STRONGEST MEN EVER: PAUL ANDERSON VS. LOUIS CYR

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  • čas přidán 3. 08. 2024
  • Only two men achieved mythical status for their strength prior to the introduction of anabolic enhancers. Louis Cyr dominated the early 20th century, while Paul Anderson was king of the
    mid-century. Aficionados of strength debate who was, in fact, the strongest. Watch this video for the answer.
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Komentáře • 304

  • @JohnJohnson-hl4fv
    @JohnJohnson-hl4fv Před 4 lety +54

    I met Paul Anderson at a high school in Straford Texas in 1976. He lifted a lot of people on the bleechers.

    • @haydenpatterson4720
      @haydenpatterson4720 Před 4 lety +3

      I'm jealous.

    • @dr.history4854
      @dr.history4854 Před 3 lety

      I met Louis Cyr. I was visiting quebec and found him. He would lift be rocks. im 180 years old

    • @Tboy439
      @Tboy439 Před 3 lety +9

      @@dr.history4854 ...Paul Anderson came to my school in Southern Pines N.C. in 1968 and put on an amazing display. He first folded a hankerchief in his hand and took about a six inch nail and with brute strength, drove it through a 2 by 4. He then took a dumb bell weighing 225 lbs with one hand and pressed it 10 times like it was nothing. It's something I will never forget. Dude was awesome. And this was when he was past his prime. The difference between Cyr and Paul is that much of what Cyr did was fable, but Paul's was actually weighed and measured, so we will never really know who was stronger, just that they were both awesome, and let's leave it at that.

    • @kwarunner
      @kwarunner Před 3 lety +4

      @@Tboy439 Paul Anderson came to our church sometime in the mid 60's. I remember him lifting about a dozen men on a table. He did the same as you describe with a nail and a 2x4.

    • @hausuandim1193
      @hausuandim1193 Před 2 lety

      Bro in the 60s paul anderson was a great friend of mine so me and some other guys went to the local church and tried to summon Louis Cyr back from the dead

  • @gannonolson6294
    @gannonolson6294 Před 4 lety +43

    How about Anderson's 500 mile bike ride to Omaha in flip flops? There's a feat of endurance.

  • @torringtonstonekeeper
    @torringtonstonekeeper Před 2 lety +30

    Paul Andersen was a great man. His legacy still to this day helping kids at his youth home. He has done more for his community than any NBA or NFL ,MLB player, even 50 years after his death ,he is still helping.

    • @g-man2507
      @g-man2507 Před rokem +1

      Lol, how do you know that will be the case?
      Fifty years after 1994 will be 2046.

    • @torringtonstonekeeper
      @torringtonstonekeeper Před rokem +1

      @@g-man2507 because your chica told me ese. Fortune telling magellin

  • @planetetrangere
    @planetetrangere Před 4 lety +42

    According to records, here is what Louis Cyr did: At 19 years old, he lifted a rock from ground up to his shoulder, officially weighted at 514 pounds

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 4 lety +14

      Accounts do exist regarding Cyr's and other lifter's strength feats, but the lack of reliable documentation and the tendency to "hype" shows make them all suspect. The same can be said of a few of Anderson's performance lifts.

    • @planetetrangere
      @planetetrangere Před 4 lety +6

      @@ET-RAMBLINGS If the movie on Louis Cyr's life is true, he actually wanted his feats to be validated and his opponents(in england) decided to not participate specifically because of that. The feats he did in England were(according to the movie) rightly registered..

    • @Tboy439
      @Tboy439 Před 3 lety +5

      @@planetetrangere ...A movie on Louis Cry's life might have been a little biased, since it was actually a movie made by someone promoting him. Just a thought.

    • @planetetrangere
      @planetetrangere Před 3 lety +4

      @@Tboy439 everything can be biased!

    • @jasoncuculo7035
      @jasoncuculo7035 Před 3 lety +1

      Brian Shaw did 574 recently on the Atlas stones, current record.

  • @mattyancick599
    @mattyancick599 Před 3 lety +14

    Respect to both. Men of different times.

  • @gymguy25
    @gymguy25 Před 3 lety +30

    I've read 3 different biographies of Cyr and saw the movie and I'll point out a few things:
    -He was listed as somewhere between 5'9.5"-5'10.5", as you explained, heavy lifters have been known to compress their spines by an inch over time as they age.
    -In Cyr's day, a press was done with the arms only, no leg drive or body momentum, consider this when you note that Anderson's presses were heavier in terms of weight.
    -Both men have been accused of exaggerating their lifts, I happen to know that Cyr's promoters offered 25 000$ (keeping in mind this was very early 20th century dollars) for anyone who could duplicate his lifts and no money was ever handed out. For Anderson, if someone could duplicate his silver dollar squat, they could keep the money in the crates, obviously, the money was never handed out either. Witnesses have said Anderson's 1200 lb squat wasn't to parallel, however, others have pointed out that due to the huge size of his quads, he was physically incapable of reaching parallel but he went as deep as he could.
    -Cyr's back lift was performed by asking men from the audience to step onto a scale before they went onto the platform, for this reason, there are high odds the weight he is credited with (4337 lbs) was accurate. It's also said that he could do over 5000 in the lift but they feared the platform could collapse at such weights so he played it safe.
    -If you're one of those who think their lifts were exaggerated, as yourself if it's possible that other strongmen in their times would have thought the same, probably, right? Don't you think they might have wanted 25 000$ Maybe they attempted to outlift them and failed!
    The main thing to consider is that they were from different eras as you pointed out and some of the lifts they performed are no longer commonly practiced.

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 3 lety +8

      Gymguy, thanks for the info. As you know, the standing press in competition devolved into a modified clean & jerk by the late 1950's. I'd read that Cyr's presses were strict, and Anderson's sus appear legit despite some leaning.

    • @gymguy25
      @gymguy25 Před 3 lety +5

      That’s exactly what I’ve been reading, yes, Anderson lifted more, but would he have if the lifts were done in a stricter fashion like Cyr? 🤔

    • @jonlanier_
      @jonlanier_ Před rokem +1

      I find it interesting how so many people today, don't think that people back then couldn't weigh things properly. Their whole economic system completely relied on the accuracy of weighing goods.

    • @sonteguh
      @sonteguh Před rokem

      No way Cyr is stronger than a Gorilla 😮

  • @STSADaniel
    @STSADaniel Před 4 lety +83

    What needs to be understood here is this, the two men are from 2 different times, in Louis Cyr's days not much training took place in gyms, it was mostly practiced on the farm working long hours and lifting heavy stuff, no tractors those days... In Paul out. In Paul Anderson's days lots of gyms and people worked out. This does not diminish Paul Anderson's strength at all. It is not really comparable. Both men were flat out the strongest of their times. Some of Cyr's lifts will never be duplicated, let alone surpassed and the same goes for Anderson's. I wish I could back in time to watch them both in action!

    • @asianfighter62
      @asianfighter62 Před 4 lety

      STSADaniel YOU ARE A FUCKING IDIOT. NOT MUCH GYMS IN THE 1950'S YOU MORON. LOTS OF GYMS UNTIL 1970'S. BODY BUILDING WAS FROWNED UPON IN THE 1950'S YOU DUMB FUCK

    • @STSADaniel
      @STSADaniel Před 4 lety +12

      Hi Wing Chun, wow... you are a rude individual. Maybe and just maybe you should read and understand what you read. Have a nice day!

    • @shel0016
      @shel0016 Před 4 lety +5

      I think given the reps cyr could do with heavy weight and holding horses back. Cut was indeed the strongest man ever to take place in competitions

    • @TheMrPeteChannel
      @TheMrPeteChannel Před 3 lety +8

      Paul worked out in a homemade gym & only had tips, not real coaches! He was working class poor.

    • @SweetbabyincmtL
      @SweetbabyincmtL Před 3 lety +5

      @@TheMrPeteChannel louis cyr didnt have a coach , a training or a gym either and was poor , i dont get your point tbh

  • @leosmith105
    @leosmith105 Před 4 lety +24

    They were both great. Paul Anderson is sort of a hero to me. I am sure they would both have respected each other.

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 4 lety +7

      I think you're right, Leo.

    • @Jfscloud723
      @Jfscloud723 Před 3 lety +1

      I say you’re right about respect but after awhile I think people want their place and purpose in the world. It’s hard when you’re the best and you actually are a good down to earth person. Most people at the top are willing to do whatever it takes to win and that means cheat. What Paul did to that Russian guy is over looked, but had that been an American. That would has been looked at as disrespectful and grounds to fight. Paul Anderson had domination of his time. I think as fans we tend to want these people to be better than they are. We got to remember it’s good that they inspire us but we shouldn’t hold them too high, because we are all human. If I was Paul I would do what Arnold does to his Opponents and that is find an advantage. Arnold actually disrespecting demoralize his opponents and they would mentally fail whenever they were around him.

    • @leosmith105
      @leosmith105 Před 3 lety

      @@Jfscloud723 What did Paul do to the Russian guy.

    • @Jfscloud723
      @Jfscloud723 Před 3 lety +1

      @@leosmith105 he didn't do anything wrong for his era, I mean in today's climate. The fact that he was a pro and wore regular clothes and seemed unknown, he then beats the champion.

    • @denniszeller5875
      @denniszeller5875 Před 3 lety

      No questions Louis was stronger Paul use steroids Google it if you do not believe me

  • @tootsietoyrestoration
    @tootsietoyrestoration Před 3 lety +20

    My uncle was in the Bill Glass Prison Ministry and saw Paul Anderson do his feats of strength many times as he gave his testimony at prisons. At one prison, Anderson told my uncle that they were to load the one-armed press dumbbell to 250 lbs. so he could show the prisoners what he could do. When he got to the part of his testimony where he would show his strength, he picked the dumbbell up and immediately knew something was wrong. It took all he had to press it twice and then let it fall to the ground. After the seminar, they went and weighed the dumbbell. They had mistakenly loaded it up to 350 lbs. rather than 250 lbs.! Unverified, but true!

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 3 lety +7

      Peter, in 1958, Anderson (by then a professional) jumped on stage at Madison Square Garden and pressed 425 lbs. for 2 reps! This was after the Russian champion pressed 350 lbs.
      A video exists showing Anderson lifting a purported 300 lb. dumbbell for 2 reps. If it actually did weigh that amount, maybe he could lift 350.
      I don't doubt your uncle's reporting, but it could also be that those who loaded the plates told the audience the wrong weight.
      Or, Anderson did, in fact, lift 350 lbs.!!! Whatever, it's a great story! Thanks for sharing it.

  • @lawrencebyrd4472
    @lawrencebyrd4472 Před 4 lety +12

    On the other hand with Anderson. We know 100% he was the first man to press over 400lbs and the first man to clean and press 200kg

  • @donaldschmidt2990
    @donaldschmidt2990 Před rokem +7

    Anderson and Cyr were men of freakish strength. Both the strongest of their time. It is of course, easier to verify Andersons feats than that of Cyr. That doesn't diminish either man's accomplishments. Anderson is beyond a doubt, the twentieth century's strongest man.

    • @charlessavoie2367
      @charlessavoie2367 Před rokem +1

      The 150 pound French Canadian, Victor Delamarre, 150 pounds, exceeded Cyr's one arm overhead lift by succeeding with 309 pounds. Delamarre's power is explained by double thick tendons.

  • @colinpurssey9875
    @colinpurssey9875 Před 4 lety +16

    Again , another absorbing review of eventful strength performances . Thanks ET . Both exponents were phenomenal . Anderson's two rep dumbell press with 300 pounds is almost miraculous !

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 4 lety +5

      Thanks, Colin. Maybe somewhere there's a film of Cyr pulling incredible poundages. Both men performed amazing lifts.

    • @shel0016
      @shel0016 Před 4 lety +2

      @@ET-RAMBLINGS that finger lift.of 500 lbs is almost like he had some.of samsons strength

    • @hisinvisibleness-fn8qj
      @hisinvisibleness-fn8qj Před rokem

      I'm a fan of both
      Note cyrs use of odd shaped unbalanced weight probably gave him an advantage

  • @williesnyder2899
    @williesnyder2899 Před 3 lety +8

    Paul and I corresponded. He was 5’10” and had Bright’s Disease (kidney disease) from his youth. His sister Dot donated a kidney up here at the University of Minnesota. I sent him a get well card, which he acknowledged. He was a great human being! I still have his letters to me. He told me how he built up his neck. Paul told me that his big back lift was “no harder than a heavy squat.” His dietary practices were something...
    R.I.P. Paul!!

  • @terry7893
    @terry7893 Před rokem +4

    I got to see Paul Anderson lifting in person. He came to our school years ago and did the backlift with people on it. I don't know if he even got paid to come (probably not) but he went a far way from where he lived to go to different schools to do exhibitions and talk about his life, etc. He was a very giving person.

  • @kevindavis8016
    @kevindavis8016 Před 2 lety +7

    6,000lb back lift by Mr. Anderson probably will never be duplicated.

    • @roderickreilly9666
      @roderickreilly9666 Před 2 lety +2

      It was actually probably 4,500-4,800 lbs according to an old "Iron Man" article from the 70s or 80s.

  • @ElmetiYT
    @ElmetiYT Před 4 lety +27

    Play it at 1.25x for normal speed ..

  • @petelillo186
    @petelillo186 Před rokem +2

    Paul Anderson Without Doubt Was The Strongest Man That Ever Lived. Paul Was Doing 1000 LB Squats Back In The 50's. He Military Pressed 440 LB. without a Warm up.

  • @jasoncuculo7035
    @jasoncuculo7035 Před 3 lety +5

    The image of the people he lifted was not his back lift, it is his carousel lift (a type of hip and harness lift) of roughly 2,700 pounds. The 1,000 pound partial deadlift is credible. Paul deadlifted ameliorate

  • @ET-RAMBLINGS
    @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 4 lety +16

    Some weights shown in pics don't correlate exactly with those mentioned on the video because photos aren't always available of Anderson and Cry performing their top lifts.

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 3 lety

      True. We try to match as close as possible. I've since found some drawings of Cyr in old online newspapers that will be uploaded sometime in the future.

    • @rg-pq1kb
      @rg-pq1kb Před 3 lety

      Cyrs pictures are doctored also

  • @williesnyder2899
    @williesnyder2899 Před 3 lety +7

    Paul did handstand push-ups against the wall. He did single leg body weight squats. And he innovated and coached himself.

    • @robertdecker146
      @robertdecker146 Před rokem +2

      I used to have a book about Paul Anderson. It was written in the 1970's. He had an impressive box-jump, and could also sprint amazingly fast for his size.

    • @MP-tf7cc
      @MP-tf7cc Před 7 měsíci

      I used to do handstand pushups (on benches to go down further), single leg squats, other innovations and coached myself too 😲

  • @willbradley8038
    @willbradley8038 Před 4 lety +6

    Good video. Something that is important to note is that Paul Anderson’s nephritis had less to do with his diet and more likely was the result of a congenital defect that he had all of his life.

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 4 lety +3

      Thanks, Will. Anderson's nephritis may have been worsened by his consuming large amounts of protein which can damage kidney nephrons.

  • @Swiatoikadr
    @Swiatoikadr Před 3 lety

    Great work.

  • @tyharden9417
    @tyharden9417 Před rokem +1

    I saw Paul Anderson in the 70s doing the table lift. I can't remember how many men was on it but it was impressive.

  • @mizukarate
    @mizukarate Před 2 lety +2

    I do mostly body weight squats(occasionally with a kettle bell) primarily as a Streach. The squat is important for strength and flexibility.

  • @bertybertface1914
    @bertybertface1914 Před 3 lety +1

    Both incredible. Both deserve their accolades.

  • @martinhamilton9185
    @martinhamilton9185 Před 3 lety +1

    Well done 👍

  • @flappospammo
    @flappospammo Před 3 lety +5

    Paul Anderson was super human

  • @loonhaunt
    @loonhaunt Před 3 lety +4

    Fascinating. Paul was a fine man.

  • @TrevorHoneyball
    @TrevorHoneyball Před 4 lety +4

    A bit like comparing Joe Louis and Muhammad Ali.....I wouldn't want to because they were both great in different ways. If I'm honest I have always preferred Joe Louis...in the main because I grew up hearing about Joe's exploits in the ring from my father.

  • @manishmagar7177
    @manishmagar7177 Před 4 lety +31

    Louis Cyr(The strongest man ever)♥️👍

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 4 lety +5

      Both men specialized on different lifts. We can only guess on what they'd be able to do with similar training. My guess is that Anderson would win, but Cyr possessed preternatural tendon and muscle strength, so who knows for sure?

    • @imranlodhi90
      @imranlodhi90 Před 4 lety +3

      @@ET-RAMBLINGS Hi, I read on Paul Anderson and although he has a record in Guiness record book, a PHd guy who's name is John (don't remember the full name, will look it up), did a more in depth research which would shed more doubt in whether Paul Anderson really back-lifted 6000 or something lbs. Even though it would be in World Guiness Record Book, according to John, there aren't any witnesses comfirming these particular lifts, neither has any local news papers from that time. Same thing goes with Anderson's allegedly 1200lbs Squat in which many are skeptic about. I can send the link from Johns research. Thank You!

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 4 lety +4

      @@imranlodhi90 Thanks for your thoughtful comments.
      Anderson's only officially verified lifts were his olympic-style ones. No sanctioning powerlifting organizations existed during the 1950s. His backlift was performed on television (I saw it), but was not official. The Las Vegas squats with silver dollars was reported to be well over a ton (1K lbs.). This, too, was not official and probably hyped.
      That said, many who trained with or near Anderson, including powerlifting champion Terry Todd, witnessed his freakish lifting strength. Also, it can't be disputed that Anderson was the only man of his era to set records (some unofficial, but witnessed) in both power and olympic lifts.

    • @haydenpatterson4720
      @haydenpatterson4720 Před 4 lety +5

      @@imranlodhi90 Good thought. I'm a bit skeptical of Paul's 6,270 pound backlift myself. As for the 1,200 pound squat, even though there are no newspapers documenting it at the time, the human body is capable of squatting that much weight. So, i think it is very possible that the lift did occur even if there is no documentation of it in the news. Another reason i believe the squat did occur was because Paul was known to have practiced squatting as part of his regular training. This would have significantly developed his leg strength and helped him squat that much weight. For these reasons, i personally believe Paul did squat 1200 pounds: outside of no documentation of it, there is no reason to believe he didn't do it.

    • @denniszeller5875
      @denniszeller5875 Před 3 lety

      Cut was stronger by far Anderson uesd steroids Google it

  • @planetetrangere
    @planetetrangere Před 4 lety +17

    What about the 4 horses pull on Louis Cyr??

  • @mubarkqardas46
    @mubarkqardas46 Před 3 lety +2

    Paul, cyr was never recorded and legends get bigger overtime

  • @timnevinger5056
    @timnevinger5056 Před 4 lety +22

    Paul squatted 1,200, benched 650+, Push pressed 500lbs+, one arm presses with 300lb. Was able to clean probably up to 450lb with brute form and deadlifted 1000lbs with grip assistance. Paul was stronger.

    • @planetetrangere
      @planetetrangere Před 4 lety +1

      Proportionnally to their body weight, I am not sure..

    • @squatsgutsandglory6440
      @squatsgutsandglory6440 Před 4 lety +7

      Raymond Arcand proportionally to their bodyweight has nothing to do with absolute strength. Strongest is strongest. You’re speaking of relative strength.

    • @mobofthedeadenjoyer4921
      @mobofthedeadenjoyer4921 Před 4 lety +6

      Louis Cyr, carried 500 lbs with one finger, and he had 18 people behind his back which equals to around 4,500

    • @robslaughter5132
      @robslaughter5132 Před 4 lety +2

      500 + lbs rock on shoulder at 19 Lous Cyr

    • @gymguy25
      @gymguy25 Před 3 lety +2

      In fairness, the powerlifts weren’t performed in Cyr’s day... which is sad because he had the ideal physique for a massive squat.

  • @nicksartiano7176
    @nicksartiano7176 Před 2 lety +1

    Anderson was strongest man to ever live. Should have been only person to ever win 3 Olympic weightlifting gold medals if he wasnt deemed a professional. Paul was a great person also.

  • @cldavis33
    @cldavis33 Před 9 měsíci

    4:35: Which or what Russian champion by name are you referring to here? Great video btw!

  • @jima6545
    @jima6545 Před 3 dny

    Paul Anderson had Bright's disease when he was a child and it ruined his kidneys. He only had one, donated from his sister

  • @frankpierce7729
    @frankpierce7729 Před 4 lety +3

    A commendable video. Most people today have no real understanding of strength, apparent by the countless number of "garbage" videos uploaded daily.
    The video is interesting, however, I do not think that a direct comparison is apropos. Both men are the greatest. In today's egomaniacal world both men fall under criticism and doubt, but the musings of idiots are of no importance.

  • @Nirsterkur
    @Nirsterkur Před rokem +1

    The Strongest Man to have ever lived is 2018/19/20 Hafthor Julius Bjornsson.

  • @samarthur1847
    @samarthur1847 Před rokem

    A fine and fair presentation. As you say so much is unsubstantiated, especially for Cyr. However if the two were to meet, they would out lift each other so many times there would still be no answer. Just my opinion and thank you.

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před rokem

      Thank you, Sam! I think you're correct; they'd be continuing toi outlift each other.

  • @drbonesshow1
    @drbonesshow1 Před rokem +1

    Who was strongest depends on the type of lift. If it is a back-lift no one was stronger than Paul Anderson.

  • @rg-pq1kb
    @rg-pq1kb Před 3 lety +2

    Cyr definitely wins the most dashingly dressed strongman ever

  • @electricman69
    @electricman69 Před 4 měsíci

    Angus McCaskill was 7-9 and picked up a 2500lb. Anchor to his shoulder and carried it and unfortunately hurt his shoulder

  • @TheBatugan77
    @TheBatugan77 Před rokem

    I always thought that Cyr was pronounced "Sire"... So I learned something quite quickly?
    👍👍👍👍👍

  • @spiritualrockofstrength8486

    JESUS CHRIST IS COMING BACK PEOPLE REPENT OF YOUR SINS AND ACCEPT JESUS CHRIST AS YOUR SAVIOR TODAY NOT TOMORROW PEOPLE WHICH IS PROMISED TO NOONE ON THIS EARTH.

  • @jessfrankel5212
    @jessfrankel5212 Před 2 lety +1

    One thing to correct. Cyr developed nephritis, probably from overeating--he was a gourmand--but I wouldn't rule out him being born with the condition and not knowing about it. OTOH, Anderson was born with the condition and ended up getting a kidney transplant which really didn't improve his condition that much. Both men were champions in their day, but Anderson's lifts were documented. Many of Cyr's were not.

  • @williamstonich7541
    @williamstonich7541 Před 2 lety

    The Canadian Hercules needs to be included in this discussion ( I forgot his name )

  • @roderickreilly9666
    @roderickreilly9666 Před 2 lety

    Anderson never actually did a jerk. His Olympic effort is listed as such because that's officially what it's supposed to be. But what he's doing in that clip is a push press. Anderson's best push press off the rack was 540lbs.

  • @Deagonboydragon
    @Deagonboydragon Před 4 lety +6

    Imagine them arm wrestling

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 4 lety +5

      Odds say both would be strong arm wrestlers, but champions such as Max Batchelor, John Brzenk, Travis Bagent, etc. seem to possess other advantages besides raw strength ... possibly an better juxtapositioning of bones, tendons and cartilage.

    • @HafthorBjornssonFan
      @HafthorBjornssonFan Před 4 lety +1

      I think Paul Anderson would win.

    • @mobofthedeadenjoyer4921
      @mobofthedeadenjoyer4921 Před 4 lety +2

      Hafthor BjornssonFan2121 Nah Louis Cyr, will, but we got opinions, he carried 500 lbs with one finger!

  • @hugodalpe1812
    @hugodalpe1812 Před rokem

    Give this a thumbs up, cause I think it is a valid video... But still, my Quebec heart thinks Louis Cyr was the strongest men ever. But as you said, things could not really be verified in those days.

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před rokem

      Hugo, because we can't verify all their feats, we debate. This keeps people familiar with Cyr, Anderson and other great men of long ago.
      BTW, many other agree with you ... and they're not all from Canada!!

  • @TheBatugan77
    @TheBatugan77 Před rokem

    Odd lifts are just that... Odd.
    Hard to do because most men simply don't do them. The Inch dumbbell, for example, was heavy. But it was the unusual circumference of the handle that defeated most comers.

  • @roderickreilly9666
    @roderickreilly9666 Před 2 lety

    One image in the video is Anderson pulling 550 to above his waist, more than sufficient to squat clean it with good form.

  • @haydenpatterson4720
    @haydenpatterson4720 Před 4 lety +11

    Paul Anderson was the strongest.

    • @shel0016
      @shel0016 Před 4 lety +5

      Nope. Holding horses back is tons of force right there. Not to mention when Louis lifted 15 -20 people he liftrd them many inches off.the ground not barely 2 inches like Anderson did

    • @dr.history4854
      @dr.history4854 Před 3 lety +5

      @@shel0016 thats correct louis Cyr is stronger

  • @megunded
    @megunded Před 4 lety +5

    hi 5 feet and 8 inches is 174 cm ....2078 cm is 20m.....which is 68 feet
    in total a medium/average height today .

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 4 lety +1

      ET will correct the vid ... if he can figure out how.

  • @planetetrangere
    @planetetrangere Před 4 lety +8

    Funny. I think that they had scales at the time of Louis Cyr to weight each person that got onto the platform.. Moreover Louis Cyr did not train like Anderson. Anderson is more like a modern lifter compared to Louis Cyr and he was much bigger than Louis Cyr.

  • @calebhu6383
    @calebhu6383 Před 3 lety +3

    These were all insanely strong men. Even compared with today's strongman champions it is very hard to tell who is strongest.
    But one thing is clear: pound for pound, Naim Süleymanoğlu is the strongest man to ever live.

    • @charlessavoie2367
      @charlessavoie2367 Před rokem

      No way. Thomas Topham was by far the strongest man to ever live. Read about the Strong Man of Islington, probably capable ofr Suley's clean and jerk ratio in a strict PRESS.

  • @cldavis33
    @cldavis33 Před 9 měsíci

    Did we miss Paul Anderson's 6000+ world record backlift here? I'm sure I missed it.

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 9 měsíci

      It's in another video on Paul Anderson alone.

  • @fullsterkurfullstrength5125

    I have alot of respect for both these athletes but let's face it some of these lifts were embellished without a doubt

  • @stevegardener7044
    @stevegardener7044 Před 3 měsíci

    Louis Cyr's metric height conversion is well over 6 ft 6

  • @mattalibozek7258
    @mattalibozek7258 Před 3 lety

    I don’t know if you can count those 2 reps Anderson did with the one hand overhead press.. 8:08

  • @growlerfrown487
    @growlerfrown487 Před 3 lety +1

    Big people just never live long

  • @jasoncuculo7035
    @jasoncuculo7035 Před 3 lety +1

    Paul did 1,000 full range with hooks to ameliorate his grip on the deadlift.

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks, Jason. Anderson relied on grip assistance after a broken left wrist and injury to the right one.

  • @silverwindspirit
    @silverwindspirit Před rokem

    In the case Lois Cyr and Paul Anderson, these are examples of genetics being the exception with these 2 men. Now of course you also have to lift weights to help you get stronger but because of genetics, you just can't duplicate the strength or muscle power of these 2 men. Not even steroids can help you become as strong as Cyr or Anderson

  • @williesnyder2899
    @williesnyder2899 Před 3 lety +3

    Paul Anderson has a lot of photographic evidence. By the way, at a WSM intro, well past his peak, he demonstrated a wheelbarrow walk, his giant thighs almost rotating like a mighty machine!!
    He was also kind and humble in his letters to me. His voice was booming, if you hear him, but he was also gentle.

  • @nitinmalharjaggi3281
    @nitinmalharjaggi3281 Před 4 lety +1

    Paul Anderson had Bright's disease at the age of 5 which had returned at his old age

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 4 lety +2

      True. With healthy kidneys, Pauls might have made it to old age.

  • @ThouSwell-zx3fd
    @ThouSwell-zx3fd Před měsícem

    I think Cyr was the strongest human ever. He was certainly the most dominant. Detracters need to read Ben Weider's excellent Louis Cyr bio.

  • @hisinvisibleness-fn8qj

    Regardless both men are notorious 👍

  • @davidhubach5528
    @davidhubach5528 Před 2 lety +1

    Anderson looked like a refrigerator , you had to see him in person to believe it , the safe squat in Vegas i guarantee was every bit of 1100 pounds notice how much the bar was bending across his back

  • @renesoucy3444
    @renesoucy3444 Před 11 měsíci

    I think that the one arm 309 pounds lift of Delamarre is more relevant about who was the real deal…. 165 pounds guy… woah!

  • @Iburn247
    @Iburn247 Před 4 lety +4

    A 1 handed 300lb lift??😳

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 4 lety +5

      Cyr's career coincided with the new PR/advertising boom which did exaggerate things. That said, thousands of people, at various times, witnessed Cyr's lifts ... including the one arm pulls.

    • @sagebias2251
      @sagebias2251 Před 4 lety

      Definity possible. I've seen people do it now. You can watch 300lb dumbbell presses overhead at the 2019 arnold strongman classic.

    • @shel0016
      @shel0016 Před 3 lety +1

      @@sagebias2251 yep but cyr could press the 275 db over 15 times

    • @sagebias2251
      @sagebias2251 Před 3 lety +1

      @@shel0016 I seriously doubt that.

  • @lawrencebyrd4472
    @lawrencebyrd4472 Před 4 lety +4

    Lot of tricks went on in the old days before standard weights. They used to fill the globe with 200 lbs of dry sand get people out of the crowd to try lift it with one hand. Then rest it between to open beer kegs slip the stopers open talk to the crowd for a few minutes why the sand run out then left it up when half the weight had run out

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 4 lety +1

      Strength exhibitions of the 19th century were major shows, and the strongman was "star"! This required that he never be seriously challenged; thus, came the tricks such as you mentioned.
      Bob Hoffman, owner of York Barbell, had his own variation according to lifter Terry Todd. Hoffman had special plates showing poundages higher than the plates actually weighed.
      Anderson lifted when barbells were strictly weighed.

  • @randyspencer5937
    @randyspencer5937 Před 3 lety +2

    Id say Paul Anderson’s

  • @ancientarchie1463
    @ancientarchie1463 Před rokem

    Anderson never competed upwards to 400# His heaviest weight ever was 360 and he was 5'9 Cyr was 5'8 and typically weighed 350

  • @Chris_Willows
    @Chris_Willows Před 10 měsíci

    No comparison.. Anderson was another level

  • @sammysr.3190
    @sammysr.3190 Před 4 lety +5

    E.T.

  • @dhg1839
    @dhg1839 Před rokem

    your metric to us units conversion needs some work

  • @Magnus_Loov
    @Magnus_Loov Před rokem

    It should be noted that the American weightlifting coach learnt from the Russians in the 1954 world championship that they used Testosterone.
    So it can absolutely not be excluded that Paul Anderson was on that in the 1956 olympics.
    Cyr on the other hand you can be a 100% sure that he was clean. The "Bull testicle injections" were totally bogus, the simply didn't work.

  • @sanjaykumar-mt6hx
    @sanjaykumar-mt6hx Před 4 lety +3

    Louis cyr is riyal strongmen

  • @claudiodibenedetto2948

    Louis Cyr had a body weight of 127kg while paul andersen according to wikipedia had a body weight of 163/180kg😅. Louis Cyr and lived in the 1800s of humble origins were poor people, there was no (doping) it was pure natural force, Louis Cyr was the pioneer of the brute force of the strongman and is compared to Samson in the bible for having held back 4 draft horses having lifted 124kg with only one arm without assistance between these pushes a train carriage on an uphill rail and finally among the most impressive feats having lifted 1967kg with a back lift which was unthinkable at the time it is said that it was well liked by the people it had a short life.

  • @kyndred2008
    @kyndred2008 Před 3 lety

    you should check out another interesthing man Victor Delamarre strongman,

  • @TheBatugan77
    @TheBatugan77 Před rokem

    I regularly cleaned and pressed hundreds. Shirts & pants mostly.

  • @lazur1
    @lazur1 Před 3 lety +1

    4:31 I can't find any evidence of this actually happening.

  • @mark4lev
    @mark4lev Před rokem

    1:52 nails it. They both died from kidney issues. This is usual for people who have artificially boosted testosterone and high protein diets

  • @bohica519
    @bohica519 Před rokem +1

    Most interesting. I grew up on island with some of the strongest humans ever. One in particular could tear dimes and quarters in two, or 3 quarters at once into 6 pieces, or tear a quarter into 3 pieces like we can tear a piece of bubblegum into 3 pieces, pick up and carry a can hauler's wheel into the repair shop instead of using a forklift, stop a 100 hp GE electric motor, etc. His father and one of his uncles had such superhuman strength as well.

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před rokem +1

      Bob, thanks for this. So many stories like this indicate that many extremely powerful men existed who never performed or never got publicity if they did.

  • @harteverett
    @harteverett Před 4 lety +2

    ET a lil off topic here but I figured it be a good topic for you ... maybe. I saw a video of Russian circus performers juggling extremely heavy bronze colored balls. When the performer offered a man in the audience one to inspect he could barely pick it up with two hands. Seemed like an amazing feat of strength the way the performer tossed those balls around. He basically did some of what Harlem globe trotters do with a basketball but with if I had to guess 100lb + metal balls

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 4 lety

      I'll check for more info on this. Thanks!

    • @vikinona
      @vikinona Před 4 lety

      czcams.com/video/hryxZwDEFTE/video.html

  • @charlessavoie2367
    @charlessavoie2367 Před rokem

    Strongest men ever? Gilgamesh was 35 feet tall, allegedly. Samson; Maximinus Thrax; Thomas Topham.

  • @lazur1
    @lazur1 Před 4 lety +2

    3:21: "....so, if any young men are watching now, and you don't wanna work, get out there and do some hard work..." I DON"T WANNA WORK!!! REMEMBER?

  • @rkt_green
    @rkt_green Před 3 lety +1

    Louis Cyr is part of my family

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 3 lety

      Did any of his strength genes get passed down?

    • @rkt_green
      @rkt_green Před 3 lety +1

      @@ET-RAMBLINGS a little I'm 14 185 lbs able to lift around 300, cus that's my brother's weight

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 3 lety +2

      @@rkt_green Wow!! I believe we'll be hearing about a new Louis Cyr!! Keep training, eat healthy and stay natural.

    • @rkt_green
      @rkt_green Před 3 lety +2

      Yup, lol

    • @Bowhunter777
      @Bowhunter777 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ET-RAMBLINGS I am also related to Louis cyr my name is Paul cyr and I was also a powerlifter tied for fourth in the bench press in the United States in the hundred and 81 pound class 475

  • @alanrghill
    @alanrghill Před 3 lety +1

    At 3m55s "Feted by Queen Victoria and Prince Albert"? Albert died 2 years before Cyr was born!!!!!!

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 3 lety

      You're correct! Reports had Edward, the Prince of Whales, as accompanying the Queen during Cyr's performance. As you point out, Albert was long gone by that time.

  • @MultiParasite
    @MultiParasite Před 4 lety

    What the hell are you doing to the metric system?

  • @danmoyer4650
    @danmoyer4650 Před 3 lety

    What about Angus MaCaskill?

    • @ET-RAMBLINGS
      @ET-RAMBLINGS  Před 3 lety

      Dan, I uploaded a MacAskill video a few weeks ago.

  • @Islandstrength1955
    @Islandstrength1955 Před 3 lety +2

    Big Paul.

  • @rafailito100
    @rafailito100 Před 4 lety +6

    Zydrunas Savickas

  • @maximbourdages3128
    @maximbourdages3128 Před rokem

    I've look at my family tree and im in the Louis Cyr family ! Anderson is a great lifter but i know who i cheer for and it's not Anderson

  • @joesilveira4717
    @joesilveira4717 Před 2 lety +1

    Paul anderson strongest man ever

  • @iwannabethekid34xc
    @iwannabethekid34xc Před rokem

    uh... five foot eight isnt 2,047 cm bro...

  • @noname-bt9ky
    @noname-bt9ky Před 3 lety

    5’8” is 173cm

  • @beurreqc1791
    @beurreqc1791 Před 3 lety +1

    5ft 8" isn’t 2074 cm 😂 it’s 172 cm

  • @ivandrago72
    @ivandrago72 Před 3 lety

    7:23
    No, 3 tons = 3,000 kg not 2,722 kg

  • @doublem1975x
    @doublem1975x Před 2 lety

    Cyr's odd lifts and feats of strength were incredible. He was 100 years ahead of his time. Modern day strongmen struggle to replicate his feats. 5'10'' 385lbs , 60 inch chest , 20 inch forearms, 24 inch calves. Anderson while an impressive weightlifter for his era couldn't even deadlift 700lbs.

  • @geoffbell166
    @geoffbell166 Před 3 lety

    They did not live very long,but people did not live like nowdays,hard work bad nutrition,medical was not good then,they did not keep people artificially alive like nowdays...