Lex Fridman Podcast - #265 – Devon Larratt: Arm Wrestling
Episode Date: February 17, 2022Devon Larratt is a professional arm wrestler, widely considered to be one of the best of all time. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Allform: https://allform.com/lex to get 2...0% off - Eight Sleep: https://www.eightsleep.com/lex and use code LEX to get special savings - InsideTracker: https://insidetracker.com/lex and use code Lex25 to get 25% off - ExpressVPN: https://expressvpn.com/lexpod and use code LexPod to get 3 months free - SimpliSafe: https://simplisafe.com/lex and use code LEX to get a free security camera EPISODE LINKS: Devon's Instagram: https://instagram.com/devlarratt Devon's YouTube: https://youtube.com/devlarratt Devon's Facebook: https://facebook.com/devon.larratt.5 Devon's Website: https://nolimitsarmwrestling.com/ PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (06:42) - Over the Top and John Brzenk (18:15) - Strength vs skill vs strategy (42:38) - Denis Cyplenkov (1:11:44) - Jodi Larratt (1:15:45) - Canadian Special Forces (1:20:19) - Arm wrestling (1:27:03) - Freedom arm wrestling (1:38:36) - Diet (1:46:00) - Devon vs The Mountain (1:57:30) - Mortality (2:03:03) - Aliens and robots
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The following is a conversation with Devon Leritt, considered by many to be one of the greatest
arm wrestlers in history.
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This is the Lex Friedman podcast, and here is my conversation with Devon Leret.
You are considered to be one of the greatest arm wrestlers in history, plus one of the most
charismatic and fun people to watch in arm wrestling.
But let me first start with a ridiculous controversial opinion.
I actually really enjoy over the top of the movie with the Sylvester Stallone, where he's
a trucker, he's like a father-son movie. It's you know like a bunch of sports have the definitive movie the boxing has
Rocky, maybe folk style collegiate wrestling has vision quest
What else is there billiards has color of money. Yeah, this is
The sort of movie for arm wrestling. So what did over the top get right?
What did get wrong about arm wrestling?
That was actually based off of a real story.
A lot of people don't know that.
Yeah, the over the top movie,
I mean, to a certain degree,
that's actually real life.
Like that tournament over the top was real.
Yeah.
It was literally named over the top.
Yes, yes.
There was a trucker division and the guy
actually won a truck for reals. Name's John Bersink. You know who that is, right? So the actual
over the top tournament, the trucker division was won by John. Who is John Bersink? He is, a lot of
people talk about him as like a legend and one of not the greatest arm wrestlers of all time. John Bersenk is every arm wrestlers father to a certain degree
all of us. The entire sport looks up to him. He, it's incredible what he's done. I mean,
at 18 he won over the top at 57. He just competed with me a couple months ago. Still at the world
level, 18, that's 40 years of being at the top of the sport. It's incredible. He's hailed
as the greatest of all time in the sport arm wrestling.
And he doesn't, he's beaten some monsters. Oh, yeah. Yeah. And he doesn't, I mean, when you talk about like the,
the evolution of the sport, he's responsible for so much of it. Like, when you talk about, like,
a lot of times when you go back like 20 years, 30 years, a lot of us looked at arm wrestling,
I think it's, I mean,'s something you could kind of do.
And he's the first guy who's like,
if you wanna get better at arm wrestling, you got arm wrestling.
And it seems so simple, but,
he answered so many questions that all of us had
about techniques in the sport,
back pre-video internet.
Yeah, he's been everybody's target for like 40 years. So in terms of strength, there's a power in terms of skill.
What did he teach the sport of arm wrestling?
So if you look, how did the sport change from 80s, 90s to the odds?
You were at the top of the world for many years, you know,
you, many argue you're still at the very top of the world,
but like you were
very dominant both left and right hand in, I don't know, 2008 to 2013, something like
that. So how did that sport evolve to today?
So it's hard for me to comment, you know, prior to, you know, when I came to the sport was
kind of mid-90s, like I've been arm wrestling my whole life, but I came to the sport was kind of mid-90s.
Like I've been arm wrestling my whole life, but I wasn't really involved in the sport
to a major degree until probably mid-90s.
But I'll say that before the mid-90s, it was really hard to get good at arm wrestling.
Very difficult.
Everybody was doing it wrong, really. Like it was really rare to find people
who were technically good arm wrestlers.
It was very underground.
When I got into sport, it was a flyer that came in the mail.
You had to know somebody, who knew somebody,
who knew somebody, and then you go to a club
and you can't do anything with these people.
And they knew how arm wrestle.
They did.
But real masters were rare.
And, you know, then internet helped everybody.
Communication.
The transfer of knowledge became so much faster.
People became technically invested.
People start training, sharing ideas.
By, I'd say, 2000, well, probably around the turn
of the millennia, I'd say that professional leagues started
to slowly pick up, More organized, bigger productions started to track more athletes.
More people took it seriously by 2010.
I'd say there was another jump.
More serious leagues.
A little bit more money.
By 2015, more major media.
Like people who were investing a lot of money.
Millionaires, billionaires type of people were organizing events, setting up leagues.
And yeah, I mean, the past five years, it's just blown up.
The techniques, I mean, if I was to go back to when I know, what took me 10 or 15 years to learn?
I mean, new guys are showing up and they've got it down in like a year.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, the thing about it, the development of this port is it's like I was telling you off
Mike, it's a battle of one versus one.
And then that can turn into battle of nations, which, you know, there is, there's Canada,
there's United States, there's all the Eastern, Europe, Russia, Georgia, all of that.
That's what makes some of the greatest sports in Olympics grade, like weightlifting.
It's a battle of nations, not just a battle of individuals.
And it's almost like these two humans
represent the two nations.
And I see that very much.
We'll talk about your matches coming up,
but there is that battle between North America
and that other part of the world.
Yeah.
North America is very prized.
The North American champion is always highly sought after because they're typically the
most famous.
Even still, when quite arguably, there's always somebody in Eastern Europe who's just monstrous.
It's typically the North American athlete who's more recognized.
By the way, we'll have a cup here with some maple syrup. Cheers Lex. Cheers. Which is you probably show
You just down that whole thing. No, no, no. I'm gonna sip it. I'm gonna sip it, you know, but by all means
It's really good, right? Yeah. Yeah, that is a maple syrup. Yeah, that's a perfect July day
In Canada in a bottle. Yeah, so you're on a totally
On a total tangent you are known for appreciating food in all kinds of ways
But one of the things you're known for is pancakes
That is yeah, that's gone to a crazy place in the sport, but yeah, like, where that originated.
So, where that originated went from like your actual love for pancake to the meme.
So, I think what happened was, so I had a match with Michael Todd, big match.
Michael, great champion.
He's another guy who's, you know, he's never going to get off the horse.
You know, he's, he's, his elbow is a complete disaster.
Probably one of the most loved and hated guys in the sport right now.
Is it because of the Kings move?
Yeah.
Yeah, the Kings move brings
them a lot of hate. Not from me, not from a lot of people, but a lot of observers have
a big problem with the Kings move. What's wrong with being a little bit controversial?
That's fun. You know, I get so passionate about it. I get so angry, you know, because
there's a saying like, oh, can you beat him in a hook? Can you beat me in?
Win. Yeah, win. That's all I'm asking.
Just win and don't talk to me about anything else. Yeah. If you can win with style, win with stop.
But don't talk to me about anything but winning other than that's the priority. So you had this match with my guitar. Yeah.
So I was in a terrible place.
So you had this match with my guitar? Yeah.
So I was in a terrible place.
I guess it was, I get so screwed up with the years.
It's 2022 now, right?
No, it's 2030.
What are you talking about?
That's right.
I think it is actually 2030.
We're way ahead of schedule.
Yeah.
Oh, man.
That's right.
So when was this?
This was like a decade ago?
No, this is like a year and a bit ago.
So it was very recent. Very recent. Yeah a year and a bit ago. Oh, it's very recent.
Very recent. Yeah. So I got really sick.
Is that the match? Yeah, this is the match, right?
Awesome match. So this is this match is for the legacy hammer. So we invented this thing
called the legacy hammer and Michael took it from me and I think 2018 and then COVID shut everything down and
Michael went overseas to try and set up because at that time
Michael was the North American champion
he beat me and
He went to Dubai and he organized this great big match with Levant and the whole thing fell apart
organizers leagues wouldn't let it happen
But the there was still an ability to have a match
of significance happen.
So Michael's like, who do you want?
And I like, let's give Devon a rematch.
And I'm like, yes.
And I was really sick at the time.
I had DVT, I had pulmonary embolism,
I was mentally in a terrible place,
and I got offered the match,
and I just totally turned my life around and
I committed
Really hard. Yeah, and what happened in this match, by the way, oh, I just totally destroyed him
Yeah, I'd just beat the piss out of him. Yeah
I'd just beat the piss out of him. Yeah.
Michael's a good friend of mine, but there's a lot of camaraderie
that you guys talked afterwards.
But we fight like brothers, you know?
So we let each other really fight hard against each other.
But so I was, I knew, I mean, strength and mass,
they go hand in hand.
And I committed to just getting as big and as strong as I could.
And literally, I was eating pancakes every day.
Bacon pancakes, every sloppy bit of garbage food I could eat.
I was trying to eat healthy also,
but if there was garbage food, I'd eat it.
We mean bacon and pancakes isn't healthy.
What are you talking about?
Exactly.
If people should go watch, there's a video where you make
the Canadian meal of bacon with some bacon cooking tips.
Water, that was interesting.
Yeah.
And then obviously pancakes and maple syrup
all over the whole thing.
Yeah.
Yeah, you're making me very hungry.
I've caused more diabetes than, you know, probably going to get in trouble
comically for making the world obese.
You should probably write a book, The Pancake Diet.
Yeah, Evan Leritz.
I think I will do that one day.
So you said, mass and strength go hand in hand, just at a big level about arm wrestling.
What's more important, Strength, power, endurance, skill, strategy,
or mental toughness? Like, how do these components all come into play in arm wrestling?
They're all important. You can use everything and you can adjust your strategy based off of
the tools that you have. I would say if I could pick ever just one thing to have more of, I would say
that it would be strength gained while fighting.
While actually arm wrestling is not off the, no, no, no.
So you get stronger from arm wrestling.
How do you get stronger from arm wrestling?
Like in Jiu-Jitsu and grappling grappling you can get good by training with people much
technically worse than you. So white belts and blue belts, it's actually beneficial.
Because you get to work stuff out. But I wouldn't say develops like that intensity and power
required to go against people at your level. So how do you balance that?
Is it okay to go against people that are much weaker than you
or do you really have to go against people
at the same level?
I think that a blended strategy is probably the best.
I'd say kind of a rule is whatever you do, you get better at.
So you want to be kind of as precise as possible.
You don't want to get hurt.
And it's just about investment.
And the answer is not always the same.
Things are going to change.
I am currently a big believer in what I call tower building.
So you have to do a lot of volume to build a great tower.
You need to have a ton of volume.
So when you look at how to best build volume, you want to do workouts that aren't particularly
challenging to make you feel good and do them
so that when you add them all together you get the biggest number. So many easy workouts today
that are specific as possible in my opinion is the best way to lay the foundation for an extreme peak and precision, right? Like there's no more
precise way to get strong at arm wrestling than arm wrestling.
So, how often can you arm wrestle? What's your training measurement? You've talked about
this as the climb, right? What is the training process to get great
at arm wrestling? Well, again, it's going to depend on what level you're at. The answer
at the beginning might not be the same. For me, guys have been doing it almost 30 years.
I have to harvest. I have to harvest energy from clubs.
I call it Cosmic Punch.
Sorry to interrupt you were here in Austin, Texas.
You were in Austin, Texas, but you were at the, what was it called?
The water tank.
You had an awesome crowd.
It was great.
I get to watch it.
I get to interact with a lot of those guys.
Yes, just amazing community, amazing human beings. I got to talk to Demet of those guys. Just amazing community, amazing human beings.
I got to talk to Dmitry and Russian in English.
She's a, he's a engineer, his wife is a engineer.
So he's a brilliant dude, but also one of the toughest,
I guess, guys you face there, but you face, I don't know,
how many people, most of them hundreds of matches.
So the bar was full.
Yeah, and that, that for me is a perfect training scenario.
Yeah.
So if I go in and just kind of be,
I'm like a lightning rod,
and I just absorb everything that I can get from people,
you know, all their effort.
That's perfect.
That's perfect.
But I'm lucky because I'm in a place
that I can handle it
You know if I was losing or failing this would not be optimal
But because I'm I'm strong enough. I've been doing it long enough that I can kind of absorb it without damaging me
This is perfect. This is perfect. I typically when I'm training up for a very serious match
I'll try and do that three or four times a week.
And then the days in between, I will just do blood flow rehab,
blood flow rehab. I will never hit a PR, a record.
I'll never do it anymore. I don't do it. I used to. A lot of things change.
That's why I say, like, there's a lot of ways to do it.
This is currently a system that's working very well for me. So when you say PR, you're not aggressively chasing a peak. You're just building and building and building. Yeah. My only peak that I
care about is for this cycle, the 25th of June. That's my only PR. Let's talk about the 25th of
June. Oh, yeah. Let's talk about Levant,
Sigenish Vili, the Georgian hawk. Yeah. Question number one, is it possible to
beat him? He is widely acknowledged as the most powerful person in arm wrestling today is he
beatable and it's so how everybody's beatable everybody's beatable. Levant is
incredible. He is what this modern peak of arm wrestling represents. So for
people who are just listening,
we also have an overlay of a video of Levant
going against Vitaly Levin,
another top three person in the world perhaps
in arm wrestling.
And Levant is the guy in the right, he's big.
I love it.
And the aggression, I mean, actually sort of underneath it all, it seems
to be a teddy bear, but when he turns it on, it's raw power. He's the full package. Levant
is, he represents the pinnacle. There's Dennis in the back. He's like, I want to be back in there.
He's like, I want to be back in there. Yeah.
Levant has a lot of bases covered.
He's, I mean, he's curling 300 pounds with one arm.
I mean, the strength that he shows for arm wrestling
is so far ahead of the field.
It's very, very strong.
But it's absolutely possible. It's very, very strong. But it's absolutely possible.
It's absolutely possible.
The one thing that I'm confident about, well, I'd say there's two things.
The two things I'm confident about is that I have more experience than he does.
And experience counts for a lot.
The other thing is my ability to breathe and recover. So if ever there's an
opportunity for the tie to turn, that's I think where you'll never get it back. So I think if I
can somehow find a hole in his game, then yeah. So you want to hold off the initial like a solid of power,
and then, and then, wear them out,
and define the whole, and then,
how much of that is mental,
how much of it is just a physical ability to do
for your muscles to have the endurance to hold off.
I like to make the endurance to hold off.
I like to make the sport bigger.
And a lot of things that most arm wrestlers believe the sport is,
I always try and push those boundaries.
So there is definitely a mental aspect to it when you're faced with something that you've never seen before. That's when things like experience comes in, he can become surprised, where what's a surprise for him is routine for me.
So my adjustments will be more precise, more accurate.
Yeah, that's how I get in. That's how I get in. Yeah, I play a, I play
a 30 game, you know, so some of it, how important is confidence in the whole in the progression
of the match? Is there ups and downs of confidence like holy shit, I actually have a chance to
win this holy shit. I'm winning this. You're done.
There's some of my favorite moments. I don't know if those are fake or not in terms of your
expressions. If it's fake until you make it, but whenever you shake your head or whatever,
you make it apparent that you believe the match is finished. And I wonder if that gets in the head
of the other person. When you start to actually, so I'm sure you're doing things in like precise, detailed
things with your hands to also indicate that you believe they're finished, but you're
facially just, see this?
Yeah.
Quit.
Oh, that's right, because it's facing the earth. So that's
ultimate to battle is about. It's like it's you're done. It's
you might as well give up.
commitment is so important in anything that you do, right? Like
I always kind of try and bring things to a level of commitment
that's uncommon.
I think that that's a lot of reasons why I do well.
It's because I just get so committed in the whole process.
And by the time that I actually show up to fight,
I sometimes just wish that they would kill me, you know, I wish that they would
because that's what that's how far I want to go.
Like people talk about like how committed are you to the match? Like if you're committed to the match and you lose,
you should be hurt. Like that's, I'm often unhappy when I lose a match and I don't have an
injury. I'm like, damn, I'm like, what the fuck? Like I should have. Like what? I feel,
I feel like I didn't commit, you know? I don't know if you know Dan Gabel is the rest there.
Oh yeah, he was on the podcast.
Yeah, yeah.
He talked about his whole career.
He dreamed of working so hard that he can't get off the mat by himself.
And he was always disappointed ultimately at the end of his career because he was always
able to get off the mat on his own accord.
So he wants to leave it all on the mat just from exhaustion.
So that's what commitment looks like.
What is this process?
What is this climb for probably the toughest match of your career?
I would say the most epic match in arm wrestling
history. I mean, it's really building up. You are the, you said North America. That's
a, I mean, I think by a constant menu, one of the greatest arm wrestlers ever, he is one
of the scariest arm wrestlers ever. And so this match, by the way, where is it happening?
It'll be in Dubai.
In Dubai.
Yeah.
June.
So what does the climb look like?
The climb for me, what I have to change in my life, always.
People talk about being a professional.
I've always loved the sport.
I've loved it like crazy, but to me, the path is about simplicity
and removal of distractions.
I do better and better.
The more I get rid of everything, nothing else, so that my life is just the goal, just the target and everything else is off the table.
And that's where I need to get to, where there's nothing, there's nothing between me and him.
And every single day you're putting in the volume every day, all day.
Now you said you worked out, so yesterday you did hundreds of arm wrestling matches and then today
You said in the morning is the worktile. So what was that workout? So you you're mixing up stuff where you're doing weights
Also this morning, you know, I try to really focus on what's administratively easy
That's a big part of me if everything I do. So I just travel with bands
Yeah, I got bands with me and
It's rehabilitative in nature. So I'm really focusing on blood flow
Feeling good doing proper movements
But yeah, just band workout and the whole town. What does a band workout look like?
So are you doing the arm wrestling movement? I'll see that see see what you did there? What's that? Yeah, it's you want to bring them in. Up, up,
the up thing up, up, up into your center, right? Yeah. You think, what can you control out here?
No, you bring everything close. You want every just that's it. Don't worry about pinning.
Pining happens once it's close to you. Yeah. Yeah, pinning is, people always think about pinning.
You don't think about pinning.
How much do the body is a part of this too?
Like the core, the torso,
because it feels like there's that almost like a Mike Tyson
punch power, right?
Does it come from the hips too and the legs?
It's definitely the whole body. It's definitely the whole body.
It's definitely the whole body.
Like everything is working.
You're connected to the table at times,
as far as your base, sometimes your base is your feet,
but a lot of times you can base off the table.
So, so you can base off your hips,
but I'll tell you, no arm rest or care
is about doing squats.
No arm rest or is doing planks.
Okay, it's all about the forearm and the actions of the hand.
That's always the limiting factor.
You look at a guy like Olegg Zock.
Do you know this guy?
Olegg Zock, marvelous.
He's a total hellboy.
He's my inspiration to what I call pumpkin training.
But what's pumpkin training?
Probably we'll get into that, but I only train my right arm. That's it. Yeah, with homework.
But back to full body, it is full body. My good friend Matt mask, when he arm wrestled
me, he actually blew his internal abductor in his leg.
So yeah, people walk away from tournament, their calves can be sore sometimes.
You know, happens.
But no, oh, there he is right there.
Yeah.
Oh, like, he is a real life hellboy.
He's like 170 pounds there.
Look at his arm.
Look at his arm.
Crazy.
Yeah.
Yeah, he's totally crazy. that's you doing left right there. So that's by the way Levant you're going right. Yeah
Yeah
So can you say more about the the mental side? Are you visualizing what it takes to beat him? Are you trying to get in his head?
All of these things so do you think it's possible to get in his head, all of these things. So do you think it's possible to get in this head? There's
definitely strategies that you can do depending on who it is you're facing. It's very good
to know who it is you're fighting and choose the correct strategy mentally. But I always
follow a process when it comes to my mental preparation.
When I'm far away from an event, I just always build up my opponent, build them, build them,
I respect them, to a point where I almost start to fear them and start to believe that
they'll beat me.
And this is a very vital part of my preparation.
And that's where I am right now at Levant.
I don't, I just build them up, build them up
into this thing that scares me.
And it forces me to be responsible, you know,
because I don't want to lose, you know, I want to win.
So the greater my opponent, the greater I can build
their worth and my mind, the more motivation it gives me.
greater I can build their worth in my mind, the more motivation it gives me. Then there comes a point when it changes. And then I start to degrade them. And yeah, that's when
it normally starts to get fun. And normally by the time I face them, I just try and completely dominate from every interaction
from start to finish.
When in the actual moment of the match, like in the moment leading up to it, what's the
feeling? Is it fear, is it confidence, anxiety, what's going through your mind?
I love to fight.
I love it.
I always have.
There's every day where you have the distractions of life and then there's really living in
the moment.
That's whatever you love to do.
That's when you can really be free. I'm free when I'm fighting. Right. So you put me in at good fight and I just love it.
And I don't think about the past. I don't think about the future. I just think about killing that
dude in front of me and I enjoy that. And just being intensely in the moment. That's it. Just
right there. Just fighting as hard as I can.
Do you study the opponent? Have you for this particular match, do you study videos of Levant?
I've seen everything. I've read everything. I get opinions from other people. I watch very closely.
What do you make of his evolution? So he's
he's grown in size, but also you've talked about his, you know, evolution technically as well. What he in studying him. Since
we're in the build your opponent to be terrifying stage, what
what makes him great? He's very impressive. The greatest thing about him
is his strength. That's the thing that sets him apart from everyone. His strength, specialized
strength, exact strength for arm wrestling. I believe it's unmatched. Can we just linger on that word strength?
What does strength mean?
What does it feel like?
Are we talking about bicep, shoulder?
Are we talking about whatever control is?
The wrist?
Is it the...
How does strength manifest? You know, like when I touch your hand, when we grab arms, I feel the, what, what, how does strength manifest? You know, like
when I touch your hand, when we grab arms, I feel like, fuck this. There's control.
What's that feeling? Where does that come from? We're in the armrests. And when you're
at the top of the world, where does that come from? So it's chains. There's chains of strength.
And in arm wrestling, this is like technical strength.
And we use these technical chains to fight each other.
The chains that I'll talk about is,
so you'll talk, remember how we talked about the post,
this upwards drive, this ability to close this angle?
This is a chain.
It can be used, it's a technical attack. It's also an
attack that can be built with training. Just the ability to just drive upwards. There's a chain
where you cup, right? Cup your wrist in. Cup your wrist in the anchor and the chain
brings you right to your heart, right to your center, right? This chain and this can be done at any time. There's a pronation
chain and that's that's to turn your thumb over, right? Turn your thumb over and you attack the
person's cupping chain. And there's a huge number of muscles involved in each of those chains.
And that's why I say it's a chain, right? But their movements and these movements you can develop
in the gym or through practice.
So you don't mean, so it's easy to serve interpreters,
strength to mean how much you curl, essentially.
But you mean the chain.
And that's what I mean, people talk to you as a bicep.
I mean, yes, there's bicep for sure involved.
But I'll always be inaccurate if I try and tell you what muscles are.
So I prefer to explain it in a movement
and then everything that's involved to do that movement. Right. Yeah. And Levant's movements
for arm wrestling are incredibly impressive. What do you attribute to how much of that is genetics,
how much of it is some training thing he's doing.
I think that Levant is very special in terms of his genetics, like not everybody can be
Levant.
You know, yeah, there's not many Levantes out there.
But what I've encountered in the bias that I always see, like when people talk about people
like Levant,
they discount the other side so very quickly.
The thing is Levant rarely has to show it on the other side because he's so far ahead.
You talk about the technical application of the sport.
He so rarely needs to show it, but he's clearly incredible.
If you watch his progression, he came up having very difficult technical struggles to overcome.
Georgia is a great country for arm wrestling.
There's this guy, Gennady Kviksphiña, who no one would ever say is not technical.
And it took him years to defeat him to a point where now it's not even a discussion.
You talk about the progression.
They had a lot of battles together over the years.
Yeah.
It's fascinating to see the ties turn.
Oh, yeah.
And once they've turned, it's like completely, completely different level.
Yeah, I mean, he's got strength, he's got technique.
Some people will argue that his technique is flawed at times.
They've shown matches where he hasn't shown the best technique, but he's still one.
And I think sometimes he just plays with people.
You know, like there's a famous match that he had with...
Oh, he's called the Bruce Lee of Arm Wrestling.
I got called Anger Byeth.
Kurtogaly Anger Byeth. They had a match in the top eight.
Great match. Critagally is like 220 pound guy from
Kazakhstan, brilliant technician,
but power wise, you know, not in the same world.
And Critagally did well, even though he lost six nothing.
He still did well. But in my opinion,
Levant didn't care. Levant was like grabbing him low and just like whatever. I will show
him things that he's not seen before. I will. He hasn't competed often in this rule set,
which will be a challenge for him. But what yeah, what can I say, like Levant, he's Everest.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, you are seen by basically everybody
is the big, big, underdog, but you're also,
even in the Eastern, even, I mean, I talk to Russians a lot.
You know that moment in Rocky,
when they start cheering for Rocky?
Yeah, yeah.
You're kind of the, they love you. They want you to win and just you know, it's not even
Just the battle itself is inspiring and it's it's like the culmination your career because
It's you know, you're at the top for a long time, but it's like it's almost like it should be over for you
But no, you're returning. it's almost, like it should be over for you, but no, you're returning.
It is like this big moment.
Yeah.
The big climb, I will be the pointy end of the spear
for North America.
Yeah.
Ah, beautiful.
Well, thanks for bringing that match up.
Let's talk about just the match against Dennis, your left-hand match.
He's also terrifying and seems one of the strongest, probably the one over of not the strongest
left hand arm wrestler.
There's a lot to be said there.
Maybe you could talk about this match at a high level.
Why did you take on this match? Why did you do the left hand versus the right hand?
What can you tell the story?
Okay. Dennis the Plankoff.
There's so much about this match.
I love Dennis.
Russian guy.
Yeah, Russian guy.
Russian, I used to call him Dennis Chernobyl.
What a monster.
He kind of led, I'd say, this new era of arm wrestling, where the super
heavyweight strength level has just gone through the roof. I wanted the match for such a
long time. We tried to get the match. We couldn't get it organized. This is back in like 2008
to 2012. Couldn't get the match. Couldn't get the match. I is back in like, you know, 2008 to 2012. Couldn't
get the match, couldn't get the match. I've always been more of a one-on-one puller. He was
doing the tournament format. I was ranked number one in the world and towards the end, it
kind of was very undecided. I ended up getting surgery. I ended up abandoning the super heavyweight division I went down to, the 225s for a few years.
WAL failed temporarily. So the 225 pound division was scrapped and I said, okay,
I'm going to go for the big crown once again and I started to enter negotiations to have the match
with him. We'd been chasing the match for 10 years. They wanted to do it left hand. I
wanted to do it right hand. I just wanted to do the match. I wanted to do the match with Dennis. I wanted to meet
Dennis. So people should know that you were, the right hand has always been your strongest.
It has been, I mean, I had surgery in 2016. I hate to make excuses. I hate to do it. Dennis
was better than me that day, even on my best day. If you had gone back my entire career.
At no single day, do I beat
Dennis to plank off in 2018? I would like to think that I could maybe do it now, but at that point,
there would be no version that could have beat him. I left.
That's all right. Right hand, no, I'm curious about the right, but left hand.
So is the world. Well, it might still happen, it might,
but Dennis completely destroyed me.
And I learned a lot from it.
I think before the Dennis match,
I think I was, I don't know,
I don't know exactly what your words to use.
Maybe I felt like my thinking was a little bit elitist and I really learned a lot.
I was really humbled that day by how far and how professional and how prepared Dennis was,
how seriously he took the sport.
There's a mental, a slightly terrifying calmness to him, which only comes with extreme preparation,
I think.
His level of dedication was extremely inspiring to me. I used to do a job where it was serious enough that the price could be death.
I arm wrestle throughout that entire period. looked at You know the cost of
Doing an activity being death
Limited to soldering and I kind of changed my mind a lot after that match I realized that anything that you're in love with
Once you get far enough down the road and professional enough at it, it's going
to kill you. Like, it doesn't matter what you're doing. If you're crazy enough about anything,
it's probably going to take your life from you. In some way, and that doesn't mean you rush
towards death. It's just your level of investment and level of risk can have some catastrophic
of effects. Bukowski, Charles Bukowski, I think, has the quote, do what you love and let it kill
you, like that.
And I understood that Dennis' level of professionalism far exceeded mine in what we were doing at the
time.
And I realized that, you know, I was no longer employed.
I was now in the world of professional arm wrestling.
And I realized that, you know, what was I doing?
Like, how serious was I?
So, Dennis is an incredible guy.
Is there moments in that match?
There's those humility there too, from him.
That was a fascinating sort of,
it seemed like you realized that you just hit a wall
and you were not ready enough for it.
It was incredible.
There was so many things that I remember
about the Dennis match.
I mean, I remember, you know,
seeing videos of somebody and then meeting them
in the person, it's different. I remember in the weigh-ins, sorry, not the weight-ins in the stand-off that we did, you know, seeing videos somebody and then meeting them in the person, it's different.
I remember in the weigh-ins, sorry, not the weigh-ins in the standoff that we did, you know, before the match. I'm looking at them, like I'm close, I'm looking at his arms.
And his bicep, it looked like an ass.
Like it was like a freaking glute muscle.
Yeah.
Like his entire structure was so sinewy and just so strong. I was like, wow, I'm like, so
physically so impressive. And I remember when I arm wrestled
him at a certain time, he allowed me to kind of set my
position. You can very, you can't really tell because it
happens very quickly. But he let me set my position. You can't really tell because it happens very quickly, but he let me set my
position, which means I kind of got my locks in where you can kind of really do a great hold.
And he just ripped through me. So you were able to get this great position. So it was
Yeah, so it was Tor right through me. Yeah, and
The first time I ever thought that you know, he that I had torn something
I thought like after the match, I'm like, he's to do rip my chest right in half like
What what did it? No, I think 100% yeah, no, I didn't I didn't actually nothing went purple or anything, but
Yeah, the strength gap was very significant
with Dennis.
So could he, what would it take to beat him on that day?
It would take me just being a little bit stronger and more healthy.
My left was not as healthy as it should be. I didn't have a full-rounded
technical arsenal. It takes a time after surgery. It really does. You can be good, but after
a surgery, you're probably looking at three or four years before you're starting to hit technical
proficiency the way you should be.
And yeah, just a bit stronger. How do you interpret the calmness on his face? Well, what is that about? Is he actually that question is the Russian thing? It's a Russian thing, I think.
I don't know. I see a lot of Russians like that. You know, they're so like,
stoic and I'm such a fan of Russia. I really want to go to Moscow. I've been saying it forever.
You've never been, not yet. Not yet. I want to go. Moscow. I've been saying it forever. You've never been not yet
Not yet. I want to go. I want to just go and live there for like a month and just train
The Moscow has got such a crazy arm wrestling scene. They've got from what I understand
There's have so many clubs. There's so many strong athletes
Just go and just lightning rod. Yeah, are you considered doing something of that sort?
It's like Rocky for again. Oh, yeah, like
Oh, and lead up to June. I would certainly consider it. I've got only one trip planned at the moment
Administration is very important
You mean by administration so like managing your time management, yeah, the management has to be very efficient.
You know, when I'm a tourist, when I'm a visitor, a little bit of that goes down, you know, when I'm at my home and things are familiar,
I've got a really great grasp on my time, you know, everything's in place, everything's perfect, you know,
if I could magically transport Moscow into my hometown and just go out and visit them.
Yeah. So it's very difficult when you're traveling, you have to keep all the, you have to
figure out what you're eating, where, how you get in the food, all the socializing plus,
you're more and more celebrity, so there's social interaction, which I don't know how draining
that could be on you outside of the arm wrestling table. So I'll have to manage all
of that because ultimately you have to focus on the fight ahead. Yeah. A lot of my strength comes from
just being in a familiar place, doing my routine. I love to travel. I love to get out there and meet people and new experiences, but when I just want to
really prepare for a big match, home is where I get strong.
So that loss against Dennis was one of the few losses in your career.
How do that feel in the moments after, in the days after, in the months after, in the years after, how
has it changed you as an arm rest, there's a human being?
Well, it's tough to lose.
Still haunt you?
I don't think so.
I actually was really happy to lose to Dennis because sometimes when you lose a match, there's a lot
of matches that have lost where they upset me because I know I made a mistake. I didn't
make a mistake with Dennis. He was just way better. There's nothing I could have done
that day. I'm really at peace with it. Dennis, to me, it was just a big inspiration. I think
that me arm wrestling, Dennis left hand handed that day, just let me touch probably
one of the strongest human beings on the arm wrestling table it's ever lived, you know,
left handed.
So knowing that's possible is almost like inspiration to you that I can be at that level
to.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Seeing what Dennis did, you know, just trying to absorb a little bit of his
knowledge, planted seeds in me. Yeah. I mean, when I look at my career, it's a bit like the stock market,
but for sure I'm trending upwards. And since really kind of wrapping my mind around some of the Russian philosophies,
they really changed my training systems.
There was some base philosophies
that they talked to me about over there
that massively impacted my training.
Is it possible to convert some of those philosophies
into words, can you describe some of the ideas
they taught you?
So, never smile.
Ah, right.
Man, it takes a while to break the ice with a lot of these guys.
Well, once you do, I mean, that's this deep as Bonzi can form there.
Yeah, yeah, for sure.
I think that I was raised under, I believe it's a flawed,
I mean, it's not flawed because it has its value as well, but it's best
if you understand both philosophies.
I think a North American thing that's just so ingrained in our fitness society is no pain,
no gain, you know, and just push in and like sweating and going harder and like fighting through like and grit and top and
But and then you talk to the Russians and they're like, yeah, never fail. You never fail never never go to failure
Always feel good always feel good. It should always feel good. Don't
Um, and those two philosophies express themselves
very differently. And if you want to get strong, yeah, don't fail. Don't fail. So that's how you,
they also believe there's a volume. Yeah, there's a lot of strategies, but volume is a massive principle. And volume is very hard to achieve when you're believing in no pain, no gain.
They don't really go together.
No pain, no gain, more injuries.
So is there parallels because in wrestling, some of the greatest wrestlers of all time
in Russian, and they were big, Dan Gable talks about it, they were big on play.
Right.
Like lighter wrestling,
right?
Probably ultimately actually,
it boils down to that's how you achieve higher volume.
Right.
Like over the stretch of years,
the way to reduce injury.
I mean, wrestling also technique
might have greater value than it does in arm wrestling.
Obviously, technique is extremely important in arm wrestling, but power can defeat technique.
It seems like in wrestling you can get away.
There's a lot of ways you can really do sneak attacks, sort of use leverage on all those
kinds of things.
So there's even more incentive to do play and all that kind of stuff.
But do you see the parallels between the two worlds?
Oh yeah, wrestling and arm wrestling.
100%.
You saw what I did the other night, right?
So I'm playing on the table for hours, right?
So that's my number one training thing that I do is I go on the table
For hours and I play yeah, yeah, when you did
Sergey keep up that video. It's on devs channel the the water tank one. Oh, it's like 180p
The Wi-Fi in there was so bad. Yeah, great. I love it
It's maybe the I don't know if it was Fish Eye,
but it had a Fish Eye feel.
It was a crowd.
I mean, so much camaraderie.
It was amazing.
But maybe just a brief mention of Dimitri,
the Russian guy.
What in that play, what are some memorable things here?
Like when you go against a bunch of different people,
a bunch of strangers, what are all the differences?
And how do you grow from them?
How do you learn from them?
Well, everybody's a bit different.
So I love to go to new clubs
because the energy's always high.
Like the first time you go to a club,
everybody's trying to kill you.
Yeah, so they're gonna excitement and there's trying to kill you. Yeah. Yeah. So they're going to excitement. Yeah. And there's a,
I see you feet off of that. Yeah, you do. You can, you can, if you're able to be strong
enough to absorb it without injury, it's awesome. It's awesome.
Because they're giving you everything they can. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Right. So it's,
it's very specific, right? Like I I'm gonna get way stronger at arm wrestling and what I try and do
When I go to these places is I make an assumption I make an assumption on the best guy there and
So I'll arm wrestle in a way that kind of protects them because the more I can protect them and
Kind of keep them kind of in a good position, they can actually give me more, right?
So I kind of give them little pieces
that I think will put them in a place
that they can really give me more.
And so yeah, that's what I'm doing.
And then when I see somebody like Demetri,
I pull that in a little bit, right?
So I know Demetri is the number one guy in Texas.
Lots of respect to the guy.
I won't give him all the pieces
until I really kind of gauge where he's at
because I certainly in training don't wanna fail.
I don't want that.
I don't want to, when you fail,
and I'm wrestling, it's just, imagine it's just bad technique and you're
trying and bad technique, you're going to get hurt.
Yeah.
So you always want to be in a strong position here.
What about how does endurance come into play here?
Here's video.
Yeah.
I was strapping up with that.
That's right.
Yeah.
I mean, you went for like, I don't know, two hours.
Yeah, it was long.
So the first, this first run of the video, I think, was a little
over an hour. Then I took a break. And I probably did another 45 minutes or so. But I mean,
do you, how can, are you okay with the endurance aspect of this? Yeah. That's probably like when
you talk to the arm wrestling world, that's probably what I'm best known for is, is my endurance.
So this helps build that. It does. But that's not why I'm doing it. I'm doing it
to get strong. In my opinion, this is one of the best ways to get strong, especially far away from
an tournament or any kind of an event. I wouldn't want to do this, you know, even a month or even
six weeks or even maybe even eight weeks before a big event.
I'd want to already be kind of shrinking my volume.
But far away from an event,
yeah, as much volume as your body can handle
and you'll feel it, you'll feel it.
Like I felt it at times.
Like, you know, after the hour mark,
I'm like, okay, I can feel my blood sugar kind of diminishing.
I can feel like the blood that's going to my muscles is kind of like
It's not really pushing more good stuff in it's starting to break down and you don't want that you don't want that
Quick pause bathroom break. I'm good. I kind of need one. Yeah, I maybe get a sweater
It's a bit is it cold? Does that matter? Does that care for?
sweater is a bit is it cold? Does that matter? Does that care for
And I still love the idea of you going to Russia. Yeah, and training there. Yeah, I'm also making a trip out to Russia. Oh,
yeah, I went for different. It was hard with the current
conflict. Yeah, the tensions there, but I'm hoping before
your match actually, so may for a couple of interviews,
or a couple of folks, some of which people know. Maybe I could ask you about
to comment on some matches that stand out to you in your career. Sure.
Is there something, is there a particular, I have a bunch that I really enjoy, but is there
something that stands out to you as memorable?
We talked about sort of a defining loss, perhaps the Dennis.
Then you faced Michael Tyler, like we mentioned, John Prasank, you've faced Matt. Is there something that stands out to you that technically or psychologically you've learned a lot from?
I feel like I try and learn something from every match, but there is a very special match to me that to this day, I can't explain. Very weird phenomena. So I think it was 2005, it was my first combat
tour overseas. So it was an active tour, you know, among other things, I got shot during that tour, like we got long tour, rough tour.
And I trained the whole time through knowing
that at the end of this, I was gonna have a big match.
So there's a champion got called Ron Bath.
He's kind of, if there was no John Bersink,
there would be Ron Bath.
Okay, so extremely decorated, unbelievable armrests are from the United States.
And this is kind of when I was just kind of coming up in the sport still.
I was fairly well established.
I was definitely the best guy in Canada.
And I had been for a few years.
But I hadn't really expanded internationally too much.
So I had a one-on-one match with Ron Bath
and that's the one.
Yeah, extremely hard fought battle.
Was three-one, I think, three-one,
but every match was really close
and he won the first one,
and I had to kinda like dig my way out of the trenches and
ended up coming back and winning but it was a match that was probably it was probably one of my
closest matches ever and it was seems like there's frustration I knew what what is that? What was
going through your mind here with these was that first all, going in, did you think you could beat them?
What was the level of college? I always think I can win. I always do.
But a lot of respect to the guy. But yeah, I always think I can do it.
So what lessons did you take away from it? Why is it so meaningful to you?
Well, it's what happened afterwards. So I had
some kind of a release afterwards. And that was the strange thing to me. So match ended. And I felt
like so relaxed afterwards, so calm, so, so So you know satisfied
Because it was one of those matches that kind of takes everything from you, but you win it and
I was relaxing in the chair and
I've never had the sensation before I've never had it afterwards
But it's like the center of my backbone just exploded and it was like
I was so weird, right? Because I'm not really spiritual that much or religious even, but it's like a fire
Just ripped through me and it only lasted an instant just exploded through my whole body
Out out out the top through my feet And then it was gone. That was it.
Weirdest thing. I've ever felt my entire life.
Yeah, but it was it was as a result of what happened in the match and leading up to it. I had
some kind of a release to what it is. It almost how did you interpret it psychologically? Was it like, uh,
some kind of, I mean, not to be spiritual or whatever, but some kind of superpower that was, uh,
like, like a lingering feeling like, holy shit, I, them, you know, I can't, I can't explain it.
And I haven't really tried hard enough to try to
Something changed something happened there. Yeah
Something happened to me. I was sore for about three or four months afterwards. It's like it smoked out my entire body
Yeah, that whole summer I was kind of sore and
Yeah, and then after that like two or three years later. That's when I won the world championships
Yeah, and then after that, like two or three years later, that's when I won the World Championships.
Yeah, I mean, all the matches are, you know, you get something from people, like, you know, you study them, you take something from them. People have an invisible crown, and he had one.
And I think I took it from him. Yeah. Maybe that was the feeling of wearing the crown.
Yeah, maybe.
What about all the trash talk?
How much of that did you learn that come naturally to you?
You're one of the most charismatic fun.
I mean, there's always like respect behind it.
I would say to me, and I'm a fan of a lot of sports,
you're one of the greatest trash talkers in all of sports
that I've ever seen, because you're able to talk shit
But there's so much love and respect behind it. It's just masterful
But you'll also get into people's heads in the moment. It's beautiful to watch because they it really gets
It gets to some people. So where's that come from? It's powerful weapon, right?
Yeah, it's the your voice is a powerful, powerful weapon.
And it's underutilized by so many athletes, because they think that it's not sportsman
like or something like that.
But the truth is, I mean, you can be a weak person, but with your voice, you can influence
and change any number of things.
And the same thing happens in a fight between two people.
If you can just be a never-ending flow of negative encouragement to someone or suggestion,
anything can happen. It's a tool. And when you're fighting a person, you're not just
fighting them. You're fighting everyone who's watching. You're fighting the crowd,
the referees, and you know, to get in the most ideal positions, situations. You
need to use your voice. Yeah. And there's, for people who haven't seen, I definitely recommend you watch a bunch
of farm wrestling matches because there's a crowd really gets into it.
It feels like there's a really intimate connection with the crowd.
I suppose because the crowd is a lot to be very close to you.
I love it.
I want the crowd right up on me.
Yeah. I love it. I want the crowd right up on me.
So sometimes...
Oh yeah.
So, whenever you talk to somebody, you literally pick somebody from the crowd.
Oh yeah.
I'll fucking, like I'll start fucking off his fans and like, yeah, like I'll start talking
to their wives or whatever. Yeah. Yeah.
Uh, yeah, there's Jody. Um, she's pretty dangerous to listen to also. But yeah, one of his
buddies, Mike Salaris, who's, you know, really good arm wrestler was, was, was, was, was
cheer informed. So I started to go after him. Yeah. Yeah. Smiling the whole. Yeah. It's fun, right? It's fun. Yeah. It's fun. It's fun to listen to. But it's also what's fun is how
much it actually affects some of the people you're facing. They get frustrated. Yeah. It's great
to see what you have to fight, right? Like a lot of people think things will be given to them.
And the thing that, you know, I've always believed from the time I was very young,
like, I was convinced that our inevitable death was going to come from aliens, right?
Like some super aggressive, super violent species was going to come and smoke us all.
You know, and I'm like, I'm not like that. I'm like, but as soon as one person is,
then you're forced to have to accept it as reality, right?
So I like to fight for every single thing.
I like to try and be more and more aggressive.
And if someone matches me,
that's when I can use my endurance.
And if they don't, then I have the tactical advantage.
So that's kind of my
balance point. And then by the way, you also yell at the ref. Yeah. I mean, the game, there's like
levels to this game, but you know, the feeling sometimes when people get frustrated is like, okay,
this person's cheating or like you're trying to get a good grip before the go before it goes.
And I think some of the frustration in combination
with the trash truck is what this person is cheating.
But everybody is like kind of trying to cheat.
Get an edge within the rules.
Yeah.
So I try and just ramp it, ramp it, ramp it.
But everybody's different.
I've learned how to play the game based off of the tools that I have physically.
And for me, this works because, you know, my genetic makeup is more, a more of a persistence
hunter, right?
So, like, I need to extend things.
And that works well for me.
You know, if I was, it's more explosive, I'm, I probably wouldn't have the same strategies.
By the way, for people who are watching, you're wearing no limits hoodie, which is one of
your nicknames. I don't wash this thing too much. It's my bacterial shield to the world. Yeah. Awesome. So you mentioned Jody, she's often in your corner and does perhaps more trash
talk and then even you. So I mean, if we could step away, she's an incredible human being
as sort of as a fan. It's fun to watch the two of you, both when you are arm wrestling and just as people, you just see so much, I don't
know, kindness and love radiating from the two of you whenever you're trash talking or
talking about just random things or just talking about life, it's just a beautiful thing
to watch and thank you for sharing that with the world. But maybe you, um, she paid me to ask you this, but what are the things
you love about Jody, your wife, Jody Lert? What are the ways she's affected your life?
Yeah. Jody and I go way back, right? We were in high school together. Um thing that I admire most in people is bravery. To me, it's the most
admirable quality. And Jody always has inspired me because she's such a fighter, you know, if she believes that something's true, she just does not back
down. She will not. And you can not say that she can't change her mind because she can,
but while she is convicted, she will not stop fighting. She's pulled me out of the fire
repeatedly. We've lived through so many things. Very lucky.
How has she made you a better arm wrestler? She's fed me.
Yeah, I can see your videos of your house basically coming apart when she's not there.
Yeah, yeah. Without Jolody, I'm on the street living in a tent and,
yeah, eating dog food. Yeah. Yeah.
Bravery. Yeah. What about love? How has love made you stronger? Now we're going to make a
Devon uncomfortable. Love is difficult to accept. Love is one of those things that you know,
Love is one of those things that, you know, a lot of times, you don't feel worthy of it, you know, and so it's hard sometimes to accept someone's love.
And someone who really loves you, well, they'll love you even when you don't, you know.
And here you go, you're going to make me cry, Lex.
Yeah, Jody and I've been through so much.
And she's shown me how, you know, she supported me just repeatedly, repeatedly.
Some of that is loyalty and patience and perseverance and all those things.
That's like when love really shows itself.
Yeah, sticking through together for years, even when you're the shitty times.
Love and faith are powerful forces in this universe.
Without them, though, we can descend into darkness very quickly, as a world, even between
people. You know, when love and faith is destroyed, then then we fall apart. You know,
and I've been graced by the love that Jody's given me. You know, it's allowed me to continue to build.
You know, when you have love between people, then you build together. I love my family. I love
Canada. I love the arm wrestling community.
I have a love for what we're trying to achieve as a human species.
And when that falls apart, we don't have much.
Yeah, just with my boy there.
Yeah. She, um, you also mentioned you were, uh, and, uh,
you once had a job where, uh, your death was a real possibility. You see, you were on the Canadian Special Forces.
What did you take away from that experience?
That time, yeah, such a, such a great life.
Really, really loved it.
I honestly, I never, I never wanted to leave. I never
thought I would leave. I thought it'd be their my whole life. Real honor to to get to serve. What
did you get to do? What was the things you loved, craftsmanship wise, like fun things you get to do,
learn and challenge yourself. And and we mentioned sort of honor in terms of
the serving part.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
My favorite thing about serving in the special forces was for sure the people that I worked
with, that's probably the first thing I could say.
You know, I never, I always felt like totally comfortable and putting my life in the other guy's hands.
I was so happy to be in a place where I felt I could follow.
Like it didn't matter.
I knew that the people ahead of me were incredible.
I knew that people beside me were incredible.
So just having that faith in your team,
it's very special. And to know that there for there for a reason that has nothing to do with money,
you know, there, and that's what kind of brings everybody together is you're there for a higher
purpose. And in terms of being an adrenaline junkie, there's nothing like it. I mean, there's nothing like, you know, going out at night and fighting. And when I say fighting, like my whole life,
I wanted to fight. And to me, there's a lot of, and look at, I've said this in the past,
and I think it's been a personal failure of mine because I've said things like, it's
the highest level that you can do. And I don't believe that to be true anymore. But at the time, I thought it was the best way I could express
my drives that I had, you know, to be a fighter. So, oh, it's a year's sense in the past. Maybe
in part now is that, so fighting is when humans get a chance to express themselves deeply.
Like that mix of the bravery, the integrity, the...
Yeah.
Whatever that is, that makes us human, that human spirit can really shine.
And I don't believe that anymore.
I believe that you can do that in any field, in any discipline.
You know, if you go hard enough,
it all kind of starts to feel the same.
But at the time, that expression to me was really,
really awesome.
I loved Close Quarter Battle.
That was my favorite thing.
That's really the whole reason I was there.
Can you describe Close Quarter Battle?
Close Quarter Battle is team fighting.
So, and it can look a lot of different ways, but basically it's ground troops doing some
kind of a mission.
And it's the orchestrated movement that is the skill, the orchestrated movement and the
drills done quickly and accurately, it's
very difficult to do.
With communication?
With communication.
Yeah.
So it's basically cooperating together, communicating, there's some strategies, some adapting to the
changing environment, and the more the team works together, the less communication there
is.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that's an amazing thing to do to be part of a machine. Well,
machine, a team of people who can fight together like that. It's, I think it's, it's, uh, we're
really designed to do it. Like as good as we can fight as individuals, the thing that makes us
really good is our ability to fight as a team. Yeah. Yeah. Where that's one of the things that makes us really good is our ability to fight as a team. Yeah. Yeah.
We're, that's one of the things that makes us really human is that collective intelligence,
social aspect.
Yeah.
And fighting is the highest of stakes.
So that's social interaction under the highest of stakes is, really does bring out something
that's deeply human.
I mean, war in general brings out something deeply human. It's
it's I mean obvious to say that it's tragic that it results in so much
loss of life and well-being
Let me if it's okay for brief moment to take us back to
If it's okay for a brief moment to take us back to arm wrestling, we did this offline. We talked about, you gave me some advice about arm wrestling, but maybe do a high level
overview of the different styles and strategies that we've talked about.
We talked about the importance of strength and power, but is there like offensive,
defensive styles? Is there, we're mentioning kings move? What would you classify your
style as? It's nice for people that don't know. Maybe even zoom back out. So arm wrestling
is a sport where two people have to, when we talk about strictly the sport, put their elbow on a particular
pad, means they have to keep that elbow on that pad and they win when the back of one
of their hands crosses some kind of, or basically touches the table. And when you actually lock up, you do so, depending on the organization without
straps, meaning there's just you agree, it's like mutual agreement that you're going to
a class, your hands in a way that's fair, and there's a referee that helps ensure that
it's fair. But of course, there's these little games going on. And then when you actually go all out with this battle,
if there's no straps, you can slip out.
And so often you'll put the straps,
which means you're, it's like marriage.
Yep.
You're committed for, like, somebody will have to lose,
essentially.
There's no pulling out.
So, okay, so that's sort of the battle within that.
What are the different styles that you can speak to that people that don't know on wrestling
could duck? Yeah, we can start to kind of just dance around the subject a bit. I'd say
there's a lot of different types. There's specialists. And there's kind of blenders and people who
are very versatile. A lot of guys win world championships on one singular move. They get just
extremely crisp at, say, a hook or a top roll. And their style is very kind of focused. And you'll see it with a lot of athletes,
like kind of a talk guy,
both guy who's very active, I call Jerry Cataret.
Okay, as soon as you think Jerry Cataret,
he's got a very unique style,
he's got a flop wrist press.
Okay, so most of his technique
is built around this one system.
Flop wrist means your,
what it sounds like.
So your wrist is flopped,
so it's like you're pushing.
So he is pushing from a losing position.
No, he will be offensive.
So he will be in a press so offensively,
so he'll give his hand away
so that he can get a shoulder behind it properly.
So he doesn't, wow.
Right.
So you can press means, like push.
Push.
Yeah.
Without having that hook position.
Right.
Which is what most people are always looking for.
And Jerry's looking for it as well.
And then, so example, there's another one.
There's another specialist, Matt Mask.
Yeah.
He's top roller.
Right. He basically, that's his great move. It's another one. There's another specialist, Matt Mask. Yeah. He's a top roller.
Right?
Basically, that's his great move.
It's a top roll.
And his other weapons aren't nearly as powerful.
This incredible top roll.
And then you have a lot of athletes that are more blended.
Okay?
They have a lot of good options.
I think that I probably fall more into that category.
You have people who are more speed guys.
So they try and do very little, I call it attrition.
So a lot of people are very willing to trade energy because they have faith that their
gas tank or their pool eventually will tire the other person out.
So anytime there's a trade, they'll trade.
Whereas, you know, a guy like Travis Baygeon, you know, he was very,
very well known as being extremely explosive, right?
But if the match stops, typically he's going to lose.
Right.
So based off of your genetics, your hands, you know, there's a lot of ways to skin it.
So I think you said something like you're a 20-second guy.
That's right.
That's a 20-second guy.
So what are the seconds we're talking about?
So a lot of the power people, they want to win in the first, maybe five seconds,
like the first order.
Just that first push, that first press that absolutely and that's it right to the pad. Yeah.
And so you're trying to hold off that attack. Yeah. If I beat you in a second, we're not in the same world.
Yeah.
When I'm with my peer group, I will typically win 20 seconds and beyond. That's a typical win for me when I'm with my peer group, I will typically win 20 seconds and beyond.
That's a typical win for me when I'm with a peer.
Whereas other guys when they're with their peers, they'll win in a second.
That's how they do it.
That's the way they're built.
That's the way they train.
Most guys at a higher level, it all starts to get more and more difficult to be a specialist at the high level now
Some people just have little holes in their games
It's rare to get someone who can really do all the moves. It's very rare
What
Where would you put Levant? I?
Would not say he's a specialist.
I'd say his top role is the strongest move.
Top role is the strongest move.
Yeah.
The interesting thing about the specialist versus the blender, there's a counter.
Every move has a move that theoretically should be the right choice.
So, if you're a single move guy, there's going to be a guy out there who will get you.
Yeah, it'll be very difficult for you to beat that guy.
But, like, when you come to like,
a tournament, typically specialists do much better internment scenarios
because their singular move can get them through a tournament very quickly and efficiently.
Whereas you get a blender in a tournament, they typically will have longer and more difficult matches
and by the way, yeah, yeah. But in the in super match format, typically blenders do better.
So we all find also talked about arm sumo or
Freedom arm wrestling. I don't know how you want to call it. Oh, I love freedom
Exactly North American way
So what so this is this is this idea and I watch a few videos and it looks fun
Yeah, it's basically removing the restriction of having
to keep your elbow on the pad
and just being able to arm wrestle over the whole table.
I think you've mentioned that the criticism that gets
is it might be injury prone or something like that.
So can you describe this arm sumo, freedom, arm wrestling idea?
Right.
When you come to freedom arm wrestling,
basically it removes the limitation of a standard arm wrestling idea. Right. When you come to freedom arm wrestling, basically, it removes
the limitation of a standard arm wrestling table. Yeah. Right. So basically every single thing is a
freedom arm wrestling table, some are better than others. Right. So looking for that nice table where
we can kind of stand apart from each other and we're anatomically, you know, in a fairly safe position.
automatically, you know, in a fairly safe position.
And the rules and freedom, the way you win is like the knuckles must either touch the tabletop or you hold it off the edge for a three count.
Right.
So this is the main way to win.
Yes, you can foul.
Like if you lift your elbow up, still a foul, but you have the entire playing surface.
So your elbow is no longer limited to your 7x7 or 7x9 pad,
so you can move it all over the table.
You can move your body around the table a bit too.
And if it's a big table, your body could largely be on the table.
Yeah, so it basically, it's like adjusting your ring size.
So arm wrestling, you're fighting in a foam booth.
Yeah, right.
So you're fighting in a field, you're fighting just bigger.
So it just makes
the sport bigger. Yeah, this is Japan. But even on a small table, even in a slightly larger
foam booth, you can get a lot more fun and variety. I love it. I think it makes the sport bigger.
I actually believe that it's the future of the sport. I really do. Because it makes it
more accessible. You don't need the equipment.
You do it at a bar, other kind of stuff. Yeah. Yeah.
Less equipment requirements. Kids, most kids start freeing.
Like most kids are on a school desk. Yeah. Yeah.
And like if you see a guy on the street, like whatever, like you can
arm wrestle anywhere, you don't need to bring your table around with you.
If we talked about the elite level, if somebody was interested in starting an armrests
thing, or like going from just like, you know, I go to the gym, you kind of lift, you
have armrests a few times, trying to get better at it, trying to learn how do you advise like getting better
to where you can beat your closest buddies.
Yeah.
That first step.
First step, I'd say find people.
Find people.
Find good people.
It's volume.
We'll get with the club.
Get with people who know what they're doing, who can mentor you.
And that's really cool.
I got to meet, I realized there's a club in Austin.
Yeah.
Sure, there's in a lot of places.
But they're everywhere.
We got this app called ArmBet.
Yeah.
Which is an app that helps you find other people there.
Yeah, very easy.
But I mean, they're all over social networks.
I mean, it's kind of widespread now.
But yeah, find people, find people.
And it's just much easier to learn with another
person, and you'll get stronger that way. But I mean, do the lifts.
I mean, if you go to the gym, just start doing the lifts, and right away, those will technically
prepare you.
What are the lifts? Can we describe?
Yeah.
So I'd say, if you want to just keep it
very, very simple.
Let's just talk about three.
There's much more than three,
but like when you talk about energy allocation,
these three lifts in my opinion should be like
90% of your investment.
It's very big these three lifts.
And the exact percentages can, you can argue about it,
but we'll start off with the cupping of the wrist.
Just this, this is a simple thing.
And do it with a cable.
You can get a thicker diameter,
so it kind of is more out on your fingers
where an armrest is gonna attack you, right?
Because any good armrest is gonna attack your fingers. So like, open hand. No. No. Well, I mean, for health, yes,
you could. But like, if you want to be really specific, you train exactly the way you
would at a table in the position that you actually start that. Yeah. And then you're just doing
this kind of. Yes. To your center. Your people. People, one People, one of the big misconceptions in arm wrestling is that you're
aiming for that pin pad. The chest up, playing it close to you. I make it come close to you, right?
You see, like whenever I do my exercises, the vector is always pulling straight towards me.
Yeah. Yeah. So just, you know, cupping close to you.
The most dangerous thing that a person can do to me
on an arm wrestling match is just pull me away from my body.
That's a terrible thing for me.
Yeah, so that cupping, that's a massive part of the sport.
So now when you think, what does the cup do to the other person?
If I cup, they get turned over.
Right?
So this has to get really strong.
This pronation.
So to fight that rolling.
Exactly.
Yeah. So that's through the thumb.
Yeah. Oh, so you put, you got it. You put on the's that's through the thumb. Yeah, so you put
Got it you put on the thumb and you put this motion. Yeah
Got it. Yeah, and those two things those two things together this cupping and rolling
This is what's gonna make the person's hand bend back and once a person's hand has bent back
They're just their whole game gets cut to pieces. They have very little good options.
It's all nasty stuff.
Those two things, that's a huge part of your investment.
Rise.
Always be climbing.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Yeah, those three simple things, that's what I would tell anybody
to spend most of their time on
if you wanna become an R wrestler.
So, and so, you'd use bands would be good for this.
Bands are great because they're easy to transport.
The only problem I have with bands is,
like if you like to measure,
and if you like to be precise bands,
just don't have to have precise.
Right, so to have growth, yeah.
Just, I mean, it's just like, you know,
you know exactly what you need.
The prescription is kind of a band is kind of like,
and a lot of people in myself included,
I like to know exactly my outputs.
So, so weights.
So, it would be like cables.
Yep.
Cables are nice.
Bands are great too.
I mixed the two. Bands are great too. I mixed it too.
Bands are when I kind of don't need to,
they're more like easy for me.
When I train bands, bands are dangerous
because the acceleration is so high on them.
Like when you screw up with band training,
the acceleration is way faster than gravity, right?
So if you do something bad, it can make it go really much worse.
Yeah.
It's funny that you didn't mention bicep curls or...
Well, it's a chain.
It's a chain.
And so you're... I mean, the idea, if you focus on these three,
the other stuff catches up.
Like, it's all involved.
This whole thing is involved.
So, if you have an axe, right?
The blade of the axe,
that's these things, right? Like you need the poignant end of all your attacks to be awesome, right?
If you have a super sharp axe,
yeah, you can have a shitty hand-sack.
Yeah, right?
Yeah, so focus on that, the pointy tip of the axe. Yeah, the tip of the axe is so important, right? Yeah, so focus on that the point the tip of the axe. Yeah, the tip of the axe is so important
Right, like if I have an awesome bicep and I can't quite use it. What's it good for? Right? Yeah, I think a lot of the
motions of the wrist that you mentioned are just thinking about Giu-Jitsu, especially in the G. Yeah,
There's a lot of I mean, there's so much importance to this and people don't often work
It
Explicitly, yeah so many of the chokes require yeah ability to it's almost like exactly like arm wrestling very close because you're weak here
What's that called flopperist? Yeah, and you're strong with the cop. Yeah, and so you just getting the muscle, whatever that's involved,
the muscle, the turning, the pressure,
because that's where also the choke comes.
That little, the thing that makes you win an arm wrestling
is also the thing that finishes the person
when you have them grabbed.
The strength is very similar.
Yeah, it's fascinating actually.
Of course, like you said, if you want to be very good,
you should be doing the very specific exact emotion. Yeah. So if I was going to do Jiu Jitsu,
I'd be like working out with the ghee. Yeah, the problem is, you know, it's difficult to construct
the exact, so you have to actually go with people and then they don't like being choked on.
So you have to actually go with people and then they don't like being choked on it, right? So like it's hard to I'm actually a big we have these kinds of debates all the time is
You know, I'm a big believer in drilling. I love doing something thousands of times like John Donner
I heard somebody I'm I mentioned to you about the jujitsu folks here
They're less believers in drilling. They see the value of
almost like the mind of going live and exploring ideas that's that play. You don't need to do the
thing a thousand times. You just need to always be thinking about the little details that make you
make you better. And then in action practicing, like developing the strength, the power, the
explosion of the agility inaction.
So actually rolling, I don't, you know, I agree with this, but I just believe in volume
more.
Yeah.
So you can accomplish it through volume.
You can play a lot.
Yes, exactly.
Well, that's the word.
If you really want to get it good, is you're talking about, you mean, that's why a lot. Yes, exactly. Well, that's the word. If you really want to get it good, is you're
talking about, you mean, that's why a lot of these folks are training three times a day.
They're doing, you know, they're putting in the hours, eight hours, nine hours, just,
just, oh, that's tough. Oh, my God. Well, so there are a lot of them
are not doing going hard. It's just being on the mat. Some of it is just sitting there
talking through ideas, watching others or teaching, explaining stuff. It's not just physical. It's a mental too,
because you're keeping in your mind. Some of the greatest, they talk about the rest of the
restletters I've talked with, the fighters, at the top of their career, they basically,
at the top of their career, they basically,
George St. Pierre is like this, another fellow Canadian.
Like, his stick figures in his head, they can't help. They're like in there,
because if you train enough hours,
it's just gonna be in your head
and they're all going to be playing around in your head.
And some little detail over time,
it's almost like computing or something like that.
And that ends up having a result even though you're not physically doing anything.
It's always in there.
I do have to return to diet real quick.
I know we talk about pancakes.
Let me quite seriously, you are one of the strongest athletes in the world for your sport.
So you have to get big, you have to get powerful, you have to get strong.
What is the right diet for you for that?
What do you eat?
How often do you eat? How often do you eat? Yeah. Yeah, from the highest detail to the smallest or
the things that make you happy and feel good. Yeah. I've experimented with every diet. I've done it
all. I've been a vegan, I've done raw, I've eaten only meat, I've eaten balance,, of eating like a body builder, you know, you name it, I've probably
tried it. I don't believe that it's as important in the sport of arm wrestling as it is, perhaps
in other sports. I believe that, just to be very basic, I mean, if you're eating enough food,
you're probably gonna be okay.
So it's just calorie.
It's a lot, I mean, really,
I mean, not to over-complicate it,
but I mean, that's where the conversation starts
or you're eating enough food.
And it can come in any number of ways.
And I don't think it's as important
as a lot of other people do.
I'm certainly irresponsible in a lot,
but the thing is, back to volume, right?
Like, if you wanna be a super heavyweight,
it's very different than if you wanna be a weight category guy.
If you wanna be a weight category guy,
I'd say that you need to be a weight category guy. Yeah. If you want to be a weight category guy, I'd say that you need to be more
responsible, make better choices. If you want to be a super heavyweight, everything.
Just so we're watching a delicious look at Alma. So, hey, spaken, syrup, so you don't
care carbs or protein. So, you know, all the things you've tried. So, I'm mostly
meat now. Yeah. And I landed on that. There's several things,
you know, obviously I'm not. But I do a lot of sport. And I was very surprised how my
particular, very specific body can perform better with only meat, why better. The sports
I do, the mind matters. And so for some reason, my mind is just clear. And I don't think,
because it feels unhealthy. It just makes me feel Yeah, and I don't think because it feels unhealthy
It just makes me feel really good. I don't think I would recommend it to anybody else
so it's
It's interesting that that journey of just exploring can take you to figure out something about your own self
One of the most interesting things that I heard about nutrition was I
One of the most interesting things that I heard about nutrition was, I heard there was a... Actually, Doritos.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I'm an idiot.
Now, I do, I'd say over the last couple years, I've really gone into carbs a lot and
high glycemic carbs and, you know, just to, I feel like it's one of the best things you can do
if you're working out really hard. cheers ad car yeah exactly um but oh where was I so good so you've had distracted
I forget everything yeah distracting no so you've added the high-dressing carbs into the mix
so that you those help but that's from mass building right so there was a study that I heard about by somebody who's trying to identify heart attacks
They did this great big study and at the end of it. I mean didn't matter what the people ate
The the most important thing was how they felt about the food that they were eating
Yeah, so if you believe in the food if if you believe that it's going to do good things for you,
and if you allocate it the right way, it's going to have a positive impact.
And I try and do that no matter what it is.
Like I have my foods that I think do certain things, and so, you know, for me, I know that
actually, I mean, I learned about corn fed pumps when I was overseas.
I realized that if I never used to eat crap, really didn't. I ate super clean all the time.
And when I was faced with imminent death more, I would be like, okay, I'm going out tonight, let's have a couple ice cream
bars, you know, like whatever. And what I realized is if I eat like an entire bag of chips or like,
you know, a bunch of chocolate bars, and then I go and have a workout, my workout will be incredible. It'll be incredible.
There's something about easily processed carbohydrates that will continue to quickly get into your
blood as fast as you can burn it.
There's something about that that will give you incredible blood flow.
Yeah. And also your mind plugging in, enjoying that.
Right. And then believing it works. And that's not all right.
So it worked better. Exactly. I mean, I feel that way.
I think this is really not this has been frustrating to me about the health culture
in the United States in the studies that are done, you look at the importance of sleep, the importance of
X diet, all those kinds of things. I wish incorporated into that would be your mental
relationship with all those things. So for example, people that tell me, well, your sleep schedule
is insane. Yes, perhaps, but also it's insane
because I'm doing what I love and I don't see it as a problem. And I think that's really
important to understand. If you're sleeping crazy hours is not affecting your stress
and is actually making you happy or you're drawing some kind
of source of happiness and pleasure and satisfaction like being awake when others aren't.
It's like the Mike Tyson thing or something like training when you've convinced yourself
everybody's sleeping and therefore you're somehow training much better.
That's powerful.
Even if you look statistically six hours, maybe worse than eight
hours or four hours, maybe worse than six hours. So the mind is a powerful thing. Super powerful.
But if you want to be a super heavyweight, eat. You got to eat stupid amounts all the time.
Yeah. You have to test your digestive system. What's your favorite meal, by the way? Just if you have
You have to test your digestive system. What's your favorite meal, by the way?
Just if you had to, you know.
You know, I am, I do, oh geez, I like so much food, it's tough, but I'd say the food
that I rely on a lot when I'm getting ready to compete is sushi.
Just because it normally comes in an all-you-can-eat format, you know?
So I love to go and just binge.
All you can eat just, all you can eat buffets.
Sushi is just super convenient.
Yeah.
If I was a sushi, all you can eat buffet plays,
I'd be terrified when I saw you.
Have you had barbecue at Texas?
I, yeah, I love it.
I love it.
So you, just a small tangent on this,
you, you faced the mountain.
I have four Bjorn's.
Well, first of all, you arm wrestled them.
It's interesting to ask, so this is the mountain
from the Game of Thrones.
A strong man, one of the strongest people in the world,
for a time, the strongest person in the world.
What was it like, I know, sort of, you guys maybe weren't going 1,000%,
but what's it like? Well, he probably weren't going 1,000%, but what's the like...
Well, he probably wasn't going 1,000%.
But it's interesting to think, what does that strength feel like?
So it's a specialized strength in another sport.
What did it feel like?
How strong was he, what is some kind of deep insights
you drawn from that battle? I feel like if we were to go back a thousand years and if you give him armor and a two-handed
sword, he will just rip across the landscape and no one will stop him.
So this is the boxing match you can't do, but there's also a video of them arm wrestling.
Yeah, what a Titan though, what a Titan, you know, a guy like that tall,
yeah, strong fit, disciplined. I mean, he is, he's quite a warrior.
What are 19 pounds? Yeah, yeah. He's incredibly impressive.
I really like Haft Thor and I like Eddie Hall too.
And I was just so, I'm just so caught up with the drama.
Okay, so Eddie Hall and Haft Thor Bearonson, two of the strongest legendary strongmen that
we have.
And they were the coolest. They were the top when strongman was really super cool.
I don't know all the details,
but they legit hit each other.
Like legit.
Like legit.
So I think it kind of stems.
I don't know, like I say,
I'm not right there with them,
but Eddie won the World Strongest Man event Like I say, I'm not right there with them, but
Eddie won the World Strongest Man event or something one year.
And like, and the thing is, one of those victories
where Haapthor was not accepting of his defeat, okay?
And there was a little bit of back and forth.
And basically, from what I understand,
they were gonna fight like the night
of the World Strongest Man.
And they got kind of pulled apart and this, uh, this heat between them got translated
into a potential boxing match.
So it's very real.
It's a very real fight.
So you have the two strongest dudes on the planet.
Again, a fight each other.
So, so I've been like, you know, because arm wrestling and strong man, it's,
it's kind of similar communities.
Who do you got?
If you're giving me financial advice, I am so bad. I always call it wrong. They're very different.
I see
hapthores being, you know, more Eddie Hall is slimming down. Is that what I see?
Well, I see hapthor is a bit more regimented
But I see Eddie Hall as like way more barbaric and like I think he's a little bit more athletic
but hapthor is bigger and
And you know they've chosen slightly different paths to prepare for the match
But but what happened was like they were about to fight
And Eddie Eddie Hall blew his bicep prepare for the match, but what happened was like they were about to fight in any
Eddie Hall blues bicep. So me, I was getting ready for Levant in December. We were
supposed to arm wrestle in December, but he's got his movie. And so I was like, okay,
I can kind of get away from the sports just a little bit, rod in my base. That happened.
And I was like, Oh, an opportunity. You stepped in. An opportunity to fight.
I'm like, I'll do it.
So how much training you trained a little bit?
So can you tell about your own decision to do that?
What was the training like?
What was it?
Oh, it was so much fun.
It was so much fun.
So basically, I made a funny video
and I sent it to the organizers of core sports that I would do it.
I'm like, I'll do it. I'm sure they got a thousand people who wanted to do it.
But I'm like, I'm like, listen, I'm like, I'm an old man.
Like, I'm gimped up like everywhere outside the arm-resting lanes.
I said, but I will 100%.
Like, if you let me fight, I'll give it my all.
And, and whatever. They didn't get back to me.
They're like, whatever, okay.
So then, so then they call me on a Friday, like five weeks before the event.
And they're like, hey, Davin, were you serious?
And I'm like, oh shit.
And I'm like, yes, I was serious.
Yeah, I'll do it.
And they're like, yes, I was serious. Yeah, I'll do it. And they're like, okay,
they're like, it's down to you and like two other people,
we'll get back to you in a day or two,
but you would do it.
And I'm like, okay, so they got back to Mount Stunneday.
Like, so right away I'm like skipping rope.
And I'm like, and I'm so, I only arm wrestle legs.
That's all I do.
So what was your, you did some stricking training?
Yeah, so I went to this guy that he was awesome,
Zach, Ben Boucheda there.
That was it from TriStar.
Dino for us, the hobby.
And yes, people in the comments,
I will interview him on this podcast.
The people, he's brilliant.
Yes, he's brilliant. He's brilliant, right?
He's an incredible guy.
So right away, I had no idea about the fight community
across Canada, really.
And I got, by the fifth message that said,
you must train with Ferras.
I was like, okay, called him up.
He was incredible, right away.
He's like, yeah, you can come and we'll just work with you.
So I got the call. I called him on like Monday at two o'clock.
By like seven o'clock, I had my things packed and I went to Montreal and I spent four
weeks in, in the fighter dorms just humbling yourself.
Yeah. Every day, just getting punched in the face, you know, over and over,
going for runs with all, like they're all like Olympians and Pro fighters living in the dorms. Super cool dudes. They were so good
to me. Yeah, there's a good video of you and for us, just talking. Yeah, I don't remember
which stage this was, but this is really, but you're already beginning to get humbled.
Oh man, I knew. I mean, I knew what I was getting into.
Like I knew it was, I knew it was going to be a losing battle, but I felt like the opportunity
to fight Thor like how cool is that? Like I had, I had to say, I had to do it.
I love the process and I learned a lot from doing it. Like the dorms, I wanna do something like that
with arm wrestling.
I think we're big enough now
that we can have these kind of, you know,
dorms, frat houses, whatever you wanna call it.
What's the dorm like?
So you basically stay in there,
yeah, food's there.
So you can, you mentioned,
what was the word you used to use administration?
No, no.
Exactly, that's it.
So it removes all of that.
Makes it so simple. You can just focus. You know, the gym is No, exactly. That's it. So it removes all of that. Makes it so simple.
You can just focus.
You know, the gym is here.
You live here.
Yeah.
You know, that your life becomes simple.
Yeah.
So this is a guy named Jimmy Pedro here in America.
He's a famous coach.
He's a place up in Boston.
He has kind of a dorm like that too.
Yeah.
And that becomes essential when the community is small
But you're trying to do epic things like winning a little bit gold
Yeah, so you have to really put the people together and these kind of minimalist conditions when they just focus on the training focus focus focus
Yes
Yeah, it wasn't enough time. I mean I trained for about yes three or four weeks
But I love the journey. And what
are some of the fun things you enjoy? So you did mostly striking. Did you? Yeah, I guess
it was boxing. It was straight up boxing. Yeah. What are some things that were transferable?
What are some cool things you learned from that? So from the world of armor, have you taken
anything back? Like some training regimens, ideas about training,
even movements? Because for us is a unique mind as well for training. Yeah. I don't know. I mean,
I've gone very far down the path of arm wrestling. Boxing and arm wrestling are very different. They're very different sports. The
physicality required is very different. The mentality, I mean, it's fighting, so it's
another form of fighting, which is cool. The big things that I took back from it, the
things that I loved about it was I had to run again. So really work on
endurance. Yeah. Yeah. I was going for runs with guys in the dorms and they would just
destroy me. Just like it was so bad. Did you like, how did you feel in the actual boxing in terms of endurance?
Were you able to, no.
It's a storage here.
It was terrible.
And the thing is, it was so crazy for me because I really was good once upon a time.
I really was physically, I had incredible full body endurance.
But being so specialized, I realized how much I had slipped.
And, yeah, it was fun to try and regain.
I think it's affected my body composition.
I think since that training, I've become much more lean.
I think it was a very healthy thing for me to do, like health wise.
I always think that when you're far away from competition, it's really good to kind of spread out, really good.
So I think that in that way, also for your mind, yeah, yeah, just like, mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's something about clearing your, I think you've talked about this, it's like,
you're basically taking steps back before you take steps forward, is I forget how you call the wave. Yeah, yeah
Under you know, you have to go under you got to you know
If you want to go above the line you have to spend some time beneath it and yeah, I was definitely beneath the line for a long time
But mountain I mean like the interesting thing was as incredible as he is, you know, like
what a monster.
And I think if you had a had him training and boxing, you know, for a long time and like
from his youth, I think you, you know, like I could be world champion.
But, you know, to be so specialized and then to switch, you're at a disadvantage.
And also, I know from just fighting guys in the gym
in TriStar.
Some of those guys were way scarier, it's for real.
Like a scariest story is, there's guys in that TriStar gym
that don't look like anything that would murder me,
much worse, much worse. Yeah. that don't look like anything that would murder me.
Much worse.
Much worse.
Yeah.
But also, you know, that's the difference
from being in the gym and onto the lights too.
I mean, GSBs and example of George St. Pierre's example,
somebody that maybe doesn't look terrifying.
But he's a try star.
Yep.
He trains a try star, but he's quite, he's super nice,
super humble, but is terrifying
when he's fighting, right, is dominating people.
You mentioned death, and your Canadian special forces, and in general, thinking about mortality.
Do you think about your death?
Do you contemplate the end that this thing that this ride ends all the time?
Yeah, from I thought about death from a young age. Are you afraid of it? Yeah, I hate it. Yeah, I don't want to die. Yeah, definitely definitely don't want to die
But there's times when I can rid myself of it. Yeah, sure, I'm not happy that death is inevitable,
and I'm not happy that potentially it's inevitable for all of us. But I like to fight against
it. If you could be immortal, would you?
Oh, that's my only wish.
Oh, see, but here's the thing.
That's, but the point is to have that wish.
It's, uh, it's like, though all you can eat buffet at, uh, sushi.
It's, that sushi is more delicious if you have a limit.
It, do you have a, oh, well, I don't know.
I mean, I, I don't think I get sick of stuff.
I'm very simple. Yeah, I don't think I would get tired of it. I really don't. I mean,
if someone would pose it to you, do you want to live forever? You would choose no. Yeah,
I would choose no. Choose no. Well, my answer is probably yes. Like, no, I would, it's more like the snooze button.
Do you want to, do you want to go to sleep?
But it's very difficult in the moment to go to sleep.
But if I'm allowed to live forever,
I'm going to delay all the crazy,
all the ambitious goals, all the, all the, because, ah, there's
always time.
That's fine.
But there is tomorrow then.
But there is tomorrow.
But see, I think that takes away from the richness of, like, the richness of the lived
experience of just each moment.
I think the richness of each moment comes from saying, like, I could die tonight. Like that, that it tastes delicious because you're going to die. I'm afraid if you're not,
I'm afraid all that goes away, all that magic goes away if you can live forever.
I don't know. But I'll tell you every time I have a near-death experience with thinking I'm
going to die, I definitely live better afterwards.
Yeah, like it's always been that way. But yeah, no, um, that's why the Stoics, you know, they really preach contemplating your mortality often. It kind of reminds you, this whole thing could just end
any moment and it makes you really appreciate. Yeah, I don't know. I don't know.
Certainly improving the quality of life is important. But part of me
thinks that immortality is not as fun as I would like to imagine. Do you
think that maybe your, I mean, what you're building potentially is a mortal?
Well, that's what I definitely think about with robots.
If they were to have a human-like experience
and be able to interact with humans in a deep-meaningful way,
I think they too have to be mortal in some fundamental way that means mortal like their right has to end as well
Because they won't be able to interact with humans deeply unless that's the case
because like to have to have fear to have
Love the ability to suffer the ability to miss somebody, I think scarcity is important.
You have to be able to truly lose somebody, you have to be to fear things, you have to
truly have the risk of destroying yourself.
And to have a sense of what it means to be a self, you have to be able to lose it.
So if you're immortal, you're just going to be, I feel like you're going to be like a toaster,
an intelligent toaster that just serves such a negative perspective on it.
And then mortality. Yeah, just think, well, now you just, you can get all those things done
that you want to do. I hope you're right. I hope you're right. Yeah, just think, well, now you can get all those things done that you want to do.
I hope you're right.
I hope you're right.
Yeah.
I mean, potentially, you could invest even harder because you're like, wow, I'm actually
going to be able to get all this stuff done.
I think about this a lot.
I hope you're right, but I fear that the drive to create, I can even do more.
All of that dissipates. Dis, disappears if you have all the time
in the world.
I just know how lazy I am.
And if I have all the time in the world,
I'm just gonna sit there and just like watch
the stupidest YouTube videos for the rest of all eternity.
And just-
And just-
And just-
And just-
And just get- Yeah. fatter and fatter.
I can get in shape later.
There's always time.
That's like a long period of contemplation.
Yeah.
So, for the first thousand years, it'll be the Dorito period of the Lex life.
Yeah.
You could be like, job of the hut for a thousand years.
You mentioned aliens, very important topic.
Do you actually think about this?
Has been an increased interest.
It has been increased UFO sightings and encounters, all that kind of stuff.
US government at least releasing data, releasing videos of pilots, pilot observations and from airplanes of UFOs. Do you think about
this kind of stuff? Because you mentioned in the following context, you mentioned like our
CMOS will get our shit together when the aliens eventually come. Yeah. What do you make of all the
sightings? Is that something you think about? I thought about it a lot when I was younger.
Is that something you think about? I thought about it a lot when I was younger.
And I've just, I made my conclusions and yeah,
I don't think that there's a possibility that there aren't aliens.
I would think there would be impossible for there not to be aliens.
There, you know, I feel like this is pretty good real estate.
So, you know, you'd probably want it.
But we already might be, well, I don't even think
might. I mean, it's probably quite likely that we are to some degree aliens. I mean, all life
is probably to some degree alien. I like the real estate, so the resources, but we're also kind of
interesting. Yeah. But whatever this ant colony of living organisms that we've created, it's kind
of interesting to study. I tend to believe that the alien civilizations that are going to reach us or have reached us are far more intelligent,
just orders of magnitude more intelligent than us. And so it's going to be very difficult,
both ways, actually, for us to understand them and for them to dumb themselves down enough to understand us. Yeah, probably.
So, they might even just miss our existence altogether, just because I tend to believe,
I don't know what you think, that we're not that special in terms of all the life forms
in the universe.
There's a lot of cool stuff out there.
And that has to be.
It has to be.
But to us we're special.
Yeah, well that's all it matters, right?
Yeah.
Even the human species is the most special to us humans.
There could be much more special species here on Earth.
They were just totally oblivious to like trees.
On the scale of thousands of years, maybe they're like, they're on to something. Lex, you know, I think that so much of what
makes a person special is what they pass on your kids, but I think that you are quite
special because you're part of this thing that's potentially giving birth to the next
thing. The robots. The robots. I should say the funny thing is while talking
to Devon during this podcast I would a door, a doorbell ring at the good on stairs and there was a big
box. Medicing box with a new leg of robot. So the hilarity of you saying that is because that robot is actually going
to likely be the main robot that I showed to the world in the coming months because that
has the highest compute level in that robot. So I've been playing a lot with legate robots,
the four legs, like a dog. I like all of robots, but there's something about when a robot has legs,
it's able to communicate, it's able to connect with humans in some kind of deep way, in the way
a dog can, just show affection, something about like step, step, step, step, and then the robot
realizes you're here and then it steps and then notices you in the way the dog does and raises its head.
It makes me feel noticed and heard in the same way I do when a dog notices me that excitement, that stupid excitement of like, yes, fellow living organism and what excites me about Legit robots is that holy shit is
possible to engineer this. It's possible to create that feeling and I wonder where
that can go. There's a lot of negative possible trajectories but I have a
sense that there's positive ones too. You think they'll take us with them? Yeah, I think so because I so there's this fear of robots that they become super intelligent
and run away from us humans and basically become so intelligent and then they almost just not
giving it down will destroy us. But I think in order for robots to become intelligence, they have to integrate themselves with society.
So they buy the very nature of how they become intelligent, have to bring us along.
So it's not that there will be this separate thing.
They have to, like we'll have robots in the home,
will they'll be interacting with us, you have human kids and you have a bunch of robots.
You have robot friends.
You have human friends.
And the robots make your human, human relationships much more meaningful and richer.
They bring more love to the world, but they it's integrated.
It's not like they'll be developing smarter, smarter, as like, um,
sentient beings by themselves. I think that's very difficult to do. You have to be doing that together with humans. And so we'll come for
the right. There's technical things like we might merge like cyborgs more and more.
Oh, we already saw our cyborgs, right? With the phones and so on, but more and more, so with Elon and Neuralink
deeper integration of robots and AI into
increasing the bandwidth at which they can communicate. So if we do implants in the brain, I
think again, a lot of people are really nervous about this as a my, but I think there's a lot of trajectories
that are positive there. And that to music side. And also, I just don't think it's possible
to stop this development. So we should steer it. Yeah. Yeah. So good. Did you, I mean, you
must have watched the movie Terminator, right? Yeah, of course. I love Terminator. Yeah.
I love my voice thing. My favorite movie of all time.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, that's that's the big fear, right?
Yeah, what's the conclusion with terminator? Isn't ultimately humanity wins?
I think they're like terminator eight now. Yeah. I don't know.
Yeah. So there, and it's interesting actually, I was going to bring this up as you were talking about it but
but china in the united states
actually don't know where can it is
but they both have agreed
that they're not going to put limits on autonomous weapon
uh... system development so not going to they're not going to
so because china said we're not going to. Now US
officially announced that we're not, we can't. But you can't. It's like, you never could, right?
As soon as it exists and it's better, people will use it. Well, but you, um, there's been a global
ban on bio weapons. So you were able to come to an agreement there that we're not going to use biological weapons in war.
So it was a lot of people have really upset that in the case of AI,
driven weapons, the world said, nope, that's okay.
And so now you have this potential for greater and greater automation and drones, for example, in picking
bombing locations.
And so the area at which they attack, and so you get some of that stuff that you mentioned
that drew you to the military is that teamwork between humans, that decision-making. So there's strategy, but built into that team
is a deep humanity. Like, even when there's an enemy, there's lines that you're aware of,
of what is ethical, what is not, what is just, and what is not. And it's so easy for a machine
And it's so easy for a machine
to miss all of that plough through it and do deeply inhumane acts commit atrocities.
That's something that worries a lot of people.
Yeah.
Cause, yeah, an AI-based war is just,
it's terrifying, especially with cybersecurity,
which is becoming more and more of an issue,
which is hacking, people that look a lot like me being the warriors of the future, which
is meaning people behind a keyboard versus the traditional warriors, probably inevitable. Yeah,
identifying it is, it is. But I think if you believe that it's
possible, it's certainly going to happen. Like at some point,
it's just when, right, when does it happen? So that, I mean,
to me, I'm ultimately, ultimately optimistic about the future. And to me, I'm excited about the world with that, I mean, to me, I'm optimally, ultimately optimistic about the future. And
to me, I'm excited about the world with AI. I'm even excited about the metaverse and all
these kinds of things, living more and more in the digital space in the virtual reality.
I think, so it's a part of me that grew up in the non-internet world, non-computer world.
You know, it says, I'll kiss these days with the video games.
There's part of me that's like that.
But I think what's, technology at its best can bring out the best of humanity.
So I think virtual reality, all of these things over time, we'll figure out how to fix it
to bring out the humanity social networks the the first generation social networks now Facebook Twitter and so on
They have so many problems. They're bringing out the worst in people
But I think we're learning from that. I think the next generation of social networks will be better and better and better and
and
I'm optimistic but of course, you know
One reason we may have not seen aliens yet, obviously, in a way that's obvious
is because once you get clever and smart and have all this cool technology, destroy yourself,
and we sure as humans are pretty close to that.
Yeah, there might be that limit that is hard to get right.
I'm hoping we get all our aggression between nations out
through arm wrestling competition.
Right?
Just all of that.
Yeah, oh my God, wouldn't that be great
if it was that simple?
Yeah.
Do you know if there's another over-the-top type movie
to be made?
Oh, yeah, yeah, there's always stuff in the works.
There's actually a, there's a tournament called
over-the-top in Australia that's a couple months way. I think they're doing it all the over top
scene, but there are arm wrestling movies that are being made right now. Actually, there's
a documentary that's filming me for this whole of on thing, but yeah, we're probably
due for another big one. But you're also just with your YouTube channel, you're doing
a lot for the sport. That's really cool to see just being genuine, but just being like
Looking not like you're looking today, but just like yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, just like sleepy
Yeah, you know, and just putting yourself out there completely as you are. That's a beautiful thing
The best thing about the sport is it brings people together
That's it. Yeah, the community the folks that got to interact with just so awesome,
so excited, so full of kindness. I'm definitely going to find the club here and
start working on my arm wrestling game. Devon, this is such a huge honor that you would
huge honor that you would spend your valuable time, you come down to Austin, you would hang out with me and do this conversation with us.
Super cool, Sosy Lex.
As I mentioned, in case people, you know, people I'm sure will tell me.
So I hang out with Joe Rogan all the time.
He's a friend.
I told him that he's talked to Devon.
He's going through some stuff currently, you know, but I'm sure that I hope the conversation between you Devon and Joe
happens eventually.
He's, that would be epic as well, because he's a, yeah, he loves fighting.
He loves fighting, he loves wrestling, he loves strength, and I think all of those are,
like so perfectly encapsulated in the sport of arm wrestling.
So thank you so much for talking to me.
Thanks so much, Les.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Devon Lerett.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now, let me leave you some words from Miyamoto Musashi.
The only reason a warrior is alive is the fight.
And the only reason a warrior fights is to win. Thank you for listening. I hope to see you next time. you