World Strongman Challenge

World Strongman Challenge
2007 (last held)
Tournament information
Location Various. Last held Tulsa, Oklahoma[1]
Established 1987
Format Multi-event competition
Final Year 2007
Final champion
Žydrūnas Savickas

The World Strongman Challenge was one of the most enduring annual strongmen competitions, running in various guises for twenty years, with only two years break. In that time it attained the position of one of the most prestigious strongman contest in the world, after the World's Strongest Man and the World Muscle Power Classic. As with its two international counterparts it attracted the top quality strength athletes of its era, which included every winner of the World's Strongest Man competition from 1980 onwards including Jon Pall Sigmarsson, Geoff Capes and Bill Kazmaier from the 1980s right up to the current WSM champion Žydrūnas Savickas.

Contents

History

The World Strongman Challenge (WMPC) first took place in 1987. It was a third major strongman competition with the previously established World's Strongest Man and World Muscle Power Classic having made the popularity of strongman competitions a huge success. The WSC in fact helped fill a void left in 1987 by the absence of the World's Strongest Man event and it may have even been introduced for these purpose. The event immediately attracted the very best athletes in the field and the final placings in that inaugural 1987 competition saw both Jon Pall Sigmarsson and Geoff Capes on the podium. In 1988, despite the reintroduction of WSM, the WSC continued and unlike many other strongman events of the era, the WSC managed to continue without a break right up until 1998, at no point dipping in the quality of the athletes competing.

Beauty and the Beast

1998 appeared to be its final year, but in 1999, the Beauty and the Beast competition, established in 1998, took on the title of World Strongman Challenge. In so doing, it immediately attracted the cream of international strength athletics once again. For five more years, the Beauty and the Beast produced world class champions but in a mirroring of the decline of the WMPC, the WSC also began to lose status. At around 2001 a Strongman Super Series had emerged, an attempt to heighten the profile of the sport. The IFSA World Strongman Super Series was being heavily promoted in 2002 and Beauty and the Beast formed part of that. In the end, it became simply the Grand Prix Final held on January 17 2003, finishing off the 2002 season. The very next day, a second Hawaii Grand Prix, again deemed Beauty and the Beast, was held as the opener for the 2003 IFSA World Strongman Super Series. This turned out to be the last holding of the event. Like the World Muscle Power Classic, once the Beauty and the Beast became entangled with the Super Series, it lost its stand alone gravitas and quickly fell from favour. In the tentative schedule for the 2004/05 Super Series there was to have been a November Hawaii Grand Prix, but that season was foreshortened and this did not take place.[2]

IFSA

In 2007 the IFSA resurrected the World Strongman Challenge holding the event in Tulsa, Oklahoma[1] The great Žydrūnas Savickas won the event. The Challenge was marred by the fact that a number of top athletes were banned from it due to their not being affiliated with the IFSA and at the time the rift between IFSA and WSM was at its height. This proved to be the last time the Challenge was held.

Results

Year Champion Runner-Up 3rd Place Location
IFSA
2007 Žydrūnas Savickas Derek Poundstone Jon Andersen Tulsa, Oklahoma
Beauty and the Beast
2003
Hawaii Grand Prix 2003 (held Jan 18 2003)
of 2003 Strongman Super Series
Mariusz Pudzianowski Raimonds Bergmanis Zydrunas Savickas Hawaiian Waters Adventure Park, Honolulu, Hawaii
2002
Hawaii Grand Prix Final (held Jan 17 2003)
of 2002 Strongman Super Series
(24-Hour Fitness Grand Prix Final)
Hugo Girard Zydrunas Savickas Mariusz Pudzianowski Hawaiian Waters Adventure Park, Honolulu, Hawaii
2001 Magnus Samuelsson Phil Pfister Svend Karlsen Honolulu, Hawaii
2000 Janne Virtanen Heinz Ollesch Svend Karlsen Honolulu, Hawaii
1999 Jouko Ahola Magnus Samuelsson Joe Onosai Sea Life Park, Honolulu, Hawaii
Original
1998 Magnus Samuelsson Mark Phillipi / Jamie Reeves
1997 Magnus Ver Magnusson Heinz Ollesch Svend Karlsen
1996 Nathan Jones Magnus Ver Magnusson Manfred Hoeberl
1995 Jouko Ahola Flemming Rasmussen Heinz Ollesch
1994 Andreas Gudmundsson Manfred Hoeberl / Gary Taylor
1993 Gerrit Badenhorst Magnus Ver Magnusson / Jamie Reeves
1992 / Jamie Reeves Magnus Ver Magnusson / Gary Taylor
1991 Riku Kiri O.D. Wilson / Gary Taylor & Hjalti Arnasson
1990 / Mark Higgins Bill Kazmaier Magnus Ver Magnusson
1989 / Mark Higgins Magnus Ver Magnusson O.D. Wilson
1988 Riku Kiri Jon Pall Sigmarsson Bill Kazmaier TBC
1987 / Geoff Capes Ab Wolders Jon Pall Sigmarsson TBC

See also

References

External links