Strength athletics in Finland

Strength athletics in Finland refers to the participation of Finnish competitors and holding national strongman competitions.

History

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Finland had enormous success on the international stage in the 1990s and early 2000s, having won 3 World's Strongest Man titles, and numerous major European and international competitions. In particular, Jouko Ahola was the 1997 World's Strongest Man & 1999 World's Strongest Man champion, Janne Virtanen won the 2000 World's Strongest Man, and Riku Kiri was a 3 time consecutive Europe's Strongest Man champion from 1995-1997. In recent years Finland has struggled in the major international scene, having not made the finals of WSM since 2002, and not having any major international victories.

National competitions

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Finland's Strongest Man

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Finland's Strongest Man
Tournament information
LocationFinland
Established1987
FormatMulti-event competition
Current champion
  Severi Allonen (2024)

Finland's Strongest Man is an annual Strongman competition held in Finland and featuring exclusively Finnish athletes, to determine who the strongest Finn of the year is. It was first held in 1987[1] and has produced 19 champions throughout its 33 consecutive years. It is one of the oldest strongman competitions in the world.

Mika Törrö holds the record for the most number of wins with five titles while Janne Virtanen and Jani Illikainen share four titles each. Ilkka Nummisto and Riku Kiri share three titles each as well.[1] Jón Páll Sigmarsson, Bill Kazmaier and Hjalti Arnason were guests in the competition but their placings were not included in the final results.[1]

Champions breakdown

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Year Champion Runner-Up 3rd Place
1987   Arto Lyytikäinen   Markku Suonenvirta   Jari Leino & Kari Pötrönen
1988   Riku Kiri (To be confirmed) (To be confirmed)
1989   Markku Suonenvirta   Ilkka Nummisto (To be confirmed)
1990   Ilkka Nummisto   Markku Suonenvirta (To be confirmed)
1991   Ilkka Nummisto   Markku Suonenvirta (To be confirmed)
1992   Ilkka Nummisto   Jukka Laine   Marko Varalahti
1993   Riku Kiri   Marko Varalahti   Jarmo Ruotsalainen
1994   Riku Kiri   Harri Simonen   Jorma Ojanaho
1995   Marko Varalahti   Sami Heinonen   Jukka Laine
1996   Jorma Ojanaho   Jouko Ahola   Marko Varalahti
1997   Jouko Ahola   Sami Heinonen   Jorma Ojanaho
1998   Janne Virtanen   Matti Uppa   Jukka Laine
1999   Janne Virtanen   Sami Heinonen   Juha-Matti Räsänen
2000   Janne Virtanen   Sami Heinonen   Juha-Matti Räsänen
2001   Janne Virtanen   Juha-Matti Räsänen   Pasi Paavisto
2002   Juha-Matti Räsänen   Sami Heinonen   Harri Simonen
2003   Juha-Matti Räsänen   Esa Qvintus   Tomi Lotta
2004   Tomi Lotta   Juha-Matti Räsänen   Jani Illikainen
2005   Jani Illikainen   Matti Uppa   Juha-Pakka Aitala
2006   Jani Illikainen   Juha-Matti Räsänen   Esa Qvintus
2007   Jani Illikainen   Jani Kolehmainen   Janne Hartikainen
2008   Jani Illikainen (To be confirmed) (To be confirmed)
2009   Juha Matti Jarvi (To be confirmed) (To be confirmed)
2010   Pedro Karlsson (To be confirmed) (To be confirmed)
2011[2]   Jarno Jokinen   Pedro Karlsson (To be confirmed)
2014[3]   Arto Niemi-Nikkola   Jarno Kirselä   Juha Jokinen
2018   Mika Törrö (To be confirmed) (To be confirmed)
2019   Mika Törrö (To be confirmed) (To be confirmed)
2020   Mika Törrö (To be confirmed) (To be confirmed)
2021   Mika Törrö   Henry Ollila   Severi Allonen
2022   Mika Törrö   Jarkko Mehtälä   Teemu Pohto
2023   Jarkko Mehtälä   Jesse Pynnönen   Mika Törrö
2024   Severi Allonen   Jesse Pynnönen   Mika Törrö
Repeat champions
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Champion Times & years
  Mika Törrö 5 (2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022,
  Janne Virtanen 4 (1998, 1999, 2000, 2001)
  Janni Illikainen 4 (2005, 2006, 2007, 2009)
  Riku Kiri 3 (1988, 1993, 1994)
  Ilkka Nummisto 3 (1990, 1991, 1992)
  Juha-Matti Räsänen 2 (2002, 2003)

Regional Competitions

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Nordic Strongman Championships

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

Year Champion Runner-Up 3rd Place
2005   Svend Karlsen   Magnus Samuelsson   Juha-Matti Räsänen
2012[4]   Johannes Årsjö   Lars Rorbakken   Mikkel Leicht
2013   Johannes Årsjö   Ole Martin Hansen   Juha-Matti Järvi

International Competitions

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Giants Live

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Finland was also the venue for a couple of Giants Live grand prix competitions with the participation of top athletes of the world. The competitions were named Giants Live Finland.

Year Champion Runner-Up 3rd Place
2011   Martin Wildauer   Vidas Blekaitis   Rauno Heinla
2012   Laurence Shahlaei   Johannes Årsjö   Lauri Nämi

References

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  1. ^ a b c "David Horne's World of Grip". Davidhorne-gripmaster.com. 2010-06-21. Retrieved 2010-06-25.
  2. ^ Finland’s Strongest Man, Woman: Jarno Jokinen, Kati Luoto Win
  3. ^ "Finland's Strongest Man: The Next Generation". Randall J. Strossen, IronMind Enterprises, Inc. 9 June 2014. Retrieved 17 July 2023.
  4. ^ a b "Nordic Strongman Championships: Viking Loses His Title!". Archived from the original on 2013-10-04. Retrieved 2012-06-21.