Newcomer of the Year Award: Runner-Up

By Eric Todd

Tony Lupo accepts his Newcomer runner-up award.

Tony Lupo accepts his Newcomer runner-up award.

The Newcomer of the year award is described as such:

This award goes to an individual who in new to the USAWA or has become involved again. It doesn’t have to go to someone in their first year of being involved in the USAWA.

This year’s runner-up in this category is Tony Lupo.  Tony is a member of Clark’s Gym.  Since last year’s nationals, Tony has been very active.  He started out by participating in the second quarter postal.  He competed in the Clark’s Gym vs Frank’s Barbell Club Postal Challenge for the victorious Clark’s Gym.  He was on hand for Clark’s birthday weekend, and he claimed runner-up honors in the Schmidt Backbreaker.  Tony broke five records as part of the Memorial Record Day, and he competed in the 2022 Postal Championship.  He took on the most daunting of challenges by completing all of the lifts in the Zercher Strength Classic, and was a competitor in the first quarter postal.  Tony placed 6th in the Bench Press Decathlon, and traveled to Kentucky to compete in the inaugural Hackendinnie Classic.  Tony has quickly gone from not being certified at all to becomming a level one certified official. As you can see, tony has had a busy, and successful, first year with the organization.  this award is well deserved, Tony!  congrats!

Courage award

By Eric Todd

Courage Award Winner: Randy Smith

Courage Award Winner: Randy Smith

Description of the Courage Award is as follows:

This goes to an individual who shows the courage to overcome an obstacle in order to return to competition. This may be a comeback from an injury, or just having to deal with difficult personal issues but still shows the courage to compete in the USAWA.

Randy Smith is the deserving recipient of our courage award for this year past.  He was close to making it to nationals last year, after just having been afflicted with the covid virus.  He just missed it, but made it to Clark’s Birthday Weekend just a couple months later.  His wife also was having some health issues, but Randy managed to take care of her while attending Worlds in October, and then made the long journey back to Columbia, MO from Michigan for another Nationals this year.  Navigating his health and taking care of his wife, while fingding the time and will to still compete goes right along with our definition of courage.  Congrats, Randy!  Well deserved!

 

Courage Award: Runner-up

By Eric Todd

Runner-up in the Courage category: Joe Garcia

Runner-up in the Courage category: Joe Garcia

This award is described as such:

This goes to an individual who shows the courage to overcome an obstacle in order to return to competition. This may be a comeback from an injury, or just having to deal with difficult personal issues but still shows the courage to compete in the USAWA.

For the second year in a row, the runner-up is Joe Garcia.  He won last year for having survived a near death experience with covid, and wins this year by way of his long recovery and return to the platform.  We has gone from being on a ventilator in a hospital bed, to doing pushups on his knees and walking around the house on oxygen, back to lifting, and ultimately making it to the national championship meet.  The road was a long one, and it took a great amount of courage to complete that journey.  Congrats Joe!  Well deserved!

How to Join USAWA

By Beth Skwarecki

This is the first in a series of articles about the basics of USAWA. First up: how to join.

Membership in USAWA is necessary to participate in competitions and to set records. (Officials also need to keep up their membership to keep their certification current.) Fortunately, it’s cheap! For just $35, you become a member and you get to do the postals at no additional charge. Many of the in-person competitions are also free to members.

USAWA is the IAWA-affiliated organization for the USA. If you live in or near the UK, you should join IAWA-UK. In Australia, you should join AWFA. If you live in another country, you should join your closest organization as an associate member. For example, if you live in Canada, you can join USAWA as an associate member. You can’t set US national records but you can participate in meets and you can set IAWA world records.

You only need to do two things to join:

  1. Fill out the membership application form, which asks for your contact information and what club you are a member of (if any–it’s okay to be unaffiliated), and includes a waiver stating you understand that you may be subject to drug testing. If you are under 21, your parent or guardian must also sign. You can either print out this form, fill it out, and mail it; or use the new online membership application.
  2. Send us $35, either by enclosing a check if you are mailing your application, or by PayPal if you are all “fancy” and “modern.”

If you’d like to learn more about the organization you are joining, the USAWA Rulebook contains the bylaws, the procedures by which competitions are run, and the rules of all the lifts.

More information on membership, including membership and meet sanctions, is on the Forms and Applications page.

That’s it–now you are all set. Membership expires at the end of the calendar year, and is not prorated. So renew every January to get your money’s worth.

2023 National Championship

By Bill Clark

nationals 2023

It was a good weekend with 17 entries – 16 made it to the platform – with plenty of record lifting and a return to 26 years ago – the last time the Nationals were held in Columbia’s American Legion Hall.

The entry list was the largest since 2017 when the meet was held in Columbus, Ohio – in the center of USAWA activity.

The only entry not on the platform was former champion Mike McBride, who had to call it off because of intestinal upset which stopped him enroute from his home in St. Joseph, Mo. He returned home and is now recovering from the unfortunate bellyache.

Not surprisingly, Abe Smith was the easy men’s winner, leading a parade of Clark’s Gym lifters which took the first eight spots and added No. 11 in a near-sweep of honors.

Defending champion, Beth Skwarecki, was the repeat women’s winner.

One of the highlights of the weekend came in the two-hand, one-inch, vertical bar deadlift when four Clark’s team members tangled in an effort to break 500 pounds – 250 lbs. in each hand. The two who had beaten 500 pounds in the past were in the mix – John Carter and Travis Luther. Close behind was 22-year-old Nick Frieders, the lightest of the quartet at 157 pounds.

In the end, it was Abe Smith who set a personal record of 505 pounds to emerge the champ.

Abe, who weighed in at 174.2 lbs., actually picked up unneeded help by getting an additional two percent – due to being 41 years young.

His six-lift total was 3,180 pounds and his adjusted total, adding and subtracting age and bodyweight, was 3,087.91 – more than 300 points ahead of his teammate, Travis Luther, age 30, who weighed in at 173.6 pounds and totaled 2,729.70 points.

Beth Skwarecki, 42, easily defended her title with a total of 1,590 pounds and 1,714.69 points, then added five difficult records in the record-day session, including bent presses with each arm, the Ziegler Lift, the James Lift, and the reflex clean and jerk.

The runner-up in the women’s competition was 12-year-old Phoebe Todd, who showed herself to be a champ of the future. Her 10-year-old brother, Everett, was the top male junior lifter. Their dad is Eric Todd, the USAWA General Secretary, who wound up in ninth place in this competition.

Chad Ullom, a former champion who was recovering from shoulder replacement, finished one spot behind Eric.

Joe Garcia finished fifth and John Carter came in seventh overall.

A year ago, Joe was just coming through the recovery stage following a months-long battle with covid-19 that had been nip-and-tuck early in 2022. He still feels the ravages of the virus, but is back to his jovial self again and finding enough oxygen once again to finish fifth last weekend. He might have been the happiest person in the meet.

Carter has become the primary caregiver for his wife and balances a schedule that requires his presence at home, handling his private contracting business, and finding some gym time. He was able only to lift on Sunday, but used a big hip lift to finish seventh on the basis of three, not six, lifts.

Hats off to both.

Let’s hope that the 2024 meet will showcase them both.

The successful weekend came about only because of the dedication of four gym members – and the Show-Me-State Games.

First, the Games allowed us to use their three lifting platforms and rugs, the officials’ lights, their supply of chalk.

Next came Abe Smith and Kerry Clark. When Abe realized that a single large U-Haul was an easier way to go than three smaller personal vehicles needed to transport about 4,500 pounds of weight, squat racks, etc., he rented and paid for a three-day use of the truck. He refused to accept the gym’s offer to cover the cost of the truck.

Kerry, who was a lifter and official in the same facility 26 years ago, took charge of the loaders, hiring four graduate students from her international program in the University of Missouri College of Agriculture, Foods and Natural Resources, paying for them herself. She also handled the computerized report of the competition, which had been set-up by Abe Smith.

Close behind was Dave DeForest, who handled the weigh-ins both days. loaded and officiated – and also took home the fourth place certificate, slipping past teammate and world-record holder, Joe Garcia. Dave is 63 years old.

Tony Lupo, who is a professor at the University of Missouri and the head of the atmospheric science program when he isn’t in the gym, was involved in every aspect of the meet – loading, officiating and lifting. He finished 11th in his first national competition – at age 57.

Without those four dedicated gym members, success was only a dream. They turned the dream into reality – and the basis for the future.

Results are as follows:

Location: American Legion Hall, Columbia, MO

Meet Director: Bill Clark, Clark’s Gym

Announcer: Bill Clark

Date: June 24-25 2023

Officials:  Denny Habecker, Joe Garcia, Tony Lupo, Eric Todd, Chad Ullom, Randy Smith, Abe Smith, Dave DeForest, Beth Skwarecki

Score Keeper: Kerry Clark

Weigh ins: Dave DeForest

The three official system was used for all lifts.  Bodyweights are listed in pounds.  All lifts are recorded in pounds.

Name age Division bwt. weight class Clean and press- heels together Squat-Front Steinborn Lift
MEN
Abe Smith 41 40 179.2 85 210* 325 295
Travis Luther 30 Open 173.6 80 155 225 135
Randy Smith 68 65 194.8 90 115 205 205*
Dave DeForest 63 60 191 90 125* 210* 205*
Joe Garcia 69 65 208.6 95 120 125 95
Nick Frieders 22 Open 157.4 75 120 245 185
John Carter 64 60 216.1 100 0 0 0
Wyatt Sawyers 26 Open 200.6 95 170 300 255
Eric Todd 48 45 289.4 125+ 210* 200 155
Chad Ullom 51 50 227.8 105 90 200 0
Tony Lupo 57 55 241.4 110 145 180 150
Sanju Gupta 52 50 193.4 90 115 175 95
Denny Habecker 80 80 183.6 85 85* 0 0
Everett Todd 10 <13 100.8 50 40* 50* 50
WOMEN
Beth Skwarecki 42 40 154 70 0 205* 195*
Phoebe Todd 12 <13 127.8 60 50* 55 60*
Name Hip Lift Vertical bar-2 bars-1″ Swing-2 dumbbells total adj.
points
Abe Smith 40 85 1775* 425* 150* 3180 3087.91
Travis Luther Open 80 1700* 465* 130* 2810 2925.7
Randy Smith 65 90 1275* 290* 100* 2190 2561.52
Dave DeForest 60 90 1250* 290* 90* 2170 2467.19
Joe Garcia 65 95 1375* 315* 90* 2120 -2404.81
Nick Frieders Open 75 1205 400* 120* 2275 2348.67
John Carter 60 100 1700 425* 60* 2190 2339.04
Wyatt Sawyers Open 95 1300 340* 120* 2485 2215.66
Eric Todd 45 125+ 1800* 280* 60* 2730 2196.96
Chad Ullom 50 105 1485 365* 60* 2050.54 2050.54
Tony Lupo 55 110 1210 215* 100* 2000 1906.91
Sanju Gupta 50 90 1075 265* 95* 1420 1460.67
Denny Habecker 80 85 600 215* 70* 990 1283.45
Everett Todd <13 50 200* 150* 30* 520 1004.89
WOMEN
Beth Skwarecki 40 70 800* 300* 90* 1590 1714.67
Phoebe Todd <13 60 275* 170* 50* 660 1047.57

Fourth attempts for records:

Vertical bar-2 bars-1″

Sanjiv Gupta – 270 lb

Beth Skwarecki – 330 lb

Record Lifts outside the meet:

BETH SKWARECKI

Bent press – one arm, left – 65.

Bent press – one arm right – 75.

Ziegler Clean – 65.

James Lift – 80.

Reflex clean and jerk -135.

DENNY HABECKER

Pullover and Press- 135

Deadlift-Fulton Bar – 255

SANJIV GUPTA

Apollon lift – 125.

Clean and push press – 125

Full Gardner – 40.

Scott Lift – 135.

Dead lift – Ciavattone – no thumbs – 275.

NICK FRIEDERS

deadlift-Fulton Bar – 425

 vertical bar deadlift- 2 bar, one-inch– 440

TONY LUPO

Deadlift – Futon Bar – Right – 105.

Deadlift – Fulton Bar – Left – 100.

Carter Lift – 1,010.

Ziegler Clean – 45.

Deadlift – Fulton bar – 345.

TRAVIS LUTHER

Carter Lift – 1,010.

Ziegler Clean – 45.

Judd Clean and jerk – right – 65.

Scott lift – 125.

Swing – two-hand – 140.

Dave  DeFOREST

Ziegler Clean – 45.

Deadift – Fulton Bar – right – 100.

Deadlift – Fulton Bar – left – 100

Hack lift – Fulton bar – 250.

Deadlift – Inch Dumbbells – 67.5 x 2 – 135 lbs.

CHAD JULLOM

Ziegler Clean – 135.

vertical bar deadlift-Two bar, one-inch – 400.

JOE GARCIA

Deadlift – Fulton Bar – left – 105.

Deadlift – Fulton Bar – right – 115.

ABE SMITH

Reflex clean and press – 185.

Judd Clean and Jerk – right – 105.

 vertical bar deadlift-Two bar, one—inch – 505.

WYATT SAWYERS.

 vertical bar deadlift-Two bar, one-inch – 400.

RANDY SMITH

vertical bar deadlift-Two bar, one-inch – 340.

 

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