This blog suffers from a paucity of Ava Cowan pics, and I intend to rectify that situation, no matter how little she has to do with the subject at hand.
Arthur Saxon
Vital Statistics
Height: 5'10"Weight: 200 lbs.
Chest: 49"
Biceps: 17 1/8"
Forearm: 14 3/4"
Thigh: 24"
Calf: 16 3/4"
Bent Press: 371 lbs.
Two Hands Anyhow: 448 lbs.
Clean and Press: 342 lbs.
Of all of the guys on whom I've blogged, Saxon has got to be my favorite. A consummate maniac, this guy lifted big, lived bigger, and ate even bigger than that. Given the fact that the guy topped out at 200 lbs, you'd expect the following to be a giant bag of bullshit and historical revisionism. It is, however, straight from the proverbial mouth of a friend of Saxon's teammate. The following are direct quotes about what the Saxon Trio (Arthur was the most famous and distinguished lifter in a competitive team) ate.
- "For breakfast they ate 24 eggs and 3 pounds of smoked bacon; porridge with cream, honey, marmalade and tea with plenty of sugar. At three o'clock they had dinner: ten pounds of meat was consumed with vegetables (but not much potatoes); sweet fruits, raw or cooked, sweet cakes, salads, sweet puddings, cocoa and whipped cream and very sweet tea. Supper, after the show, they had cold meat, smoked fish, much butter, cheese and beer. Following this they had a chat and at one o'clock went to bed."
- "The Saxons did have a "health drink" which I presume they concocted themselves. The ingredients were dark lager beer (or Dublin stout) mixed with Holland gin, the yolk of an egg and plenty of sugar. "It is a very good but strong drink" was the Saxon opinion, "but, if you are not used to it you will get dizzy very quickly." It seems to me that one would have to be a very strong man in the first place, in order to drink it."
- "Later, in England, as performers, Hermann and Kurt were partial to sweet foods and sugar. They tried very hard to gain weight but in spite of sweets and a terrific appetite, sometimes consuming one pound of butter between them, they failed to gain weight; sometimes only a few pounds which they could not hold. Arthur, the oldest, did not care for sweets and butter; even as a child he did not care for butter. Instead of butter he would use the lard from pork."
- "Their three o'clock dinner consisted mostly of roasted or fried meat, beef, pork or veal, not much potatoes, plenty of salads with oil just as in their childhood. Sometimes they had vegetables, but always lean meat. Every day they had pudding-yorkshire, rice, sago, etc., but very sweet. Then there was always raw or cooked fruits and nothing to drink. Sometimes, on one day during the week, they roasted poultry, goose, chicken, or turkey."
- "One day during the week they had fried or boiled fish, plenty of butter and toast but no potatoes. At six o'clock they had "tea"-this was mostly raw minced meat with raw onions, German bread and plenty of butter; sometimes sweet cakes and coffee were substituted."
- "Their late supper included herrings (when they could get them) and eaten in the same manner they had become accustomed to in childhood. The herrings were sometimes used in salad form; they made their own mayonnaise with raw whipped eggs and oil. There never was any whisky or brandy at home. Even as children they did not care for milk and as men they developed no taste for it. At "tea" time they very often had whipped cream. They did not care for boiled eggs, instead, they went big for poached eggs with plenty of butter."(Gadreau)
Louis Cyr
Vital Statistics
Height: 5'8.5
Weight: 320
Neck - 20"/50.8cm
Biceps - 20"/51.5cm
Forearms - 16.3"/41.4cm
Chest (normal) - 55.2"/140.2cm
Waist - 47.4"/120.4cm
Thighs - 28.5"/72.4cm
Calves - 19.3"/49cm
Ready and waiting, ladies.
His appetite was even more legendary than his lifts, however, as I think even the freakish Japanese eating champs would have trouble eating like Cyr. According to George Jowett, "He could eat more than four ordinary men at one sitting, and took a keen delight watching the amazement creep over the waiter's face when he turned in his order at the hotel. Six pounds of meat at one meal was nothing for him. He could devour that for breakfast.... Many a gourmand has gone away wiser in head and lighter in pocket after a meat-and-potato contest with the giant Louis."(111) "One time [Louis and Barre] had an eating match to be decided by which could devour a twenty-two pound suckling pig the quickest, and they say that Louis was done when Horace was little more than halfway through."(134) It's that kind of eating that fuels a big body, rather than the ridiculous bodybuilder-style chicken and rice fests that comprise the best of the scrawny-lifters' bleating about their inability to gain weight.
Doug Hepburn
Vital Statistics
Height: 5'8
Weight: 300
Hepburn's diet relied on two cornerstones: milk and eggs. This is fairly unsurprising given that he was a Hoffman product, and Bob Hoffman was one of the progenitors of milk and egg protein supplements. What was surprising, however, was the amount of food Hepburn ate- as a young lifter, at every meal, he ate 18 eggs, a bunch of bananas, and a half gallon of milk. This amounts to a total of 540 grams of protein, which increased as his bodyweight increased. (Katterle) Later in life, he continued to eat in such a manner as to make the dead fat guy from Se7en look like he was a light snacker, and would eat 6-8 eggs with every meal, a "normal portion of meat", and wash it all down with a shitload of milk 4-5 times a day. Additionally, Hepburn consumed massive quantities of protein supplements and vitamins, and "consumed as much as three imperial quarts during a two-hour workout."(Kiiha) Thus, he was drinking well over a gallon of milk a day, in addition to a couple of dozen eggs as a supplement to his regular food intake.
Think you eat a lot? Doug Hepburn would think you were a lying sack of shit, if he wasn't so dead.
Hermann Goerner
Vital Statistics
Height: 6'1"
Weight: 264-293
Neck: 20"
Expanded Chest: 52.5"
Biceps: 18.75"
Forearms: 17"
Waist: 38"
Thighs: 27"
Another one of my all-time favorites, Goerner was pretty much a gigantic version of Arthur Saxon, with the addition of war hero status, elephant-wrestling, and a Hitler mustache. I blogged about him here, and consider him to be one of the single coolest people to have ever lived. Like the rest of these guys, Goerner ate protein first, most, and with a motherfucking vengeance. In stark contrast to Hepburn, Goerner eschewed milk products for meat, which he ate in any form he could find it. According to his best friend, who followed him around like a stenographer would follow a particularly self-absorbed potentate, "Goerner is firmly convinced that a mixed diet is the best for a strong man, with emphasis laid on eating good meals with the accent on meat! He particularly partial to pork and beef and also wurst- German sausagemeat. Vegetables also, together with potatoes, but not overdoing the latter. He is very fond of nuts- particularly walnuts- and all fruits: apples especially, which he thinks every strongman should eat, as well as oranges and other citrus fruits. Cheese and eggs also figure into his diet, but he does not care for rich pastries nor does he drink milk in any quantity."(Mueller 108-9) Utilizing that paleo-esque diet, Goerner hit an all time bodyweight high of 293, and remained fairly lean while doing so. The key to his weight gain was quantity, as he would spend a couple of hours in the bar attached to his gym eating sausage and drinking beer after every workout.
Clearly, Goerner lived the fucking life.
In the next installment of this series, we'll cover a couple other examples and take a look at the constant theme running through the workouts of these beasts. Additionally, I'll continue to mock the ever-loving shit out of people you probably know, deride their clearly inferior intellects, and possibly piss on their grandfathers' graves.
GOMAD?
Anderson, Paul. Diet and Nutrition. http://ditillo2.blogspot.com/2008/06/nutrition-paul-anderson.html
Gaudreau, Leo. THE SAXON TRIO: What they ate & how they trained. From Muscle Power Magazine, courtesy of Joe Weider. http://www.bobwhelan.com/history/saxontrio.html
Gentle, David. Louis Cyr: Strongest Man Who Ever Lived. http://www.sandowplus.co.uk/Competition/Cyr/cyr-biog.htm
Jones, Glenn. Obesity and misreported food intake. Harmonizing Health and Economics. 2009. http://ihea2009.abstractbook.org/presentation/340/
Jowett, George. The Strongest Man That Ever Lived. Philadelphia: Milo Publishing Company, 1927. http://www.sandowplus.co.uk/Competition/Cyr/The%20Strongest%20Man%20That%20Ever%20Lived/album/index.html
Katterle, Sean. Doug Hepburn's Raw Strength. http://ditillo2.blogspot.com/2009/02/doug-hepburns-raw-strength-sean.html
Kiiha, Osmo. Doug Ivan Hepburn. http://www.bobwhelan.com/history/hepburn.html
Mueller, Edgar. Goerner the Mighty. Leeds, 1951.
Volek JS, Kraemer WJ, Bush JA, Incledon T, Boetes M. Testosterone and cortisol in relationship to dietary nutrients and resistance exercise. J Appl Physiol 1997;82:49-54.
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