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The World Amateur Bodybuilding Championships (formerly IFBB Mr. Universe) is a male bodybuilding contest organised by the International Federation of BodyBuilders (IFBB) and first held in 1959. The name was changed in 1976 to avoid confusion with the NABBA Mr. Universe.
The 2005 championships were held in Shanghai, China on November 23-28, 2005.
[edit] Winners
[edit] Classes
From 1959-1969 there was just one category of competition - open. In 1970 the competition was split into three height classes: Short (under 5'5"), Medium (under 5'8"), and Tall (5'8") with an overall winner also decided. In 1976 they were abandoned in favour of weight classes. These have changed over the years but as of 2005 they are (weight in brackets is the maximum for this category):
- Flyweight (60 kg, 132 lb)
- Bantamweight (65 kg, 143 lb)
- Lightweight (70 kg, 154 lb)
- Welterweight (75 kg, 165 lb)
- Light-Middleweight (80 kg, 176 lb)
- Middleweight (85 kg, 187 lb)
- Light-Heavyweight (90 kg, 198 lb)
- Heavyweight (over 90 kg, 198 lb)
An overall winner award was not awarded between 1976 and 1995. In 2006, overall winner awards were awarded in both the bodybuilding and classic bodybuilding disciplines.
[edit] Results
Year |
Location |
Overall Winner |
1959 |
Montreal, Canada |
Eddie Sylvestre |
1960 |
Montreal, Canada |
Chuck Sipes |
1961 |
No Contest |
1962 |
New York, USA |
George Eiferman |
1963 |
New York, USA |
Harold Poole |
1964 |
New York, USA |
Larry Scott |
1965 |
New York, USA |
Earl Maynard |
1966 |
New York, USA |
Dave Draper |
1967 |
Montreal, Canada |
Sergio Oliva |
1968 |
Miami, USA |
Frank Zane |
1969 |
New York, USA |
Arnold Schwarzenegger |
1970 |
Belgrade, Yugoslavia |
Franco Columbu |
1971 |
Paris, France |
Albert Beckles |
1972 |
Baghdad, Iraq |
Ed Corney |
1973 |
Geneva, Switzerland |
Lou Ferrigno |
1974 |
Verona, Italy |
Lou Ferrigno |
1975 |
Pretoria, South Africa |
Ken Waller |
1976 |
Montreal, Canada |
|
1977 |
Nimes, France |
|
1978 |
Acapulco, Mexico |
Mike Mentzer (perfect score) |
1979 |
Columbus, USA |
|
1980 |
Manila, Philippines |
|
1981 |
Cairo, Egypt |
|
1982 |
Brugge, Belgium |
|
1983 |
Singapore |
|
1984 |
Las Vegas, USA |
|
1985 |
Gothenburg, Sweden |
|
1986 |
Tokyo, Japan |
Ralf Möller |
1987 |
Madrid, Spain |
|
1988 |
Brisbane, Australia |
|
1989 |
Paris, France |
|
1990 |
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia |
|
1991 |
Katowice, Poland |
|
1992 |
Graz, Austria |
|
1993 |
Seoul, South Korea |
|
1994 |
Shanghai, China |
|
1995 |
Guam |
|
1996 |
Amman, Jordan |
Jeno Kiss |
1997 |
Prague, Czech Republic |
Ahmed Haidar |
1998 |
İzmir, Turkey |
Hamdallah Atkutlug |
1999 |
Bratislava, Slovakia |
Jaroslav Horvath |
2000 |
Malacca, Malaysia |
Serguei Dimitriev |
2001 |
Yangon, Myanmar |
Thomas Scheu |
2002 |
Cairo, Egypt |
Jose Carlos Santos |
2003 |
Mumbai, India |
El Shahat Mabrouk |
2004 |
Moscow, Russia |
Olegas Zhuras |
2005 |
Shanghai, China |
Dennis Wolf |
2006 |
Ostrava, Czech Republic |
Ali Tabrizi (bodybuilding)
Luca Iacobucci (classic bodybuilding) |
2007 |
Jeju City, South Korea |
Kamil Drwalewski |
[edit] External links