Darren Sadler

Darren Sadler
Born Darren Sadler
(1980-03-22) 22 March 1980[1]
England Boroughbridge, England
Residence England
Other names Pocket Rocket
Occupation Strongman
Height 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)
Weight 275 lb (125 kg)
Competition record
Strongman
Competitor for  United Kingdom
World's Strongest Man
Qualified 2006 World's Strongest Man
Qualified 2007 World's Strongest Man
Qualified 2009 World's Strongest Man
Qualified 2010 World's Strongest Man
Competitor for  England
Britain's Strongest Man
3rd Britain's Strongest Man 2007
England's strongest man (WSM)
3rd England's Strongest Man 2009
IFSA Under 105kg World Championships[2]
2nd 2005
1st 2006 (called World Strongman Challenge)
IFSA England's Strongest Man under 105kg[2]
1st 2005
During the Giants Live 2009 Poland event.

Darren Sadler (born 22 March 1980) is a British former strongman competitor, winner of the World Strongman Challenge in the under 105 kg category, and notable for being a repeat competitor at the World's Strongest Man despite his comparatively small stature.

Early life

Darren Sadler was born on 22 March 1980 in Boroughbridge and attended Boroughbridge High School.[3]

Strongman career

Sadler began training in the gym at the age of seventeen but it was not until he was twenty when he was approached by former World's Strongest Man competitor, Dave Warner,[4] that he began to compete in strongman competitions. In 2009 he said that "At first I was the youngest and the lightest person, but I did work at it. Now I come in the top few in the country every year."[5] However, when the IFSA showcased a light division class for strongmen in the mid-2000s, Sadler rose to eminence in the field. In 2005 he not only won the English under 105 kg championships, but went on to place second in the world championships.[6] The next year, still in the light division, he won the IFSA World Strongman Challenge.[7] Such was his ability that despite his weight and height, in a sport where men of 6' 1" have been described as "short",[8] he was invited to compete in the main division and began to rise up the rankings against the very best in the world. In 2006, he secured an invite to the World's Strongest Man ("WSM"), the premier strength athletics event.[9] Here, he was noted for producing "unbelievable performances for a guy his size."[10] The next year he came third in the Britain's Strongest Man finals after Terry Hollands and Mark Felix who had both been in the top four athletes in the world at one stage. He was again invited to the WSM and was just short of making it into the top ten finalists. He has been quoted as saying his greatest achievement in strongman is to have been invited to, and attend Being at WSM 06,07 & 09.[4] In 2008, at the Britain's Strongest Man finals where he was hoping to improve on his third-place finish in 2007, he tore a ham-string. This led to a self-imposed absence in 2008, in which time he concentrated on setting up a business.[5] However, a third invite to WSM was secured with a third-place finish in the WSM qualifying version of England's Strongest Man,[11] which replaced the Britain's Strongest Man competition in 2009 as a WSM qualifier, the latter not being held.

Sadler's favourite event is the Conan's wheel, with his least favourite being the Deadlift hold.[4] Additionally, his height hinders his performance in the Atlas stones. Sadler has said that of former greats he most admires Jón Páll Sigmarsson, and Mariusz Pudzianowski as the current athlete for whom he has most admiration, along with Derek Poundstone.[4]

Outside of strongman

In 2008 Sadler bought a gym in his hometown of Boroughbridge. He opened it in 2008 under the name of Absolute Fitness, and although his name has an attraction for "musclemen and fitness fanatics" he stressed that he wanted it to be an all-round gym for all ages and sexes.[3] He has referred to his business as his greatest personal achievement.[4]

General stats

References

External links

Preceded by
Janne Hartikainen
IFSA Under 105k World Champion Strongman
2006
Succeeded by
Janne Hartikainen
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, November 05, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.