Ken Leistner is
an American strength training writer, personal trainer, strength
consultant for the National Football League, and chiropractor.
He is often known as "Dr. Ken". Photo By Kathy Leistner
- Stone by Slaters
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History
of Powerlifting, Weightlifting and Strength Training - Part
One
by Dr. Ken Leistner
There are many fundamental differences among
the participants of the various aspects of
the iron related sports. The emotional response
and make up of the athletes involved in strongman
competition differs from those who compete
in bodybuilding shows and powerlifters think
and often behave very differently than those
who do Olympic weightlifting as their primary
sport. It wasn’t always like this. Powerlifting
wasn’t organized as a sport until 1964
and yes, I was there for that. It wasn’t
seen as a momentous occasion and few of its
participants believed that the “odd lift” contests
that had been held on a more or less regular
basis for perhaps a four or five year period,
would significantly change just because the
activity now had a name and an official organization.
We were obviously wrong in that belief for
both positive and negative reasons.
Through the 1950’s and early 1960’s Olympic weightlifting
was the dominant sport for those who lifted weights. Some,
myself included, realized early and accepted the fact that
they were not athletic enough, explosive enough, quick enough,
or patient enough to excel as proponents of the two-hand press,
snatch, and clean and jerk. Those were the three official lifts
and if anyone on a New York City subway thought you lifted
weights or noted that your physical development was above average,
and of course had the gumption to approach you about it, the
leading question would always be “How much can you press?” Even
the lay person or “unathletic” knew that the press
was the measuring stick for those who believed themselves strong.
Weight training of any type was considered to be a cult activity
until the late 1960’s. Even in the New York City Metropolitan
area with its millions of inhabitants, it was a cult and most
of us were acquainted with each other or recognized each other
on sight. In discussion about the Weider sponsored national
level “Mr.” contests that were usually held at
the Brooklyn Academy Of Music, in part to lend the occasions
an air of legitimacy and elegance, there was a casual closeness
to the audience. My comment to a young enthusiast who has a
strong interest in the history of the iron game, was that “if
5000 people attended the 1968 grouping of contests that included
the Mr. American, Mr. Universe, and Mr. Olympia contests on
the same evening, 3000 of us would either know each other or
recognize one another from the various hole-in-the-wall gyms,
garages, basements, or storefront facilities throughout the
City and Long Island. The other 2000 would be gay guys who
stood in the bathroom and watched the big bodybuilders taking
a leak.” Don’t shoot the messenger, it was a different
time and that’s how it was.
Astounding to the past two or three generations of trainees
is the fact that most of the big time bodybuilders were very
strong and most of the Olympic and powerlifters had very good,
well developed physiques. This was the result of having limited
equipment to train with and the use of the same basic exercises
by almost everyone who trained in a serious manner. For example,
Olympic weightlifters would do squats or front squats as their
primary lower extremity movements and supplement that with
deadlifts, cleans, snatches, and pulls. Doing full squat cleans
or snatches and arising from the bottom, the equivalent of
placing oneself at a severe disadvantage before doing a front
squat, gave obvious work to the hips and thighs. As the Odd
Lifts of the bench press, squat, deadlift, and barbell curl
in varying order and with varying rules grew into the official
sport of powerlifting, competitors performed squats, front
squats, and deadlifts as their primary lower extremity work,
and supplemented this with cleans or power cleans ala the typical
regimen of Olympic lifters. Serious bodybuilders, those big
and hard enough to consider competing, did squats and front
squats, deadlifts and cleans, and prior to competition “cut
up” with additional leg extensions and leg curls. Upper
body work for all centered around the standing barbell press
and heavy rows and shrugs. The Olympic lifters would include
snatch work, the bodybuilders would include arms and some pulldowns
or chins, and the powerlifters would incorporate almost any
of the basic movements done by the other two groups. With the
emphasis on basic multi-joint movements, almost everyone who
lifted weights in a consistently serious manner, over time,
became quite strong and looked darned good if their diet wasn’t
totally out of order.
In an age of specialization where most lifters and bodybuilders
don’t even train in the same facilities, I’m sure
this seems quite strange and pointless. However, everyone believed
they were “in it together” because the general
public viewed anyone with developed muscles and anyone who
devoted more than a passing moment to lifting weights as “odd,” “off,” “a
narcissist,” or misguided. Until the post-World War II
era, few could devote any time to weight training because economic
conditions demanded that everyone, meaning every male, be gainfully
employed and often with two jobs. The leisure time that sprung
from the prosperity of post-War America allowed for time and
energy to be placed upon developing one’s strength and
physique if one wished and only then did any of the weight
sports begin to grow beyond the bounds of cult-status and become
part of the consciousness of the general public.
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