Asian Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
General | 255.0 kg | Zang Lina | China | December 23, 1992 | Asian Championship | Chiang Mai, Thailand | |
+82.5 kg | |||||||
Snatch | 115.0 kg | Li Yajuan | China | May 24, 1992 | World Championship | Varna, Bulgaria | |
Push and Snatch | 150.0 kg | Li Yajuan | China | May 24, 1992 | World Championship | Varna, Bulgaria | |
General | 265.0 kg | Li Yajuan | China | May 24, 1992 | World Championship | Varna, Bulgaria |
What's next?
Many experts say that new world records in weightlifting, which are set by athletes, are less and less different from those already set. And this is even despite new methods, nutrition and funding for athletes. More and more people associate this with the fact that they have simply already come close to the capabilities of the physical strength of the human body, and therefore there can no longer be large gaps in the records. Whether this is true or not, only time will help figure it out. As they say, “we’ll wait and see.”
How the record holder trained
Despite the fact that Lucy’s main profile movement is the deadlift, the girl performs a large number of “auxiliary” movements, which is typical for a strongman. Among the exercises often used in training:
- Throwing the weight back over the bar;
- Axel press;
- Farmer's Walk;
- Raising the Atlas Stones;
- Squats.
The entire strength community is now focused on Lucy Anders and her future victories. However, the girl promised not to stop there and set higher goals to achieve.
And also read: A young powerlifter broke the world record in deadlifting in training → Ivan Makarov tried to lift a record weight of 502 kg in the deadlift → A record was set in the deadlift among masters 40+ →