1st Quarter Postal

By Denny Habecker

MEET RESULTS –

2019 1ST QUARTER POSTAL MEET

15 lifters took part in the first postal meet this year, with John Strangeway leading the men and R.J Jackson at the top in the women’s Division.

2019 1st Quarter Postal
January 1st thru March 31st

Lifts- Jerk from Racks, Hack Lift-One Arm, Deadlift- Fulton DB One Arm

Lifters with a certified official:

John Strangeway – Eric Todd & Lance Foster
Aidan Habecker   – Barry Bryan & Denny Habecker
Chris Todd          – Eric Todd & John Strangeway
Lance Foster       – Eric Todd & John Strangeway
Al Myers             – LaVerne Myers
Barry Bryan        – Denny Habecker
LaVerne Myers    – Denny Habecker
Branden Rein      – Al Myers
Denny Habecker  – Barry Bryan
Dean Ross           – Denny Habecker

Lifters with no Certified Official:

John Douglas
Chad Ullom
R.J. Jackson
Sylvia Stockall
Lynda Burns

Women’s Division

Name               Age    Bdwt.      Jerk       Hack                Fulton D.B.      Total         Points

R.J. Jackson      57     106Lbs.   80 Lbs.   135Lbs.- R        57 Lbs. – L      272 Lbs.    446.1

Sylvia Stockall  61     135 Lbs.  105 Lbs.  100 Lbs.-L        80 Lbs. – R      285 Lbs.    398.4

Lynda Burns     44     179 Lbs.   87 Lbs.    87 Lbs.-R        75 Lbs. – L       249 Lbs     248.9

Men’s Division

John Strangeway   40   205 Lbs.    245lbs.    251.5 lbs.-L    168 lbs-R      664.5lbs  591.8

Al Myers               52    235 Lbs.    150 lbs.    280 lbs.-R     165 lbs -L      595 lbs    551

Barry Bryan          61    186.5 lbs.  165 lbs.    187lbs- R      124 lbs. -L     476 lbs.   540.4

John Douglas        55    300 lbs.     205 lbs.    200lbs -R      185 lbs.-L      590 lbs.    497

Chad Ullom          47    241 lbs.      95 lbs.      275lbs.-L      155 lbs.-R    525 lbs.    458.5

LaVerne Myers      74    231 lbs.      95 lbs.      154 lbs-L       155lbs.-R     404 lbs     451

Brandan Rein        23    154 lbs.     130 lbs.     160 lbs.-R     110lbs. -L      400lbs.    419.2

Denny Habecker    76    192 lbs.      99 lbs.     132 lbs.-R      96 lbs.-L       327lbs.     410

Aidan Habecker     15    195 lbs.     110 lbs.     187 lbs.-R     91 lbs. -L      388 lbs.    405

Chris Todd            39    272 lbs.     205 lbs.     214lbs.-R      113 lbs-R       532 lbs.    384

Lance Foster         53    345 lbs.     120 lbs.     151 lbs.-L      108 lbs.-R      379 lbs.   294

Dean Ross            76    243 lbs.      45 lbs.      75 lbs. -L       75 lbs.- R       195lbs     215

 

OTSM World Postal

By Al Myers

MEET ANNOUNCEMENT –

2019 IAWA OLD TIME STRONGMAN WORLD POSTAL CHAMPIONSHIPS

After the success of last year’s inaugural OTSM World Postal, John Mahon and I have decided to continue with the promotion again this year.   This years competition dates are July 20th-21st.

Now for a little “background” on this postal competition. It is much different than the other postal meets we have.

  • It will be held over a weekend only and all lifts must happen at this time
  • It will always be held at only one venue per participating country
  • Each country will have a promoter for the event, and provide the venue

The reason for these added stipulations is to give more credibility to the event.  Since all lifts will be done at a set venue at the same time, with the same set of officially recognized officials there is no question to the validity of this World Championship.  Also, I like the idea of everyone world wide doing the lifts at the same time, almost like a meet we are all at together.  There are different lifts chosen this year to give a new challenge to everybody.

ENTRY FORM (WORD)- 2019 OTSM World Postal Entry Form

ENTRY FORM (PDF) – 2019 OTSM World Postal Entry Form

Once completed, please send your completed forms to me this year instead of John.  I would like everyone to please use the prepared form for the official scoresheet to minimize submission errors.

USAWA MEET DETAILS

I have the set the date and time for the USAWA portion of the IAWA OTSM World Postal Championships.  I am hoping for a turnout as good as last year.  I plan to run it very efficiently, so hopefully if we start by 1 we will be finished by 5.  Also, please let me know in advance if you plan to attend so I can make proper arrangements.

Location:

Dino Gym
1126 Eden Road
Abilene, KS 67410

Meet Director:

Al Myers
amyers@usawa.com

Date:

Sunday, July 21st
Weigh-ins: 12:00 Noon
Meet Start: 1:00 PM

 

JWC: The Evangelism Years

by Thom Van Vleck

Left to Right:  Brian Kerby, Brett Kerby, John O'Brien, and Thom Van Vleck.  The core members of the JWC Evangelism Team

Left to Right: Brian Kerby, Brett Kerby, John O’Brien, and Thom Van Vleck. The core members of the JWC Evangelism Team

The Jackson Weightlifting Club (JWC) has had many lives over the past 91 years.  One of it’s incarnations was as an Evangelism team.  We were inspired by Paul Anderson who toured the country and evangelized while demonstrating feats of strength.

It started with a relationship with Randy Richey who heads up Omega Force.  They are a strong man evangelism team that has toured the country for many years.  I met Randy at a Scottish highland games and he invited me to perform with his group in St. Louis.  I talked Brian Kerby into going and we performed 6 shows in 4 days.  Talk about a workout!  We finished as the warm up for the US Strongman Nationals at the Family Arena in front of a crowd of over 3000.

Randy invited us to travel with them but Brian and I both had families and full time jobs.  We would occasionally hook up with them but doing anything long term was out of the question.

Brian is an ordained minister and often would fill in at local Churches.  He was filling in at a little Church in tiny Worthington, Missouri and they were having a 24 hours fast with the youth group.  Brian suggested we do a little strongman show for the 20 or so kids present.  Brian invited his brother Brett and I invited my friend John.  That show ended up being quite a production and a real hit.

We had not intentions of taking it further.  Just a one time deal.  But a woman came up and gave Brian a check for $250.  She said we needed to do this somewhere else.  So the team was born. We would stay local and that way we could all be back to work the next day.

At first we weren’t going to call ourselves the JWC.  That was the name of the weightlifting club started by my grandfather and continued by my Uncles.  But Brian thought it would be the thing to do.  My family has a deep Christian history and I was honored.

We never asked for money.  Just an offering.  We figured as long as there was money in the bank we would keep going.  Over the next 10 years we did over 250 shows to over 25,000 spectators.  Every show was all about the gospel.  But some serious lifting and feats of strength were performed. We would bend short steel, steel bars (scroll work), break cement blocks, lift objects such as anvils and stones, lift traditional weights, strongman events such as the log lift, and tearing phone books and decks of cards in half. All the feats would tie into a Christian message.

Thom Van Vleck on the bed of nails with 380 pound Terry Lawson on top of hims and 330lb Brian Kerby at the very top.  Yes, it's a physics trick but it still hurts!!!!

Thom Van Vleck on the bed of nails with 380 pound Terry Lawson on top of hims and 330lb Brian Kerby at the very top. Yes, it’s a physics trick but it still hurts!!!!

Some of the more amazing feats we performed over the years include the following:

John O’Brien became a world class short steel bender.  He would bend 3/8″ grade 8 bolts.  We would always offer for someone to come out of the crowd and try it and no one ever even put a kink in it.  John is one strong guy and he would lift about anything.  He would lift a 90lb dumbbell with a 3 inch grip with one hand and the proceed to press it overhead for as many as 10 reps.  We would have the crowd count along.  Afterwards we would ask people to come up and try and lift it.  The thing was that with that 3inch handle nobody could get a grip to even break it off the ground!

Brian Kerby was just strong.  He would regularly load up 405lbs on the Bench with no warm up and then do reps.  Again having the crowd count along and he would usually do 10 reps.  Brian benched 550 raw in a meet one time.  Another time he lifted a log loaded to over 300lbs.  He lifted it so easily the crowd didn’t respond.  So with the weight overhead he stood on one leg, the did a 360 degree turn, and then proceeded to talk for what seemed like a minute or two all while holding that weight.

Brett Kerby was amazing at grip strength.  He would do all the bending that John would do but he was also great a ripping decks of cards in half.  Now lots of strong guys could rip a deck of cards in half with a little work.  Heck, I did it!  But Brett would take it two steps further.  He would rip the deck in half, then quarter it….and then eighth it!

Some of the other “regulars” included Mitch Ridout, Eric Todd, Jeff Jacques, and Joe Costello.  Sometimes just two or three of us would go.  Work and family came first.  Just whoever could make it and we made do.  Some of the funniest memories was going out to eat after a show.  We would be exhausted and starving but full of joy.

I learned to do many feats of strength.  I built a bed of nails and we would lay a platform across my body and load up audience members.  I once had 14 kids standing on me.  We would break concrete blocks across my stomach with a sledge hammer.  One of my regular feats was to pull vehicles.  One time we showed up at a Church and we had told them if they had a vehicle I would pull it.  They had a fully loaded 80,000lb semi!  I thought I’d met my match but somehow I managed to ever so slowly pull it.  I had blood blisters all over my shoulders from the harness.

I never dreamed we would last as long as we did.  The end came when Brian moved away for a new job.  We did a couple more shows without him but it wasn’t the same and father time was moving in on all of us.  Brett had to quit because of injuries.  It just reached a natural conclusion.

That was about 10 years ago and to this day I’ll still be recognized by people who saw one of our shows.  One of the more touching moments for me involved a boy that attended our show and I gave him a signed souvenir after the show.  That boy died suddenly and at the funeral that souvenir was in his casket.  His dad explained that it was a prized possession and his goal was to lift weights and get strong and do what we did.  I like to think we did God’s work and glorified Him and not us.  We just used His gifts to serve Him.  My grandfather was a musician and he spread God’s word through his music.  I’m a strength athlete and I served with my own talents in the same way.  Through performance with a message.

Forty Years of Lifting

by Thom Van Vleck

It was 40 years ago in May that I started my weightlifting journey.  I had messed around with the weights for a couple of years.  I would workout but a month or two later I would quit.  I made myself a promise on my 15th Birthday I would start training and give it my all.  I’ve been lifting ever since.

I remember maxing out on some lifts to get a base line.  I deadlifted 225 pounds, I could barely squat my own bodyweight (due to having broken both legs and my hip), I benched 105, and power cleaned 125.  I weighed in at a porky 198lbs.  As a matter of fact I wore a 38 waist then and I now weigh 275 and wear 38’s.  I was a fatty!

My birthday was the first day of school being out.  I worked out in the old Jackson Weightlifting Club which was in a barn with a metal roof.  More often alone than with someone. There was no air conditioning.  It was hot!  I would workout about 2 hours every single day all summer.  Not surprisingly I lost over 30lbs in three months plus I think I converted another 10lbs to muscle.  On top of that I grew about 4 inches.  My transformation was so great that when I went back to school that fall a classmate didn’t recognize me.

My lifts didn’t sky rocket up.  I was probably over training badly.  I was also constantly maxing out and not sticking to a routine.  But I was dedicated and I learned a lot and I got well conditioned.

I would spend my time reading stacks of weightlifting magazines owned by my Uncles and my grandfather that were laying around the gym. My routines were often gleaned from these pages.

My memories of those days working out in that unairconditioned, metal roof building in the sweltering Missouri heat are burned into my mind.  I felt like a spartan!  I had friends come by to workout and they would last a day, maybe two.  Then they would quit.  It was too hot and too hard for them.

My Uncle Wayne would come by and workout three days a week.  We would visit, talk about training, and I would watch him put up some fantastic weights and dream of when I would be that strong.  He regularly pressed 300 pounds or more.  I remember him doing a seated press with 300lbs for 8 sets of 3 reps.  I also remember him hang cleaning 300 for 8 sets of 3 reps.  It was inspirational.

My grandfather would also come out a couple days a week and work out.  I marveled at his dedication even though he was in his late 60s.  At my age at the time that was amazing.  He did a lot of old school strongman lifts.  He would do lifts like the shoulder drop and Zercher squat.  I learned a lot from him.

We would open the big sliding doors to the barn to let as much air in as possible.  I can recall opening those doors and it being like walking into an oven.  I would often walk outside between sets hoping to catch a breeze.

It was at this time I fell in love with weightlifting.  It became my sport.  While I’ve had some success in competition the greatest rewards have been in mind, body, and spirit.

Do you remember when you fell in love with lifting weights?

USAWA NATIONALS Meeting and Banquet

By Denny Habecker

For anyone coming to the Nationals this year, which I hope will be many of you, the annual meeting will be held at 7 PM, Friday June 21 at my house. The  awards banquet after the meet will be held at Hoss’s Steak and Seafood,1235 East Main Street, Annville, Pa. 17003 at 7:30 PM. It will be an order from the menu and pay your own, banquet.

 

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