User Panel
Posted: 1/19/2021 12:25:27 PM EDT
Texas' results: Average squat: 687 lbs Average bench press: 438 lbs Average deadlift: 742 lbs. Virginia came in second, followed by New York, California and North Carolina. North Dakota came in last. https://cbsaustin.com/news/local/texans-are-the-physically-strongest-people-in-america-research-shows |
|
[#1]
Ha... When I was in my 20's I fought full contact karate (kickboxing) and I was 6'2" 160 pounds. I worked high rise construction and from my observation weight lifters were the weakest. They were muscle bound and would tire out in minutes.
It doesn't matter how much you can lift if a skinny dude can beat your ass down with ease... |
|
[#2]
Quoted: Ha... When I was in my 20's I fought full contact karate (kickboxing) and I was 6'2" 160 pounds. I worked high rise construction and from my observation weight lifters were the weakest. They were muscle bound and would tire out in minutes. It doesn't matter how much you can lift if a skinny dude can beat your ass down with ease... View Quote Weird, I thought it said physically strongest, not best fighters.. RIF I guess. |
|
[#3]
Quoted: Ha... When I was in my 20's I fought full contact karate (kickboxing) and I was 6'2" 160 pounds. I worked high rise construction and from my observation weight lifters were the weakest. They were muscle bound and would tire out in minutes. It doesn't matter how much you can lift if a skinny dude can beat your ass down with ease... View Quote Keep telling yourself that. |
|
[#4]
The amount of TX hate in this thread will be absolutely LEGENDARY!!!
|
|
[#5]
Quoted: Ha... When I was in my 20's I fought full contact karate (kickboxing) and I was 6'2" 160 pounds. I worked high rise construction and from my observation weight lifters were the weakest. They were muscle bound and would tire out in minutes. It doesn't matter how much you can lift if a skinny dude can beat your ass down with ease... View Quote Alrighty.... |
|
[#6]
Quoted: Ha... When I was in my 20's I fought full contact karate (kickboxing) and I was 6'2" 160 pounds. I worked high rise construction and from my observation weight lifters were the weakest. They were muscle bound and would tire out in minutes. It doesn't matter how much you can lift if a skinny dude can beat your ass down with ease... View Quote In a sparring match with rules and clocks. Don't assume great strength can't be dangerous in a real fight. |
|
[#8]
Quoted: Ha... When I was in my 20's I fought full contact karate (kickboxing) and I was 6'2" 160 pounds. I worked high rise construction and from my observation weight lifters were the weakest. They were muscle bound and would tire out in minutes. It doesn't matter how much you can lift if a skinny dude can beat your ass down with ease... View Quote Is this the new tossing hay bales? |
|
[#10]
Texans are the New Yorkers of the south my informal study shows
|
|
[#11]
Can they lift a horse over their head and defeat every kind of man in single combat?
|
|
[#12]
ND came in last cuz its all good old boys working on the farm.
They're not tracking their workouts and numbers. They have better shit to do. |
|
[#13]
|
|
[#16]
|
|
[#18]
|
|
[#19]
|
|
[#20]
TLDR
Its comparing sanctioned powerlift meets from the past few years. |
|
[#21]
Quoted: Ha... When I was in my 20's I fought full contact karate (kickboxing) and I was 6'2" 160 pounds. I worked high rise construction and from my observation weight lifters were the weakest. They were muscle bound and would tire out in minutes. It doesn't matter how much you can lift if a skinny dude can beat your ass down with ease... View Quote And no one was talking about this. What a bizarre follow up. |
|
[#22]
Lmao!!!
I've only seen a couple texas come here to northern Maine. The cold alone broke these "strong men". Went back to thier sunshine and burritos. |
|
[#24]
Texas was represented pretty good at worlds strongest man 2020.
They couldn't beat the Europeans though. Eta: Robert oberst is my spirit animal |
|
[#25]
All that "research" proves is that Texas may be the most full of shit.
It was a survey. I would love to take an average Texan and put him under >600lbs on the bar and see what happens. |
|
[#26]
I was a running back @ 145 lbs dripping wet in 1971 at a very small school. All the good athletes played both ways. I was easily the strongest kid in school. Thanks DAD!!!!! for putting me on a 90 lb jack hammer in the summers. Throwing hay bales helped as well. My cousins both had hay fields and we'd work those bails between two-a-day work outs. I got a bit frustrated at my life but I'm sure glad I did it. I'm almost 70 now and I have no issues slinging my 18 lb. PRS rig around a barricade. 50lb bags of salt for the pool? No problem. Heavy ass pieces of steel humped over to the welder in my shop? No problem. Getting old sucks but watching soi bois sure gives me a good chuckle. I was in downtown Chicago a while back and I was amazed at the lack of manliness I saw. Very few men did I see that I couldn't physically destroy even at my age. I'm gonna make a video of me being re-programmed. No fucks given anymore. The wife is going to make a fine catch for some fella.
|
|
[#27]
|
|
[#28]
|
|
[#29]
Quoted: I was a running back @ 145 lbs dripping wet in 1971 at a very small school. All the good athletes played both ways. I was easily the strongest kid in school. Thanks DAD!!!!! for putting me on a 90 lb jack hammer in the summers. Throwing hay bales helped as well. My cousins both had hay fields and we'd work those bails between two-a-day work outs. I got a bit frustrated at my life but I'm sure glad I did it. I'm almost 70 now and I have no issues slinging my 18 lb. PRS rig around a barricade. 50lb bags of salt for the pool? No problem. Heavy ass pieces of steel humped over to the welder in my shop? No problem. Getting old sucks but watching soi bois sure gives me a good chuckle. I was in downtown Chicago a while back and I was amazed at the lack of manliness I saw. Very few men did I see that I couldn't physically destroy even at my age. I'm gonna make a video of me being re-programmed. No fucks given anymore. The wife is going to make a fine catch for some fella. View Quote What |
|
[#30]
Of course they are the strongest. It takes a huge amount of strength to stump-break a longhorn!
J/K Texas! Home to half my family and all of my wifes Family. |
|
[#31]
Quoted: Ha... When I was in my 20's I fought full contact karate (kickboxing) and I was 6'2" 160 pounds. I worked high rise construction and from my observation weight lifters were the weakest. They were muscle bound and would tire out in minutes. It doesn't matter how much you can lift if a skinny dude can beat your ass down with ease... View Quote Wow, the first post! Amazing, it usually takes 1/4 of a page for a thread to get this tarded. |
|
[#32]
Lol, did I make it in before everyone claims they can do better?
Otherwise, we have discovered Texans to be the biggest bullshitters. |
|
[#34]
Quoted: I was a running back @ 145 lbs dripping wet in 1971 at a very small school. All the good athletes played both ways. I was easily the strongest kid in school. Thanks DAD!!!!! for putting me on a 90 lb jack hammer in the summers. Throwing hay bales helped as well. My cousins both had hay fields and we'd work those bails between two-a-day work outs. I got a bit frustrated at my life but I'm sure glad I did it. I'm almost 70 now and I have no issues slinging my 18 lb. PRS rig around a barricade. 50lb bags of salt for the pool? No problem. Heavy ass pieces of steel humped over to the welder in my shop? No problem. Getting old sucks but watching soi bois sure gives me a good chuckle. I was in downtown Chicago a while back and I was amazed at the lack of manliness I saw. Very few men did I see that I couldn't physically destroy even at my age. I'm gonna make a video of me being re-programmed. No fucks given anymore. The wife is going to make a fine catch for some fella. View Quote Hell yeah. We have a new copy-pasta. |
|
[#36]
Quoted: I’ve stacked tens of thousands of square bales. Fuck all that these days! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Texans would fail in 2 hours of hay baling I’ve stacked tens of thousands of square bales. Fuck all that these days! Tell you what is rougher than square bales on a hot day...stacking sacks of soy beans in a stifling truck trailer. I've done both. I called the soy bean stacking "Alabama Get-ups"....that tiring. Bring on the bales if I'm reduced to serfdom again. |
|
[#37]
Quoted: Ha... When I was in my 20's I fought full contact karate (kickboxing) and I was 6'2" 160 pounds. I worked high rise construction and from my observation weight lifters were the weakest. They were muscle bound and would tire out in minutes. It doesn't matter how much you can lift if a skinny dude can beat your ass down with ease... View Quote Is this from the copy/paste thread? |
|
[#39]
Yeah, there's also been some scientific research that stated our penises are 8" on average (limp), with 25% greater girth. California came in last.
Seriously, I'd love to see where and how the data was collected for the strength study. |
|
[#40]
When I saw the thread title, I thought "Nodaks are probably the strongest", yet the report says they came in last.
Not a chance that Texas, as averaged across the entire population, has stronger people than North Dakota. I have lived in both states. There's no fucking way. |
|
[#42]
|
|
[#43]
|
|
[#44]
|
|
[#45]
|
|
[#47]
No. They have the strongest weight lifters.
Real big difference. |
|
[#48]
The article says Texan has the strongest powerlifters.
Doesn’t say anything about average folks. Besides, we’ve all been to Austin. |
|
[#49]
Quoted: Nobody reads the fucking article apparently. Not average joe gym guy. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Squatting 687lbs? As an average? Yeah fuckin right You're right, but if you check some random PL meet results the numbers in the article still look like bullshit. |
|
[#50]
Methodology
All data is sourced from Open Powerlifting Data is from 2016-2020, accessed January 6, 2021 Lifters must meet the following criteria to be eligible for their state Drug tested = true Equipment = raw Age = 18 or older Event = SBD (full power) Each lifter’s best full power meet performance is ranked within the state they represented at the time of the competition. This way, the same lifter cannot count more than once toward a given state’s average. However, it is possible for the same lifter to appear twice on the list, but only if they moved between 2016 and 2020 and re-registered with their federation under a different state. The top 10 totals by wilks were used to calculate each state’s averages. Including Washington DC and Guam, this resulted in a total of 513 lifting performances (Guam only had 3 performances in the time period that met the above criteria). This was done to compare each state’s best lifters against each other. Including all lifters in this type of calculation would “water down” the averages of states where powerlifting is more popular and there are more low-level lifters. From: https://liftvault.com/strongest-states/#Methodology |
|
Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!
You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.
AR15.COM is the world's largest firearm community and is a gathering place for firearm enthusiasts of all types.
From hunters and military members, to competition shooters and general firearm enthusiasts, we welcome anyone who values and respects the way of the firearm.
Subscribe to our monthly Newsletter to receive firearm news, product discounts from your favorite Industry Partners, and more.
Copyright © 1996-2024 AR15.COM LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Any use of this content without express written consent is prohibited.
AR15.Com reserves the right to overwrite or replace any affiliate, commercial, or monetizable links, posted by users, with our own.