News
September 8, 2008
World's Strongest Man competition continues in Charleston
Capital city gives strongmen a strong showing as host

Slideshow: The World's Strongest Man competition in Charleston

Strongman competitors shouldered the weight of West Virginia on Sunday during the second day of competition in Charleston, in pursuit of the World's Strongest Man title.

Thirty participants from around the globe heaved and pulled over the weekend, attempting to qualify for the final rounds of the 2008 Met-Rx World's Strongest Man competition next weekend in the capital city.

1 of 4 Photos
Sunday, Sept. 7, 2008 - Brian Siders of Clendenin gets a rousing greeting from the crowd as he gets ready to start the Fingal's Fingers in the Met Rx Strong Man competition's preliminary rounds.
Sunday afternoon, several thousand spectators gathered on Kanawha Boulevard to watch competitors pull a loaded coal or timber truck weighing between 40,000 and 50,000 pounds.

The second day of competition opened with the Fingal's Fingers challenge, where strongmen pushed five weighted poles in 180-degree arcs.

City and event organizers said the preliminary competition is off to a good start, with more excitement early this week leading up to the finals, beginning Friday.

Although past events have been held at secluded resorts in countries like Zambia and Morocco, the Charleston community is bringing an original flavor to the 2008 competition, said Bill Kazmaier, ESPN commen-

tator and three-time World's Strongest Man.

"To come here, to [2006 World's Strongest Man] Phil Pfister's hometown, with the towering rocks and the beautiful bridges ... it's just wonderful. It's the best I've been to, even more than in some so-called exotic places," he said.

The overcast skies and steady breeze that flapped the U.S. flags along Haddad Riverfront Park on Sunday were ideal conditions for keeping the athletes at peak performance.

"The athletes love this, and they're at their best," Kazmaier said. "They're enjoying the culture and the support from the crowds, which we expect to grow in number. It's just a festival atmosphere."

Although physical problems were minimal during the first two days, Mariusz Pudianowski, four-time champion, re-injured his calf muscle during the morning's Fingal's Fingers. Pudianowski of Poland arrived with a bandaged leg in time for the timber-truck pull, but the injury might take him out of the competition, Kazmaier said.

The strongmen interacted with the crowd that lined both sides of the Boulevard and filled the roof of a nearby parking garage, signing autographs and posing for pictures with kids while camera crews from ESPN set up.

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