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Maingaining is a method of building muscle by increasing caloric intake without adding body fat of a traditional "bulk" phase. Here's what that means for you. How You Can Use 'Maingaining' to ...
He became the first ADFPA drug-free lifter in powerlifting history under drug tested conditions to [1] bench press over 600 pounds, squat over 900 pounds and break the 2000, 2100, 2200 and 2300 pounds total without the use of anabolic steroids”. [1] [2] [5] [7] Hall, who claims God as his coach, is known as the "World’s Strongest Drug-Free ...
Louie Simmons (October 12, 1947 – March 24, 2022) [1] was an American powerlifter and strength coach. He was active as a powerlifter and coach for more than fifty years. Simmons was the founder of Westside Barbell and has developed several training protocols, including the "Conjugate Met
Raw powerlifting, also called classic or unequipped powerlifting has been codified in response to the proliferation and advancement of bench shirts and squat/deadlift suits. The 100% RAW federation was founded in 1999; [ 66 ] within a decade, many established federations came to recognize "raw" divisions, in addition to their traditional (open ...
Frederick C. Hatfield (October 21, 1942 – May 14, 2017), nicknamed Dr. Squat, was an American world champion powerlifter and PhD holder in sports sciences. [3] [4] He was also the co-founder and president of the International Sports Sciences Association, [5] an organization of fitness experts which certifies personal fitness trainers from around the world.
In 2016, Atwood competed at the IPF Classic World Powerlifting Championships for the first time with only 3 months of preparation. [4] At the competition, he secured the total world record of 722.5 kilograms, which would shortly be surpassed by competitor Aliaksandr Hrynkevich-Sudnik of Belarus. [ 5 ]
He preferred to lift without equipment (raw) but was unable to keep up with other powerlifters who competed in the IPF if he did not use equipment. [1] In his first Russian Championships from 2007 to 2009 he competed in single ply equipment with a bodyweight of 150–152 kg (330.7–335.1 lb) as a teenager.
Doug Young (August 21, 1944 – October 7, 2005) was an American national and world powerlifting champion multiple times throughout his career while competing in the 242 lb. and 275 lb. weight classes.