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The current president of the USAPL is Larry Maile. [1] The USAPL is a drug tested organization and restricts the usage of equipment to single ply suits and shirts in the equipped division. [1] The raw division of the USAPL allows wrist wraps and knee sleeves as well as a lifting belt. [1]
Brad is a 6 time IPF World Powerlifting Champion and a 14 time USAPL National Powerlifting Champion. [3] Brad has won 34 Major Events. [3] Brad has set IPF Open World Records in the 120+ kg Class with a 395 kg (870) deadlift at the 2011 IPF Pacific Invitational in Melbourne, Australia, and a 397.5 kg (876) deadlift at the 2011 IPF World Championships in PlzeĆ, Czech Republic.
Audunn lifted heavy since his childhood, and entered his first powerlifting competition in 1986 at the age of 13. Since then he competed prolifically across IPF , EPF, NAPF, KRAFT and USAPL for 30 years, [ 3 ] establishing more than 172 national, regional and international records in different age and weight categories until his retirement in ...
Blaine became the first lifter across all powerlifting federations to bench press over 1,000 lbs in single ply gear on March 2, 2019. [10] This broke his own record by 88 lbs. Blaine was the first person to achieve these IPF/USAPL milestones:
Brady Anthony Stewart is an American weightlifter. He was born on July 21, 1982, in St. Louis Missouri. Stewart is an 8-time US National Bench Press Team member for USA Powerlifting (Luxembourg 2009, Lithuania 2013, Sweden 2015, Denmark 2016, Lithuania 2017, South Africa 2018, Japan 2019, Czech Republic 2020[canceled due to Covid-19]).
This is a list of world championships medalists in men's powerlifting.. The various federations of powerlifting have their own championships. The International Powerlifting Federation's (IPF) recognition by the International Olympic Committee as the official governing body, as well its longevity has resulted in their championships being deemed the official world championships, and the results ...
Brian started lifting in high school, mainly just training the bench press and upper body. [2] Brian started focusing on squatting and deadlifting in the winter of 1997, and started doing full powerlifting meets in 1998. [3] Brian trains 6–7 days per week and up to 4 hours at a time at his gym he built at his home. [4]
Tyler is a member of the USAPL and competes in both, the equipped and RAW styles of Powerlifting. [2] He is a two-time North American Bench Press Champion and holds 20 American Records. [3] Moore became eligible for Pro competitions in the Fall of 2013 after winning his second international title.