Strength athletics in Sweden

Strength athletics in Sweden refers to the participation of Swedish competitors and events in the field of strength athletics in association with the World's Strongest Man.

History

Sweden has a long and rich history of strength athletics dating back to the mid 1900s in the sport of Olympic weightlifting with Bo Johansson in the 1960s and 1970s, and several top ranked IPF Powerlifters such as Lars Hedlund and Lars Norén during the 1980s. Sweden has been at the top international level in World's Strongest Man since the very beginning in the late 1970s with Lars Hedlund achieving numerous podium finishes. Sweden struggled through the 1980s and early 1990s until the arrival of Magnus Samuelsson in 1995. Samuelsson would go on to win the 1998 World's Strongest Man, Sweden's only WSM title. Magnus continued to win major international contests and be a top podium finisher at WSM until his retirement in 2008. In recent years, Johannes Årsjö has continued to maintain Sweden's top position on the international scene with numerous podium finishes at major international contests.

National competitions

Sweden's Strongest Man

Sweden's Strongest Man
2018
Tournament information
LocationSweden
Established1995?
FormatMulti-event competition
Current champion
Martin Forsmark

Sweden's Strongest Man (Swedish: Sveriges Starkaste Man) is an annual strongman competition held in Sweden and featuring exclusively Swedish athletes. Magnus Samuelsson and Johannes Årsjö have both won the competition 9 times, thus currently (2017) sharing the record for most wins.

Top 3 placings

[1]

Year Champion Runner-Up 3rd Place
1995Magnus Samuelsson
1996Magnus SamuelssonJorma PaananenTorbjörn Samuelsson
1997Magnus SamuelssonJörgen LjungbergTorbjörn Samuelsson
1998Torbjörn Samuelsson[2]Jorma Paananen
1999Magnus SamuelssonJorma PaananenTorbjörn Samuelsson
2000Magnus SamuelssonTorbjörn SamuelssonAnders Johansson
2001Magnus SamuelssonTorbjörn SamuelssonAnders Johansson
2002Torbjörn SamuelssonAnders JohanssonJorma Paananen
2003Magnus SamuelssonJörgen LjungbergKalle Lane
2004Magnus SamuelssonJörgen LjungbergBenny Wennberg
2005Magnus SamuelssonAnders JohanssonRobert Brolin
2006Anders JohanssonBjörn AnderssonTomas Karlsson
2007Anders JohanssonStefan BergqvistDaniel Wiklund
2008Anders JohanssonPeter RundbergStefan Bergqvist
2009Johannes ÅrsjöAnders JohanssonMikael Hoffner
2010Johannes ÅrsjöStefan BergqvistPeter Rundberg
2011Johannes ÅrsjöMartin ForsmarkStefan Bergqvist
2012Johannes ÅrsjöSebastian DavidssonMartin Forsmark
2013Johannes ÅrsjöSebastian DavidssonDavid Nyström
2014Johannes ÅrsjöMartin ForsmarkDavid Nyström
2015Johannes ÅrsjöMartin ForsmarkJohnny Hansson
2016Johannes ÅrsjöMartin ForsmarkJoachim Gustavsson
2017Johannes ÅrsjöMartin ForsmarkJohnny Hansson
2018[3]Martin ForsmarkTorbjörn PerssonJohan Espenkrona
2019Martin ForsmarkAndreas StåhlbergJohan Espenkrona

Regional Competitions

Nordic Strongman Championships

The Nordic Strongman Championships consists of athletes from Iceland, Norway, Sweden, Finland and Denmark.[4]

Year Champion Runner-Up 3rd Place Location
2005 Svend Karlsen Magnus Samuelsson Juha-Matti Räsänen IFSA Nordic Championships Kristiansand, Norway
2012[4] Johannes Årsjö Lars Rorbakken Michael Licht Nordic Championships Harstad, Norway
2013 Johannes Årsjö Ole Martin Hansen Juha Matti Jarvi Giants Live Nordic Championships Norway
gollark: And if you've written the JSON database thing in the way everyone does it, it is opening the file, writing whatever array is in memory to that file, and closing it.
gollark: They create a temporary file, write their buffer to that, and then move the temporary file over the original, so that if they get interrupted in the middle of writing there's less chance of data loss.
gollark: Nope. No good text editor actually works like that.
gollark: I'm inferring.
gollark: Unless you've written more code than I assumed, it isn't actually doing that, it's rewriting the file with the entire array each time.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.