Strongman is a competitive strength sport which tests athletes' physical strength and endurance through a variety of heavy lifts and events. Strongman competitions are known for their intensity, pushing athletes to their physical and mental limits. In modern strongman, athletes compete to score points based on their relative position in an event. An athlete who engages in the sport of strongman is also called a 'strongman'. They are often regarded as some of the strongest men of the world.
In the late 20th century, the term strongman evolved to describe one who competes in strength athletics – a more modern eclectic strength competition in which competitors display their raw functional strength through exercises such as deadlifts, squats, overhead log lifts, lifting stones, toting refrigerators, pulling heavy vehicles and tossing or loading weights. With the advent of the World's Strongest Man competition, strongman began to be formalized as a competitive sport rather than a non-competitive spectacle. Since the advent of the modern sport, competitions including Arnold Strongman Classic, Europe's Strongest Man, Strongman Champions League, World's Ultimate Strongman, World's Strongest Viking, World Muscle Power Classic, Fortissimus, Pure Strength, Rogue Invitational, Shaw Classic, Giants Live, IFSA World Championships, Strongman Super Series, World Strongman Challenge and Siberian Power Show have adopted a standardized format based on the original World's Strongest Man.
More than 30 countries also hold national-level strongman competitions. Local competitions featuring amateur athletes are also common.
Strongman competitions score competitors by comparing their relative place in an event and awarding more points to competitors with better finishes. Typically, first place in an event will receive a number of points equal to the number of competitors. For example, if an athlete finishes first in the deadlift in a competition with 10 competitors, they will receive 10 points, with second receiving nine, and so on, until last place receives only one point.
Most competitions award zero points if an athlete could not complete a lift or start the event--if, for example, an athlete could not pick up a stone in a stone-carrying event, they would be awarded zero points. Competitions will also normally split points based on ties, adding up the combined points for their places and averaging them out. For example, if two athletes finish tied for first in a 10-athlete competition, the scores for first and second (10 and 9 points) will be added up and divided by two, resulting in each athlete being awarded 9.5 points.
Although you can do general strength training, at a typical gym, training with a strongman regimen requires equipment not typically found in a gym. Some equipment used in a strongman competition would have to be found custom-made or at a strongman gym. Some of these equipment includes natural stones, tree trunk logs, farmers walk frames, yokes, kegs and various sorts of vehicles.
Another part of a strongman's training is its intense diet regime. The biggest strongman competitors would need to ingest around 8,000 - 10,000 calories a day.
25 of them have won the World's Strongest Man (WSM), 11 have won the World Muscle Power Classic (WMPC), 9 have won the Arnold Strongman Classic (ASC), 3 have won the World's Ultimate Strongman (WUS), 3 have won the Rogue Invitational (RI) and 2 have won the Strongest Man on Earth (SMOE).
7 men have won both WSM & WMPC (Kazmaier, Capes, Sigmarsson, Reeves, Magnússon, Ahola, Karlsen). 5 men have won both WSM & ASC (Savickas, Shaw, Björnsson, Licis, Hooper). 2 men have won both WSM & WUS (Björnsson, Novikov). 3 men have won both WSM & RI (Licis, Novikov, Hooper). 2 men have won WSM, ASC & RI (Licis & Hooper). 1 man has won WSM, WUS & RI (Novikov). 1 man has won WSM, ASC, RI & SMOE (Hooper).
Additionally, the following 50 strongmen have reached either 4th or 5th places of World's Strongest Man and/or World Muscle Power Classic and/or Arnold Strongman Classic and/or World's Ultimate Strongman and/or Rogue Invitational and or Shaw Classic:
1 | Žydrūnas Savickas | 1996–2022 | 147 | 79 | ||
2 | Mariusz Pudzianowski | 2000–2009 | 61 | 43 | ||
3 | Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson | 2010– | 71 | 31 | ||
4 | Brian Shaw | 2007–2023 | 65 | 27 | ||
5 | Aivars Šmaukstelis | 2014– | 80 | 27 | ||
6 | Krzysztof Radzikowski | 2005–2019 | 112 | 24 | ||
7 | Ervin Katona | 2003–2015 | 99 | 17 | ||
8 | Mitchell Hooper | 2022– | 26 | 15 | ||
9 | Hugo Girard | 1998–2008 | 37 | 15 | ||
10 | Dainis Zageris | 2009–2022 | 87 | 15 | ||
11 | Jón Páll Sigmarsson | 1982–1992 | 29 | 13 | ||
12 | Mateusz Kieliszkowski | 2014– | 49 | 13 | ||
13 | Magnús Ver Magnússon | 1987–2005 | 48 | 12 | ||
14 | Oleksiy Novikov | 2016– | 49 | 12 | ||
15 | Magnus Samuelsson | 1995–2008 | 63 | 12 | ||
16 | Matjaz Belsak | 2014–2020 | 66 | 12 | ||
17 | Jouko Ahola | 1994–2002 | 22 | 11 | ||
18 | Riku Kiri | 1987–1999 | 25 | 11 | ||
19 | Mikhail Koklyaev | 2005–2014 | 50 | 11 | ||
20 | JF Caron | 2007–2023 | 73 | 10 | ||
21 | Geoff Capes | 1979–1988 | 20 | 9 | ||
22 | Svend Karlsen | 1996–2006 | 67 | 9 | ||
23 | Rayno Nel | 2023– | 10 | 8 | ||
24 | Bill Kazmaier | 1979–1990 | 18 | 8 | ||
24 | Robert Cyrwus | 2013–2024 | 18 | 8 | ||
26 | Derek Poundstone | 2006–2017 | 22 | 8 | ||
27 | Martins Licis | 2015– | 24 | 8 | ||
28 | Vytautas Lalas | 2007–2018 | 30 | 8 | ||
29 | Kelvin de Ruiter | 2011– | 43 | 8 | ||
30 | Janne Virtanen | 1998–2009 | 50 | 8 | ||
31 | Laurence Shahlaei | 2007–2021 | 55 | 8 | ||
32 | Rafał Kobylarz | 2008–2022 | 25 | 7 | ||
33 | Travis Ortmayer | 2005–2023 | 51 | 7 | ||
34 | Manfred Hoeberl | 1990–1996 | 18 | 6 | ||
35 | Adam Roszkowski | 2021– | 22 | 6 | ||
36 | Vasyl Virastyuk | 2002–2008 | 28 | 6 | ||
37 | Evan Singleton | 2018– | 32 | 6 | ||
38 | Andrus Murumets | 2003–2009 | 40 | 6 | ||
39 | Flemming Rasmussen | 1995–2001 | 19 | 5 | ||
40 | Mike Burke | 2011–2015 | 21 | 5 | ||
41 | Mykhailo Starov | 2004–2006 | 24 | 5 | ||
42 | Pavlo Kordiyaka | 2017– | 31 | 5 | ||
43 | Johannes Årsjö | 2007–2017 | 39 | 5 | ||
44 | Stojan Todorchev | 2005–2017 | 44 | 5 | ||
45 | Mikhail Shivlyakov | 2011–2025 | 45 | 5 | ||
46 | Raivis Vidzis | 2002–2009 | 46 | 5 | ||
46 | Jarek Dymek | 2000–2010 | 46 | 5 | ||
48 | Kostyantyn Ilin | 2007–2020 | 59 | 5 | ||
49 | Reza Gheitasi | 2019– | 12 | 4 | ||
50 | Oskar Ziółkowski | 2020– | 13 | 4 |
- As of 5 July 2025
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