Tag: Open Bodybuilding

2023 Bigman Spain Pro Show Results and Scorecards

2023 Bigman Spain Pro Show Results and Scorecards

Benidorm , Spain welcomed the 2023 Bigman Spain Pro Show this weekend from July 29-30. Competitors from the Men’s Open and Bikini categories gathered with the intention of earning an invite to this year’s Olympia competition.
This event is a qualifier for the upcoming Mr. Olympia contest taking place on Nov. 2-5 in Orlando, Florida inside the Orange County Convention Center. It’s been a busy season and athletes have already earned qualifications. However, the deadline for passage to the 2023 Mr. Olympia is Oct. 9. Brett Wilkin won the 2022 Bigman Spain Pro, but didn’t compete this weekend so a new champ emerged.
After putting on a show during the prejudging rounds and the finals, Roman Fritz emerged victorious with the Men’s Open title. He’ll have the opportunity to face the reigning Mr. Olympia Hadi Choopan in roughly three months. Meanwhile, Ivanna Escandar took home gold in Bikini. With her achievement, she will square off against Bikini Olympia Maureen Blanquisco.
2023 Bigman Spain Pro Show Winners

Men’s Open: Roman Fritz
Bikini: Ivanna Escandar

2023 Bigman Spain Pro Show Results Breakdown
Men’s Open

Winner — Roman Fritz
Second Place — Emir Omeragic
Third Place — Jose Manuel Munoz Quiles
Fourth Place — Pablo Llopis
Fifth Place — Krystian Wolski
Sixth Place — Jonny MC
Seventh Place — Jordi Llucian Armengol
Eighth Place — Marco Sarcone
Ninth Place — Youngbeom Kim
Tenth Place — Julio Mojica Lopez

Bikini

Winner — Ivanna Escandar
Second Place — Krishina Brunauer
Third Place — Chantal Hill
Fourth Place — Lisa Reith
Fifth Place — Jade Kelsie Wolfenden
Sixth Place — Raina Stamatiadou
Seventh Place — Sofia Maudos Pia
Eighth Place — Claudia Clemente
Ninth Place — Giuditta Taccani
Tenth Place — Alice Marchisio

2023 Bigman Spain Pro Show Scorecards

Fitness Volt congratulates the winners!
Published: 31 July, 2023 | 1:53 AM EDT

Larry Wheels On Not Doing ‘Extreme’ Men’s Open: ‘Classic Physique Feels Like an Art Form’

Larry Wheels On Not Doing ‘Extreme’ Men’s Open: ‘Classic Physique Feels Like an Art Form’

Multi-talented Larry Wheels is a popular figure in the fitness space with experience competing in multiple strength-based sports. He is gearing up for a move to bodybuilding in the Classic Physique division. In a recent post made on Instagram, Wheels revealed why he didn’t choose the Men’s Open category.
Larry Wheels first gained attention for his incredible feats of strength as a budding powerlifting sensation in 2017. He set the World Record of 2,275 pounds on the squat, bench, and deadlift without wraps in the 275-pound weight class, a record that was broken by Zac Meyers last month. In 2018, he made his amateur bodybuilding debut at the NPC Gold Coast Muscle Classic and scored gold overall.
Following a back injury, Wheels decided to quit steroids in August 2022. He chose to get on TRT (testosterone replacement therapy) as he slowly cut down on other performance-enhancing drugs. He revealed he’d switch to the Classic Physique division earlier this year. Open sensation Andrew Jacked and William Bonac partnered with Wheels to help him sharpen his posing abilities after the conclusion of the 2023 Arnold Classic.
Wheels left the fans stunned with a shredded physique update in prep for his highly awaited move to the Classic Physique division four months ago. He believes he’s already packing enough muscle on his massive frame and could hold his own with the use of TRT alone. Wheels showed off his insane bicep peak in an impressive physique update and posing session ahead of the transition.
The 28-year-old smashed a heavy set of 150-pound incline dumbbell shoulder presses and posted a ripped physique update two months ago. He added he was not lifting heavy weights in an effort to get his waist down. Then, he performed a massive 405-pound bench press for 22 reps.

Larry Wheels crushed a 150-pound incline dumbbell bench press for a taxing 25 reps last month. He also gave fans a sneak peek at the package he would bring in his Classic Physique debut.
‘Classic Physique Feels Like an Art Form’: Larry Wheels on Not Doing ‘Extreme’ Open
In a recent Instagram post, Larry Wheels revealed his reasons for choosing Classic Physique over the Men’s Open division. He favored Classic Physique due to its artistic touch and less extreme requirements.
“I’m trying to break into the Classic bodybuilding division so I’m dropping some weight, trying to get a bit healthier, get that tight snatched waist,” said Wheels. “It’s a big change from being a powerlifter, strongman, strength athlete, where being lean was just a byproduct of good genes and hard training but it was never a priority until now.
“The shift, because that’s just the direction the industry is going and also people like Joshua Manoi who lives out here in LA, very beautiful physique, very graceful when he poses. It feels more like an art form versus Open bodybuilding it feels like mass monsters. And I say that with respect to them because I know what it takes to get that far. It’s just I can’t put myself to that extreme to be where they’re at. And that’s not what I want for myself nor the message I want to pass on to my audience.
“I find that with Classic bodybuilding, I can use far less PEDs such as just TRT for example, and I can still be competitive, have a beautiful physique, still be super strong, and it’s still enhanced lifting and an enhanced lifestyle but a much healthier approach.”

Larry Wheels demolished a huge set of 500-pound paused bench presses with the encouragement of powerlifting legend CT Fletcher two weeks ago. Then, he collaborated with Stefi Cohen for an intense training session where he crushed a 405-pound bench press.
RELATED: Eddie Hall and Larry Wheels Crush an Intense Boulder Shoulder Workout
Based on his track record, Wheels has a good chance of finding success and fans are excited to see how he looks on stage.
Published: 12 July, 2023 | 9:42 PM EDT

2023 Orlando Pro Results and Scorecards

2023 Orlando Pro Results and Scorecards

The 2023 Orlando Pro delivered an exciting show and took place on July 1. Men’s Open bodybuilders gathered in Orlando, Florida for a chance to guarantee passage to the upcoming Mr. Olympia competition. 
For this year’s most prestigious contest, athletes have until October 9 to secure their respective invites. The 2023 Mr. Olympia show will return to Orlando, Florida from Nov. 2-5 inside the Orange County Convention Center.
Qualifying has been more difficult this year because there are fewer months to earn an invite than in 2022. In addition, the point system has been removed so bodybuilders must win a pro show to step on the big stage. 
Heading into this weekend, all eyes were on the defending champion Hassan Mostafa, who took gold at this event last year. Tonight was extra important for Hassan as he narrowly missed receiving his Olympia invite to Iain Valliere back at the 2023 Toronto Pro Supershow. Meanwhile, fans also expected a solid performance from veteran Phil Clahar, who continues to defy time with improvements season-to-season. 
In the end, Phil Clahar emerged victorious this weekend in Orlando and will have the opportunity to face the reigning Mr. Olympia Hadi Choopan. ‘The Persian Wolf’ asserted himself at the top of the category last year after dispatching contenders Derek Lunsford and Nick Walker in the finals. 
2023 Orlando Pro Winner 
Men’s Open: Phil Clahar
2023 Orlando Pro Results 
Men’s Open
During prejudging and the finals, fans and the judges acknowledged it was a two-man battle between the reigning champion Hassan Mostafa and Phil Clahar. Clahar brought great conditioning which helped him shine during some of the comparisons. Many fans saw the contest close as Mostafa once again brought an impressive package to the stage. 
Clahar has his sights set on the upcoming Masters Olympia contest in Romania on Aug. 26-27, 2023. Although he hasn’t clinched a victory in an Open show since turning pro in 2018, he has consistently been a strong contender in several competitions. In fact, he secured the second overall position at the 2021 Tampa Pro, finishing just behind Valliere.
Clahar’s most recent appearance was at the 2022 Boston Pro, where he achieved a respectable sixth place. 

Winner — Phil Clahar
Second Place — Hassan Mostafa
Third Place — Stan de Longeaux
Fourth Place — Emmanuel Alvarez 
Fifth Place — Chris Didomenico
Sixth Place — Jason Lowe
Seventh Place — Mohammad Alnsoor
Eighth Place — Ray Short 
Ninth Place — Matt Kouba 
Tenth Place — Erik Ramirez 

2023 Orlando Pro Scorecards 
2023 Orlando Pro Results Men S Open
FitnessVolt congratulates the winner on the big victory! 
Published: 1 July, 2023 | 9:14 PM EDT

2023 Musclecontest California Pro Results — Ross Flanigan Wins Bodybuilding Title

2023 Musclecontest California Pro Results — Ross Flanigan Wins Bodybuilding Title

Bodybuilding action took over the West Coast this weekend in Anaheim, CA at the 2023 Musclecontest California Pro. Competitors from the Men’s Open division battled on May 27 as they aim to lock in their invites to this year’s Mr. Olympia. 
Unlike in 2022, athletes have fewer months to qualify for the Mr. Olympia competition in November. In addition, the point system has been removed, therefore bodybuilders must win a pro show in order to make an appearance on the sport’s biggest stage. 

Last weekend, the 2023 New York Pro, headlined by the Open class, saw two names in the running for gold: Tonio Burton and Stuart Sutherland. Ultimately, Burton’s fullness and deep muscle separation got the job done. Both men are competing again in California, however, they will face a new addition to the roster as Sergio Oliva Jr. entered the show last minute. Sergio has shared consistent updates in the lead-up to the event and revealed he’s weighing approximately 286 pounds. Meanwhile, Seung Chul Lee is also looking for a statement performance. 
2023 Musclecontest California Pro Results (Live Update)
Men’s Open Bodybuilding

Winner — Ross Flanigan
Second Place — Tonio Burton
Third Place — Sergio Oliva Jr.
Fourth Place — Stuart Sutherland
Fifth Place — Bednar

More coming soon!
Ross Flanigan
2023 Musclecontest California Pro Scorecard 

Coming Soon!

Fitness Volt congratulates the winner!
Published: 27 May, 2023 | 10:15 PM EDT

Lee Haney: Open Athletes Are ’60-Lbs Overweight Traumatizing Themselves with Terrible Diets’

Lee Haney: Open Athletes Are ’60-Lbs Overweight Traumatizing Themselves with Terrible Diets’

Lee Haney rose to the top of the sport with exceptional balance, conditioning, and fullness. In a recent Escape Fitness interview, Haney fired shots at Open bodybuilders for poor nutrition and relived his first Mr. Olympia victory in 1984. 
Bodybuilding legend Lee Haney dominated the IFBB Pro League during the 1980s. He is an eight-time Mr. Olympia winner (1984-1991), a reign he made possible with an unyielding work ethic and sheer determination. During his bodybuilding tenure, Haney faced the cream of the crop, having battled with three-time Mr. Olympias Sergio Oliva, Frank Zane, as well as Lee Labrada, and Rich Gaspari. 
Since Haney’s dominant title run, the sport has undergone dramatic changes. After Haney retired on top in 1991, mass monsters would soon stake their claim in the division. Despite changes to the category, fans, and bodybuilding veterans alike agree that Haney displayed one of the most complete physiques ever. 

While he competed in a different era, Lee Haney has continually warned competitors today about who they choose to train with. And now it appears Haney is taking issue with Open competitors who have developed a seemingly unhealthy relationship with food. 
Lee Haney Talks Poor Nutrition & Offers Advice to Bodybuilders: “Always Stay Within Striking Distance” 
According to the bodybuilding icon, low-carb diets are for ‘fat boys.’ He encouraged athletes to keep a healthy relationship with food so it’s easier to prepare for bodybuilding shows. 
“Low carb is for fat boys. If you look like a porkey the pig in the off-season, you’re fat! You got to burn that stuff off. When you trying to get rid of all that weight through aerobics and starvation, your muscle is not going to have that life to it.
That life force where it looks great on stage and it’s popping because you’re aerobic-ing yourself to death and stress will show up on your physique, it’ll tear you up. So, my message has always been in bodybuilding as I share with young athletes, always stay within striking distance. Train around, no more than around 12-15 pounds over your competition weight,” said Lee Haney. 

Haney says 3% body fat is the goal on stage and believes athletes can adjust their nutrition based on where they are in their respective prep. 
“If you’re 15 or 16 weeks out, if you’re 15% body fat, then guess what? You can drop a percentage every week until you bottom out at 3% or 3.5% you’re ready then. And if you get there too quick then guess what? Increase the food intake. I don’t believe in zero carbs. I never had to do that. I was a carb monster. My carbs would be 4 to 500 grams of carbohydrates a day because I was never a fat boy.” 
“These guys get 40, 50, 60 pounds overweight and they have to traumatize themselves, eating chicken and green beans, what kind of life is that? It’s terrible man. It’s ignorance,” added Haney. “Never go below 50 grams of carbs. Zero carbohydrates for me, keto for me, if you want to call it keto, we just said lower your carbohydrates.” 
Unlike his contemporaries, who consumed sunflower seeds, almonds, and walnuts, Haney underscored that modern competitors carb up with bacon, cheese, and ‘garbage.’ 
“The muscles overcompensate when you put the carbs back in, that’s why we want to hit the stage and we’re full and the muscles and the veins are popping. Even on another point, when we do carbohydrate deplete, we don’t use bacon, cheese, and garbage. We used sunflower seeds, we used almonds, we used walnuts.” 
“They have half-truths [people in fitness and bodybuilding], they don’t live and they haven’t lived what we lived. When I say we, we’re bodybuilders, that’s what we do. We understand the science of food. They don’t [online coaches]. They just read stuff and don’t get it right and get a lot of people hurt living off statins.” 
Haney on Winning 1st Mr. Olympia in 1984: “It Was a Dream Come True”
Haney said he won his first Mr. Olympia weighing 233 pounds. He credited Arnold Schwarzenegger, Frank Zane, Robby Robinson, and Ed Corney as early influences. 

“Winning a Mr. Olympia is a miracle in itself and to be there on the same stage with Frank Zane and Robby Robinson, Sergio Olvia was there… wow. You know, that was absolutely incredible. It was like a dream come true man. You watched these guys in the magazines, you grew up admiring them, there you are, standing on stage with them. To be the winner and the victor, wow. Thank you, lord,” added Haney. 
“The previous year I weighed 243 but winning at 233. I had went back and figured out through my notes and studied what had went wrong. No one had stepped on an Olympia stage at the weight and at that height. I knew that was a winning package. You size up your competition. I always knew if I had a combination of Arnold, Robby, Frank Zane, Ed Corney, who can beat that? And I felt that’s what I had achieved during my whole career, not just for that one but during my whole career. That’s what I wanted to be like, a combination of all of those gentlemen, those awesome legends.” 
Haney isn’t the only bodybuilding veteran from a different era taking aim at the Open category. A few months back, 1990s standout Rich Gaspari accused Open bodybuilders of abusing steroids instead of depending on consistent training. In an additional Fitness, Fame & Fortune podcast, Gaspari said he personally favored the look of Classic Physique Olympia Chris Bumstead over recent Men’s Open Mr. Olympia winners. 
Given his expertise, Lee Haney is determined to educate new talent making their way into bodybuilding. He stands by his approach, which saw him set the all-time Mr. Olympia win record that was later matched by Ronnie Coleman. 
You can watch the full video on the Escape Fitness YouTube channel below: 

RELATED: Lee Haney Shares Iconic Police Traffic Stop Photoshoot After First Mr. Olympia Win in 1984
Published: 24 May, 2023 | 4:44 PM EDT

Sergio Oliva Jr. Responds To Recent Criticism Surrounding Open Bodybuilding

Sergio Oliva Jr. Responds To Recent Criticism Surrounding Open Bodybuilding

Sergio Oliva Jr. recently made comments about some negativity around Open Bodybuilding.
There has been plenty of criticism surrounding Open Bodybuilding in recent months. This comes after a recent string of deaths and major competitions such as the Arnold Classic and Olympia. Many old-school bodybuilders have been critical of today’s sport, including Robby Robinson, Lee Haney, and Samir Bannout. Recently, Sergio Oliva Jr. responded to criticism and came to the defense of today’s Open Bodybuilding.
Oliva Jr. recently finished third at the 2021 Legion Sports Fest. Following the competition, Oliva Jr. took to Instagram to defend the sport and acknowledge the hard work and dedication that it takes to get to the top.

“The ig pages that constantly bash open bodybuilding won’t post these kinds of pics. They’ll run to post shiesty ass click bate posts to start drama and get traction to their pages only talking about who lost to who rather than how aesthetically pleasing that lineup was on Sunday. How much promise and potential was in the top 6 with so many up and coming future stars.”

Sergio Oliva Jr. has turned into one of the best posers in bodybuilding. He is the son of Sergio Oliva, a three-time Olympia champion who had many battles with Arnold Schwarzenegger. Because of this, Oliva Jr. has been around the sport for many years and has seen plenty of changes.

This generation of Open Bodybuilding is based on size and conditioning. This has caused an uproar because of the preparation that athletes go through and the dangers of some tactics. This has even caused Schwarzenegger to make a statement himself on how to improve the division.
“With all the talk about open bodybuilding shape being dead and this and that I didn’t see anyone you wouldn’t want to look like and Older bodybuilders who talk shit about our generation don’t watch every show (I get it) but then talk about what isn’t around anymore or what’s dead. I will say this the coverage for content from @legionsportsfest was a lil weak. Unless they are about to come out with a ton of footage there really isn’t a lot of the actual stage stuff.But anyone who was there or watched the live stream know it was so crazy at the end. So loud such a fight but at the same time spewing with comradely. We even had guys yelling from the back rooting us on.”
Sergio Oliva Jr. continued his intense response via Instagram by calling out some of the veterans for their lack of knowledge about today’s sport.
“But someone better tell @garystrydomofficial and @robbyrobinsonofficial and @officialsamirbannout and allllll of the other veteran bodybuilders that don’t contribute to any open athlete currently with training and mentoring ultimately which would make a difference yet rather sit on the side lines and complain that, bodybuilding isn’t just the top 3 at the Olympia. You don’t agree with that decision, fine. But quit with this exaggeration that the whole bodybuilding class doesn’t exhibit any old skl qualities that it started with. The problem is, all that stuff doesn’t get views and likes at the end of the day by the majority and it goes unseen. Like moments like this. #BodybuildingIsntDeadJustYourPerspectiveOfItIs“
Sergio Oliva Jr. will not be the only athlete to come out and support bodybuilding and the positive news surrounding the sport. This has turned into a storyline where there are two clear sides to take and neither seems like it is going to budge.
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