The World Deadlift Championships is an annual competition featuring strength athletes from all over the world, competing exclusively in the strongman deadlift. It was created by Giants Live and the championship focuses mainly on the maximum deadlift in pursuit of the deadlift world record, although in the 2017 edition, the event was changed to a 400 kg (882 lb) weight for the most repetitions in 60 seconds before reverting to a maximum weight format in 2019 after a one-year hiatus.
Champions
edit 1 While Makarov has declared for Russia, he competed for Ukraine at the 2021 World Deadlift Championships.
2 While Makarov has declared for Russia, he competed for Georgia at the 2022 and 2023 World Deadlift Championships.
Heaviest lifts
editIn history (men)
edit# | Weight | Competitor | Event location and name | Bar/ standard | World Record? |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 501 kg (1,105 lb) | Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson | Reykjavík, Iceland |
Standard/ multi ply suit |
Yes |
2 | 500 kg (1,102 lb) | Eddie Hall | Leeds, England |
Standard/ multi ply suit |
Yes |
3 | 485 kg (1,069 lb) | Peiman Maheripour | Tehran, Iran 2024 Iran Strongest Men & Women's Deadlift Championship
|
Standard/ multi ply suit |
No |
4 | 483 kg (1,065 lb) | Ivan Makarov | Neukirchen beim Heiligen Blut, Germany 2022 Eisenhart Black Competition
|
Standard/ multi ply suit |
No |
5 | 481 kg (1,060 lb) | Peiman Maheripour | Moscow, Russia 2021 WRPF World Championships
|
Standard/ multi ply suit |
No |
6 | 477.5 kg (1,053 lb) | Peiman Maheripour | Moscow, Russia 2021 WRPF World Championships
|
Standard/ multi ply suit |
No |
7 | 476 kg (1,049 lb) | Rauno Heinla | Cardiff, Wales |
Standard/ multi ply suit |
Yes (Over-40s only) |
8 | 475 kg (1,047 lb) | Mitchell Hooper | Australia |
Standard/ multi ply suit |
No |
Ivan Makarov 1 | Manchester, England |
Standard/ multi ply suit |
No | ||
10 | 474.5 kg (1,046 lb) | Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson | Columbus, United States |
Elephant/ raw |
Yes (Elephant only) |
In history (women)
edit# | Weight | Competitor | Event location and name | Bar/ standard | World Record? |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 318 kg (701 lb) | Lucy Underdown | Cardiff, Wales |
Standard/ single ply suit |
Yes |
2 | 315 kg (694 lb) | Becca Swanson | Helsinki, Finland 2005 WPC WPO European Semi Finals
|
Power/ multi ply suit |
Yes |
3 | 305 kg (672 lb) | Becca Swanson | Chicago, United States 2005 WPC WPO Semifinals
|
Power/ multi ply suit |
Yes |
Lucy Underdown | Cardiff, Wales |
Standard/ single ply suit |
Yes (Strongwoman only) | ||
5 | 302 kg (666 lb) | Lucy Underdown | Columbus, United States |
Elephant/ single ply suit |
Yes (Elephant only) |
6 | 300 kg (661 lb) | Crystal Tate | Lake Buena Vista, United States 2018 WPC WPO Championships
|
Power/ multi ply suit |
No |
Lucy Underdown | Milton Keynes, England |
Standard/ single ply suit |
Yes (Strongwoman only) | ||
Crystal Tate | Chicago, United States 2022 APF Chicago Summer Bash
|
Power/ multi ply suit |
No | ||
9 | 298 kg (657 lb) | Crystal Tate | Columbus, United States 2018 XPC Finals
|
Power/ multi ply suit |
No |
10 | 295 kg (650 lb) | Tamara Walcott | Columbus, United States 2023 Arnold Strongwoman Classic
|
Elephant/ single ply suit |
Yes (Elephant only) |
Victoria Long | Columbus, United States 2023 Arnold Strongwoman Classic
|
Elephant/ single ply suit |
Yes (Elephant only) |
At the championships (men)
edit# | Weight | Competitor | Year | Bar | Record Set |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 500 kg (1,102 lb) | Eddie Hall | 2016 | Standard | World Record |
2 | 476 kg (1,049 lb) | Rauno Heinla | 2022 | Standard | Estonian Record, World Record (over-40s) |
3 | 475 kg (1,047 lb) | Ivan Makarov 1 | 2021 | Standard | Ukrainian Record |
4 | 470 kg (1,036 lb) | Graham Hicks | 2023 | Standard | - |
5 | 465 kg (1,025 lb) | Eddie Hall | 2016 | Standard | World Record |
Benedikt Magnússon | 2016 | Standard | World Record | ||
Jerry Pritchett | 2016 | Standard | World Record | ||
8 | 463 kg (1,021 lb) | Eddie Hall | 2015 | Standard | World Record |
9 | 461 kg (1,016 lb) | Benedikt Magnússon | 2014 | Standard | World Record |
10 | 455 kg (1,003 lb) | Rauno Heinla | 2019 | Standard | Estonian Record |
Jerry Pritchett | 2019 | Standard | - | ||
Rauno Heinla | 2023 | Standard | - | ||
Ivan Makarov 2 | 2023 | Standard | Georgian Record | ||
Evan Singleton | 2023 | Standard | - |
At the championships (women)
edit# | Weight | Competitor | Year | Bar | Record Set |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 318 kg (701 lb) | Lucy Underdown | 2023 | Standard | World Record |
2 | 305 kg (672 lb) | Lucy Underdown | 2023 | Standard | English Record, World Record (standard bar only) |
3 | 280 kg (617 lb) | Rebecca Roberts | 2023 | Standard | Welsh Record |
Lucy Underdown | 2023 | Standard | - |
Continental records
edit- This list features lifts made with a standard bar.
Region | Weight | Athlete | Nation | Year set |
---|---|---|---|---|
Europe | 501 kg (1,105 lb) | Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson | Iceland | 2020 |
Asia | 485 kg (1,069 lb) | Peiman Maheripour | Iran | 2024 |
Oceania | 460 kg (1,014 lb) | Mathew Ragg | New Zealand | 2024 |
North, Central America and Caribbean | 475 kg (1,047 lb) | Mitchell Hooper | Canada | 2021 |
Africa | 455 kg (1,003 lb) | Chris van der Linde | South Africa | 2022 |
South America | 402.5 kg (887 lb) | Rafa Crestani | Brazil | 2014 |
Records on other bars and standards
editLift details | Weight | Athlete | Nation | Year set |
---|---|---|---|---|
Silver Dollar (Elevated 18" height) | 580 kg (1,279 lb) | Rauno Heinla | Estonia | 2022 |
Hummer tyre (Elevated 15" height) | 549 kg (1,210 lb) | Oleksii Novikov | Ukraine | 2022 |
Axle bar (Elevated 18" height) | 499 kg (1,100 lb) | Gabriel Peña | Mexico | 2021 |
Elephant bar (Standard 9" height) | 474.5 kg (1,046 lb) | Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson | Iceland | 2019 |
Power bar - Conventional (Standard 9" height) | 460.4 kg (1,015 lb) | Benedikt Magnússon | Iceland | 2011 |
Power bar - Sumo (Standard 9" height) 3 | 487.5 kg (1,075 lb) | Danny Grigsby | United States | 2022 |
3 This lift has been included as a reference - sumo deadlifts are classified as illegal in strongman competitions.
Individual results
edit2014
editThe 2014 World Deadlift Championships were held at the Headingley Stadium in Leeds, England on 9 August 2014 during the 2014 Europe's Strongest Man. Magnússon set a new world record with a lift of 461 kg (1,016 lb).[1]
Results
edit# | Name | Weight |
---|---|---|
1 | Benedikt Magnússon | 461 kg (1,016 lb) |
2 | Eddie Hall | 446 kg (983 lb) |
3 | Martin Wildauer | 435 kg (959 lb) |
Laurence Shahlaei | ||
5 | Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson | 420 kg (926 lb) |
Mark Felix | ||
Johannes Årsjö | ||
8 | Graham Hicks | 400 kg (882 lb) |
Vytautas Lalas | ||
Krzysztof Radzikowski | ||
Andy Bolton | ||
12 | Mikhail Koklyaev | No lift |
X | Brian Shaw | Withdrew |
Records
editNation | Name | Weight |
---|---|---|
World | Benedikt Magnússon | 461 kg (1,016 lb) |
Icelandic | Benedikt Magnússon | 461 kg (1,016 lb) |
English | Eddie Hall | 446 kg (983 lb) |
Austrian | Martin Wildauer | 435 kg (959 lb) |
Swedish | Johannes Årsjö | 420 kg (926 lb) |
2015
editThe 2015 World Deadlift Championships were held at the Headingley Stadium in Leeds, England on July 11, 2015. Hall set a new world record with a lift of 463 kg (1,021 lb).[2]
Results
edit# | Name | Weight |
---|---|---|
1 | Eddie Hall | 463 kg (1,021 lb) |
2 | Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson | 450 kg (992 lb) |
3 | Rauno Heinla | 435 kg (959 lb) |
Jerry Pritchett | ||
5 | Andy Bolton | 430 kg (948 lb) |
6 | Mark Felix | 400 kg (882 lb) |
Krzysztof Radzikowski | ||
Terry Hollands | ||
Dainis Zageris | ||
Matjaz Belsak | ||
11 | Dimitar Savatinov | 360 kg (794 lb) |
12 | Luke Stoltman | No lift |
Records
editNation | Name | Weight |
---|---|---|
World | Eddie Hall | 463 kg (1,021 lb) |
English | Eddie Hall | 463 kg (1,021 lb) |
Estonian | Rauno Heinla | 435 kg (959 lb) |
Slovenian | Matjaz Belsak | 400 kg (882 lb) |
2016
editThe 2016 World Deadlift Championships were held at the 2016 Europe's Strongest Man event at the First Direct Arena in Leeds, England. Hall set a new world record, becoming the first person in history to deadlift 500 kg (1,102 lb).[3]
Results
edit# | Name | Weight |
---|---|---|
1 | Eddie Hall | 500 kg (1,102 lb) |
2 | Benedikt Magnússon | 465 kg (1,025 lb) |
Jerry Pritchett | ||
4 | Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson | 440 kg (970 lb) |
5 | Laurence Shahlaei | 420 kg (926 lb) |
Terry Hollands | ||
Mark Felix | ||
Marius Lalas | ||
9 | Johannes Årsjö | 400 kg (882 lb) |
Dimitar Savatinov | ||
Adam Bishop | ||
12 | Mateusz Kieliszkowski | No lift |
Stefan Solvi Petursson |
Records
editNation | Name | Weight |
---|---|---|
World | Eddie Hall | 500 kg (1,102 lb) |
English | Eddie Hall | 500 kg (1,102 lb) |
Icelandic | Benedikt Magnússon | 465 kg (1,025 lb) |
American | Jerry Pritchett | 465 kg (1,025 lb) |
2017
editThe 2017 World Deadlift Championships were held at the Giants Live Finals event in Manchester, England. In this edition, the championships were changed to a deadlift for the most repetitions in 60 seconds format with a fixed weight of 400 kg (882 lb) .[4]
Results
edit# | Name | Repetitions |
---|---|---|
1 | JF Caron | 5 |
Konstantine Janashia | ||
3 | Benedikt Magnússon | 3 |
4 | Žydrūnas Savickas | 2 |
5 | Mikhail Shivlyakov | 1 |
6 | Laurence Shahlaei | 0 |
Nick Best | ||
Terry Hollands | ||
Cheick "Iron Biby" Sanou |
2019
editThe 2019 World Deadlift Championships were held at the Wembley Arena in Wembley, England, as the opening event for Giants Live Wembley. In this edition, the championships returned to the max weight deadlift format.[5]
Results
edit# | Name | Weight |
---|---|---|
1 | Rauno Heinla | 455 kg (1,003 lb) |
Jerry Pritchett | ||
3 | Rob Kearney | 440 kg (970 lb) |
Adam Bishop | ||
Nedžmin Ambešković | ||
6 | Martins Licis | 420 kg (926 lb) |
Mikhail Shivlyakov | ||
Mark Felix | ||
9 | Mateusz Kieliszkowski | 400 kg (882 lb) |
Tom Stoltman | ||
11 | Luke Stoltman | No lift |
Records
editNation | Name | Weight |
---|---|---|
Estonian | Rauno Heinla | 455 kg (1,003 lb) |
Bosnian | Nedžmin Ambešković | 440 kg (970 lb) |
2021
editThe 2021 World Deadlift Championships were held at the AO Arena in Manchester, England, as the opening event for Giants Live World Open.
Results
edit# | Name | Weight |
---|---|---|
1 | Ivan Makarov 1 | 475 kg (1,047 lb) |
2 | Pavlo Nakonechnyy | 453.5 kg (1,000 lb) |
Evan Singleton | ||
Adam Bishop | ||
Oleksii Novikov | ||
Gabriel Peña | ||
Nedžmin Ambešković | ||
8 | Mikhail Shivlyakov | 425 kg (937 lb) |
Rauno Heinla | ||
Gavin Bilton | ||
Andy Black |
Records
editNation | Name | Weight |
---|---|---|
Ukrainian | Ivan Makarov | 475 kg (1,047 lb) |
Mexican | Gabriel Peña | 453.5 kg (1,000 lb) |
Bosnian | Nedžmin Ambešković | 453.5 kg (1,000 lb) |
Welsh | Gavin Bilton | 425 kg (937 lb) |
2022
editThe 2022 World Deadlift Championships were held at the Cardiff International Arena in Cardiff, Wales, as the opening event for Giants Live World Open. During this competition, as a result of another nationality change, Ivan Makarov became the first strongman to hold the national deadlift record for three different countries, having set the new Georgian record at 453.5 kg. Makarov, at the time of the championships also held the Ukrainian (475 kg - set 2021) and the Russian records (470 kg - set 2019).
Results
edit# | Name | Weight |
---|---|---|
1 | Rauno Heinla | 476 kg (1,049 lb) |
2 | Graham Hicks | 453.5 kg (1,000 lb) |
Mitchell Hooper | ||
Ivan Makarov 2 | ||
Pavlo Nakonechnyy | ||
6 | Gavin Bilton | 425.5 kg (938 lb) |
Oleksii Novikov | ||
Evan Singleton | ||
9 | Andy Black | 400 kg (882 lb) |
Shane Flowers | ||
Pa O'Dwyer |
Records
editNation | Name | Weight |
---|---|---|
World (over-40s) | Rauno Heinla | 476 kg (1,049 lb) |
Estonian | Rauno Heinla | 476 kg (1,049 lb) |
Georgian | Ivan Makarov | 453.5 kg (1,000 lb) |
Welsh | Gavin Bilton | 425.5 kg (938 lb) |
2023
editThe 2023 World Deadlift Championships were held at the Cardiff International Arena in Cardiff, Wales, as the opening event for Giants Live World Open. This was the first championships to have female competitors, with Lucy Underdown setting a new world record of 317.5 kg (700 lb).
Results
edit# | Name | Weight |
---|---|---|
1 | Graham Hicks | 470 kg (1,036 lb) |
2 | Rauno Heinla | 455 kg (1,003 lb) |
Ivan Makarov 2 | ||
Evan Singleton | ||
5 | Austin Andrade | 430 kg (948 lb) |
Gavin Bilton | ||
Jamal Browner | ||
Shane Flowers | ||
9 | Evans Nana | 400 kg (882 lb) |
Rob Kearney | ||
Oleksii Novikov | ||
Pa O'Dwyer | ||
Luke Stoltman | ||
14 (1F) | Lucy Underdown | 318 kg (701 lb) |
15 (2F) | Rebecca Roberts | 280 kg (617 lb) |
16 | Oskar Ziółkowski | No Lift |
Records
editNation | Name | Weight |
---|---|---|
Georgian | Ivan Makarov | 455 kg (1,003 lb) |
Welsh | Gavin Bilton | 430 kg (948 lb) |
Ghanaian | Evans Nana | 400 kg (882 lb) |
World (women) | Lucy Underdown | 318 kg (701 lb) |
English (women) | Lucy Underdown | 318 kg (701 lb) |
Welsh (women) | Rebecca Roberts | 280 kg (617 lb) |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Europe's Strongest Man 2014". www.strongman.org. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
- ^ "World Deadlift Championships 2015". www.strongman.org. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
- ^ "See the results for the Europe's Strongest Man + World Deadlift Championships". www.floelite.com. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
- ^ "2017 World Deadlift Championship Results". www.startingstrongman.com. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
- ^ "Giants Live Wembley 2019 – full results and show round up". www.giants-live.com. Retrieved 2 August 2020.