Ed Coan | |
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Born | July 24, 1963 |
Residence | Chicago, Illinois |
Occupation | Powerlifter |
Known for | Strength athletics |
Height | 5 ft 6 in (1.68 m) |
Weight | 181-239lb (82-108kg) |
Competition record | |||
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Powerlifting | |||
Competitor for United States | |||
USPF Senior National Championships | |||
1st | 1988 | ||
1st | 1989 | ||
1st | 1990 | ||
1st | 1991 | ||
1st | 1993 | ||
1st | 1994 | ||
1st | 1995 | ||
IPF World Championships | |||
1st | 1984 | ||
1st | 1988 | ||
1st | 1989 | ||
1st | 1993 | ||
1st | 1994 | ||
1st | 1995 | ||
1st | 1996 | ||
USPF Mountaineer Cup | |||
3rd | 1999 | ||
1st | 2000 | ||
1st | 2001 |
Ed Coan (born July 24, 1963) is an American powerlifter. He has been described as "the greatest powerlifter in the history of the sport" and the "powerlifting equivalent of Michael Jordan."[1]
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Ed Coan has set over seventy world records in powerlifting.[2] He became the lightest person to cross the 2,400 lb. barrier in the powerlifting total (a sum of three lifts: the deadlift, bench, and squat). He set an all-time powerlifting record total at 2,463 pounds, even though at the time he was not in the heaviest weight class.
Ed Coan's best single ply lifts:
Ed Coan's best competition lifts as a 220lb lifter:
Squat - 961 lbs Bench - 584 lbs Deadlift - 901 lbs