Bill Anderson | |
---|---|
Born | Bill Anderson June 6, 1937 Bucksburn, Scotland |
Occupation | Highland Games/Strongman |
Height | 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) |
Weight | 300 pounds (140 kg) |
Competition record | |||
---|---|---|---|
Highland Games | |||
Competitor for Scotland | |||
World Highland Games Championships | |||
Champion | World Highland Games Championships 1981 | ||
Scottish Highland Games Championships | |||
Champion | 1959 | ||
Champion | 1960 | ||
Champion | 1961 | ||
Champion | 1962 | ||
Champion | 1963 | ||
Champion | 1964 | ||
Champion | 1965 | ||
Champion | 1966 | ||
Champion | 1967 | ||
Champion | 1968 | ||
Champion | 1969 | ||
Champion | 1970 | ||
Champion | 1971 | ||
Champion | 1972 | ||
Champion | 1973 | ||
Champion | 1974 | ||
USA Highland Games Championships | |||
Champion | 1976 | ||
Champion | 1977 | ||
Champion | 1978 | ||
Champion | 1979 | ||
Champion | 1980 | ||
Canadian Highland Games Championships | |||
Champion | 1977 | ||
Strongman | |||
Competitor for Scotland | |||
World's Strongest Man | |||
9th | 1979 World's Strongest Man | ||
Britain's Strongest Man | |||
2nd | 1979 Britain's Strongest Man |
Bill Anderson (born 1937[1]) is a Scottish heavyweight sportsman. He won the World Highland Games Championships in 1981 and the Scottish Highland Games Championships 16 times. He has also held every possible Scottish record in Highland Games.[2]
Bill was born on Greenferns Farm, Bucksburn, close to Aberdeen in Scotland. He began competing as an 18-year-old at Alford in 1956 and went on to compete at the top of his sport, excelling at caber tossing and hammer throwing
Anderson dominated the heavy events for three decades, winning 16 Scottish championship titles as well as British, European, American, Canadian and World championships.
Anderson claimed his first Scottish title in 1959 and he became the first man to hurl the hammer 150 feet (46 m) in 1969. Of the heavy events, the Scots hammer was Anderson's, wooden shafted and thrown from a standing position. His 1969 Scottish Championship record of 123 feet 5 inches (37.62 m) with the 22 lb hammer still stands. The one and only time he threw the wire hammer was on national service in Aden in 1957 when with a standing throw he reached 133 feet (41 m).
He is the grandfather-of-five and still works part-time. He also judges at the Aberdeen, Crieff, Aboyne and Braemar Highland games.
He was made a member of the Order of the British Empire in 1977 by Queen Elizabeth II.[3]
Anderson was inducted into the Scottish Sports Hall of Fame in 2007.[1]
Anderson competed in the 1979 World's Strongest Man contest, but withdrew early in the competition due to an injury.[4]
A biography, Highland Fling was published by Argyll Publishing.[5][6]