Massenomics Podcast - Ep. 46: APF Meet Wrap Up
Episode Date: February 20, 2017This week, we fill you in on everything that went down during this year's APF State Powerlifting Meet. Tune in to hear how all the Massenomics guys' lifts went, and learn why you should #fearthelegend....  As always, you can watch this episode in full color video... Or check out the super-high quality audio version below.. Make sure you LIKE the Massenomics Facebook page... If you don't already have a closet full of Massenomics gear, go to the MASSENOMICS STORE and load up on swag... Also, please CLICK THIS LINK TO GIVE US A 5 STAR RATING ON ITUNES... Click this text to follow Massenomics on Instagram... Vote Massenomics for President in 2016... Have your barber shave our logo into the side of your head.. Maybe get a Massenomics tattoo while you're at it.   Or you could sign up for our email newsletter at the bottom of this page. Stay Strong, M #Repost @tylereffinstone with @repostapp ・・・ Some @massenomics lifters getting after it today with the skwaaat... Adam hit 363, Larry Legend with 573, and Tanner with 584. @larry_schuck #massenomics #massenomicseffect #apfpowerlifting #strongaf #power A video posted by Massenomics (@massenomics) on Feb 4, 2017 at 9:35am PST Lifted at the South Dakota APF powerlifting meet in Chamberlain SD this last Saturday. I just signed up for the bench only and managed to place first in my weight division. My attempts were 369lbs, 385lbs, and 407.5lbs. The first two moved smooth and easy, the last one I just didn't have the strength to lock it out, but it was pretty close. Got some more work to do. Thanks to @massenomics for the spot and helping me out during it, and thanks to @tylereffinstone for video taping and coming to support us. Even got a good luck snapchat from @huckfinnbarbell !Couldn't have asked to have lifted with a better bunch of guys for my first meet. @larry_schuck @adamscherr @massenomics #meetday #APF #rivercityfitness #benchpress #benchonly #massenomicsstrong #massenomicseffect #massenomics #powerlifting A video posted by Ross Taylor (@roscoe2828) on Feb 5, 2017 at 3:51pm PST The guys finishing strong in the deadlifts today. Tanner pulled an easy 650.4lbs, and Larry hit this 551lbs deadlift.. Larry got red-lighted on this lift, but we're still gonna count it. . #themassenomicseffect @massenomics @larry_schuck #massenomics #deads A video posted by Tyler Stone (@tylereffinstone) on Feb 4, 2017 at 5:50pm PST
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M-M-M-M-M-M-M-Massanomics
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All right, ladies and dudes and lady dudes,
we are here in the basement of Massanomics Studio.
How's it going, guys?
Fantastic.
Good.
We are about, what are we, 14 hours post the state APF powerlifting meet.
Post meet.
Post meet.
Tanner is feeling okay.
Yeah, I feel pretty good.
This is the best I've ever felt after a meet.
Really?
Yeah.
Does that mean you just didn't go hard enough, probably?
Kind of.
We were mentioning that earlier.
I think the reason that I feel so good is because I didn't select heavy enough attempts or yeah i wouldn't say that i
didn't select heavy enough attempts but um none of them were like 100 attempts yeah like i had more
you weren't like near the threshold really they were prs but just they were they were yeah they
were big pr you know front squat it was a was a, 39 pound PR for me. That's crazy. And I
probably still could have done more. I mean, that's easy to say, but I probably, you know,
there's probably 10 or 15 more pounds there. So, cause you hit, you hit what? 585. Yeah. I went,
uh, opener was 529, which is very easy. It should be.
My second attempt was 551, which was a PR for me.
That's six pounds more, five pounds more than I've ever squatted.
So that's why I chose 551 on my second, just to get a PR for sure.
And it still felt very easy.
So then the guy that was kind of handling me, that was wrapping my knees and stuff like
that, he really kept saying that I should do 600 and like all through warm-ups and through uh first attempt
and after the second attempt he was really pushing for me to go 600 and I was just like man that 551
was just five pounds more than I've ever done in my life on any form of squat. I was like, I don't think I want to try 50 more pounds, you know?
So, uh, 584, which I took, which, uh, ended up, you know, being a huge PR for me and I
hit, I kind of decided to choose that number, um, because it's six plates in my head. I was like, yeah, six, you know, six plates and it's
not quite biting off as much as 600. And it was a pretty good choice. It wasn't super easy,
but I probably still could have done a little bit more, but that was the first,
only one of my three where I felt like, you know, it was really pushing the limit.
And from the looks of the lift, like know 584 went went pretty good but like
600 would have probably happened could have probably happened but that would have probably
been the mark you wanted to be on like yeah that would have been right at that line yeah if i 584
on the squat i was i was happy with that choice the 600 you know I don't necessarily want to do a squat where I like almost die or,
you know, fail on a, like, I don't mind.
I don't mind finishing with a little left in the tank.
As long as I'm hitting PRs and finishing with more in the tank.
If you can just do that.
Always.
Always.
Yeah.
I think that's.
Eventually you'll squat 10,000 pounds.
Yeah. There think that's. Eventually you'll squat 10,000 pounds. Yeah.
There's no end.
What about, I want to go back to, what about you said you had somebody handling you.
Was that something you had lined up ahead of time?
Yeah.
Or were you just like the day that you're like, oh, fuck, who's going to wrap my knees?
And has this man handled you before?
And is that why?
How many men have handled you?
It depends like on what you consider man versus boy.
Like what the age cutoff is.
It depends on what state you live in.
No, I kind of lined it up the week before.
The reason I wanted that is because I'm wrapping my knees otherwise I don't
feel like that's very necessary for me I mean maybe it could still help to have someone help
you pick numbers and everything but I kind of had my numbers down so it was the biggest thing was
someone to wrap my knees because I can't do that effectively myself yeah I never wrap my knees
I don't know what I'm doing and this guy does wrap knees and he did a
really good job wrapping my knees and by good job you mean it really fucking hurt it did hurt really
bad and uh maybe it hurt less than last year just because i knew a little bit of what to you know
yeah i just it hurt the same but i just knew better what to expect so i was a little more
prepared for it but yeah fucking hurts still
and like the backs of my knees are bruised pretty bad and he had it so i mean it felt like my knees
were in casts like if you just stood up uh if you just someone did it you know it's never had their
knees wrapped before if if he did that to you you would stand up and be like oh my knee is not bendable like this could never bend but
then you go and put you know five six hundred pounds on your back or whatever it finds a way
to bend yeah yeah yeah but it did feel like my knees were in cast but that's why I had them
because I was knee wrapping and helped a lot like that's kind of a shitty job to do too
is to wrap someone's knees because it's stressful because you have to do it there's a
there's a really serious time element to that to do do it right you don't want to do it too early
and have someone stand there and watch like two or three other lifters go all their legs turn purple
exactly and you also don't want to be behind the eight ball and uh have the judge call out well
bars loaded and you're still finishing wrapping the first knee.
Then the lifter's getting super nervous
and you're getting super nervous.
So it's not that fun
of a job, but he did a really good job of it.
Right on.
But we threw that together the week
before. He, on Instagram,
almost like as a
kind of like a joke, said, well, I'll wrap
your knees. And I said, no, that's, yes, do that as a, kind of like a joke said, well, I'll wrap your knees. And I said,
no, that's yes. Do that actually. Yeah. Did he do like Larry's or? He didn't do Larry's because
Larry and I were in the same flight, only a few apart. So Ross, uh, wrapped Larry's and their
first one, they didn't have the timing quite right so larry had to stand there and watch
like a couple people go and he was like walking around he's like oh i can't feel my feet yeah
you know but it was his first attempt and he still hit it real easy so and then they had the timing
down after that and i suppose a lot of that depends on how how the lifts in front of you go
too i mean like it's not like if a guy's if they're just popping
them through right um that's a totally different story than if you have like three guys in front
of you that fucking got that fiddle fuck around getting ready yep and then gotta really and then
really grind yep yep for sure and and the the other difference is if there's a big change of
weight between each attempt and uh rap uh mono height and then in and out in versus out like if they have to do
a lot of changes there like that it it uh makes that timing quite a bit longer too huh the other
thing i noticed we were there is uh there is some really enormous human beings like around around
here you know we're pretty big people so like i'm standing in
that room we're walking around and there's some like really thick sons of bitches like yeah
fucking crazy big oh and a lot and and so many yeah that's what the thing that gets you there's
so many there's one guy that's a freak you're like man that guy's next level but there's like 14 people that are fucking just
jacked like super super huge like really jacked like really big upper bodies that's uh we were
sitting in the hotel like eating breakfast the morning of i think and there's like a doorway
where people are walking through and ross and larry and adam i are sitting there and like people
keep walking through guys walking in every one of them's huge. And you know, we're all kind of looking up and seeing,
and no one's saying anything. We're just all noticing. And you know, I can see that everyone's
noticing. And by like the eighth one, I just said to everyone, I was like, everyone is so
fucking big. And like they all burst out laughing because it's what we were all thinking. Like,
fucking big and like they all burst out laughing because it's what we were all thinking like like if you ever think you're big you can just go to like a meet like that yeah and then you
walk away being like wow i am really no i am not big yeah yeah i like i i don't feel narrow
that often right but i'm walking around like i i like there's a lot of times i'll walk around the grocery store like
fuck yeah i go here i go here and i immediately felt like this yeah the whole time i was just
like i don't even want to try to pretend like i have any like i could i should just sit down
yeah and there's so many beards and tattoos and yeah i noticed that from the little i watched
that was a recurring theme also i think and there was a lotings. I noticed that from the little I watched. That was a recurring theme.
Also, I think there was a lot of,
quite a few people from Omaha Barbell were there,
and I think they must have some sort of uniform policy
in which you have to have a beard
before you get into the building.
Like at least as long of a beard as yours, too.
That would be a base level.
You have like the entry-level beard.
It's like you have to maybe squat 500 pounds for you to come in that gym.
And you probably also need at least four inches of beard hair.
Yeah.
Seriously.
Like I would go there with my baby face and they'd be like, get the fuck out of here.
Child.
But there was some, uh, there was some really fucking strong lifts there.
I mean, we had a guy come out.
I think he, one of the guys mentioned a shirt but i think
his opening attempt was like 5 45 or something like that yeah there were some big lifts um but
this meet there was uh a lot of raw there was some single ply and there's a couple multi-ply guys
and we were all mixed together in flights in this one because there wasn't i've never done that
before but because there wasn't very many geared guys, you know, just a couple single ply and a couple
multi-ply, we were all together. Also what they did differently that I'd never done before is
the heaviest guys were in the first flight. It was like reverse and the women were in the last
flight. Okay. Which everyone, uh, in the morning, you know, you know they put the flights out the the morning of
like right before the rules briefing they post the flights and every big guy in there is looking
around and looking at it like what the fuck like everyone you know all you're just if you've done
multiple meets yeah yeah like everyone's like oh why are like that
won't work like like it's it ends up not being that big of a deal and the rationale for it was
which makes sense to me after hearing it and i think it worked out well is um they want that
first group of of of heavy lifters that take quite a while to warm up because they're
warming up to bigger weights. They want to give them full control of the warmup room before they
go. And they, they said they would start the meet late if they have to, if, if everyone needs more
time to, to warm up, but then none of that second or third weight class should be in the warm-up room
while that uh first flight is going yeah and that way because otherwise when those guys are normally
in the last flight they'll be in there dicking around in the warm-up room during like you know
when the second flight should be going and kind of they just well it also monopolize it the whole
day yeah well and it also probably takes a really long time.
Like if you're going for a 700-pound squat, you're going to need more time.
Than if you're going for a 300-pound squat.
So fucking Joe Blow is maybe just trying to get loose between attempts.
And you've got some guy that's like starting his kind of his build to to some ridiculous weight
right and he also isn't going to go up to some guy that weighs 400 pounds you know
and it's got 600 pounds on the bar like can we strip this down
so that kind of made sense but we were squatting like max out pr attempts at 9 30 in the morning
which i'm i'm not used to.
But just as I suspected when we were talking about it,
when you get out there and get going, it's completely not relevant for me whatsoever.
Yeah, it's like at that point if you're not ready, you're never going to be.
Yeah, no, there's so much added adrenaline and excitement about competing in a meet.
Another thing I thought was weird, I didn't realize this until the end of the day,
I never took one bit of caffeine at any point throughout the entire day.
Just crystal meth?
Yeah, just cocaine.
What was the time frame from your first attempt to the start of deadlifts?
First attempt squat was probably around 915 to 930 deadlifts.
We were deadlifting by two, I would guess.
So it was a pretty fast lead. It went really, really fast, which that helps with what I was just talking about.
The downtime in between from squatting to bench and bench to deadlift was very short.
I never hardly sat down. know from squatting to bench and bench to deadlift was very short like i never i'd never
hardly sat down you know and i don't think it was too short no just but it was like just enough to
where it was always you know right out there yeah i really liked that which i i don't know if we'll
ever have an experience again like the first meet we did together where it was i mean we were in for the long haul would be just a good way to put it because i think
lifting start at eight deadlifts started at eight also yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah it was it was like
a 13 hour day i mean i think we so we got there at like seven o'clock for weigh-ins and stuff
seven in the morning yeah on that meet you're talking about and i don't think we got there at like 7 o'clock for weigh-ins and stuff, 7 in the morning on that meet you're talking about.
And I don't think we got out of there until like 9 or 10 at night.
I think we got back to our hotel, which was one block away from the meet.
I think we got back to our hotel room at 10 o'clock.
Yeah.
So it was being in one ratty old gym for like 15 hours or something.
Yeah, which is just mentally defeating.
Like that's an accomplishment in itself right there.
As a spectator of this meet, I was also really exhausted from having to stand up
for that amount of time. Me and Thick Nick and
Big Shane, we got back. It's a three hour drive.
We got back and got out. I was like, you know, I am
legitimately sore from this experience
um yeah what else did i think we had a guy down there did uh squatted 660 and bare knees
yeah 242 pound body weight yep bare knees yep i think that's what it was that was uh
fucking crazy that's last year at that meet too, there was a lot of those guys from Omaha Barbell Squat.
That must be kind of a thing for them is squatting bare knees more than you see around here.
So there's a couple 700-pound bare-knee squatters there last year, too.
That's just unreal.
My knees would just feel terrible.
I don't know.
I could maybe do it.
I just, it's been so long, but I mean, not like this week.
Yeah.
But like, and not the 700 pound part or the 600 pound part, but just do heavy for you.
I think I could make a run at like max F or even like a really heavy rep day or even heavy single.
I don't think it would make a huge difference as far as comfort for me.
Yeah.
And then the meat I think it still would be...
Yeah, I think you could block that out
when you go into animal mode and not feel anything.
Is this a stupid question,
but for the sake of just keeping your knees warm,
could you just warm up with your sleeves on
to keep from cooling off between attempts
and then peel them down
and you could still knock out a max effort?
I would think, yeah.
And then for Massanomics guys, You could just peel him down and you could still knock out a rep, knock out a max effort. I would think, yeah. Yeah. But.
And then for Massanomics guys, Big Larry Legend, what was your hashtag on Larry today? Hashtag fear the legend.
Yeah.
Larry Legend, I think he squatted 573, which was an all-time PR for him.
So he's just about ready to turn 40 years old and he's still hitting all time yeah i mean he's
hitting all-time prs which and it's also not like he not like he started lifting no no yeah it's not
like he started powerlifting five years ago no 2008 he's been like competing in powerlifting
and he closed it in on 10 years yeah he's he's hit 573 on his third deadlift attempt he definitely
could have done more than that, but that's still okay.
You mean on his squat?
Yeah, squat 573.
He benched 380, which is only the second time in his life he's benched that much.
So it tied an all-time best for that.
Deadlift, he did a really easy opener of like 502 pounds.
he did a really easy opener of like 502 pounds then he needed five 551 would have given him over a 1500 pound total which he's never done before so that you know we're kind of encouraging him
to go for that and knew that he could do it and so he took 551 on a second attempt
and came off the floor good locked out really easily like really fast was a really fast attempt, but he did this weird thing.
I don't know if it was a balance thing, like the little bit of whip of the bar
because he locked it out so quickly that it kind of pulled him forward
just a smidge off balance.
Just a touch.
I mean, you have to watch it to even see.
Yeah, you can't even quite put your finger on what it is.
Yeah.
There's just a movement.
What I think happened is, so he came up, he lift up,
and then he extended.
And I think as he extended, it was locked out, but it was heavy.
So I think he came back a little further than he wanted,
and then he just kind of set forward.
And we're talking like an inch of the shoulders coming forward.
And in doing that, and I'm looking, I did not see the bar come down.
I just saw it was locked out and his body moved.
It's like an illusion.
And he got two red lights on it.
And I mean, it looked like such a good lift.
I was like...
Was that second or third attempt?
That was second.
Okay.
And then that was in his head.
Like, because he set it down, everyone was cheering.
Yeah.
You know, he was jacked up and it was like two red lights. No idea why. that was in his head like because he set it down everyone was cheering yeah you know he
he was jacked up and it was like two red lights and everyone's no idea why yeah everyone's like
nobody knew yeah so he had you know he talked to the judges a little bit and that's what they said
i guess and then that was in his head uh-huh and then he you know broke he retried it on his third
attempt and he broke it from the ground and he didn't really make a good run out of there.
But I really think it was just mental at that point.
Yeah.
And because I think had he gotten the white lights on that 551, he would have moved up and done more weight.
I'm pretty positive he would have done like 10 more pounds from that point.
Yeah.
But because of the mental, like he was was that threw him off for sure yeah but that was like
anyone that say if you've never power lifted but you understand lifting and you understand a dead
lift you would look at that and be like that's why does that not count yeah like i mean several
people you know we posted that and several people are like so what why did he get red light yeah
like i don't understand and it's not and it's not like we just said yeah larry got red lighted? Yeah. I was like, I don't understand. And it's not like we just said Larry got red lighted.
It was like we posted the video of him lifting.
Yeah.
And everyone's like, well, I just watched that.
What the fuck?
So.
But they did call the deadlifts were really tight.
Really tight.
I didn't think that you could be no lifting that many fucking.
I feel like it's starting to be more of a new thing to be stricter on deadlifts as far as
lockouts in the knees, holding it
firmly.
That was the strictest lift.
Which you might think would be the least.
You tend to think it is just you got it or you don't.
Because I saw some lifts there and I'm
not really interested in calling anybody
out or saying the judging was poor
but I saw some
there was some squats that like
and again it's just my angle there were some squats that were passing that sure shit looked
fucking high and some of the top squats looked high um and and again close is not is not a no
lift but it sure looked high to me and then um and on the bench there was a lot there's a lot of thick motherfuckers
here who probably have a hard time straightening out their arms but there was i would say five of
the top 10 heaviest lifts were like really questionable lockouts like like the weights up
and it's just like well you can't just stop there because because like because because you could if
you didn't have it just go there and be like well well, what? I'm done. And there was kind of quite a bit of that.
And then the deadlifts come, and they're just fucking dinging everybody.
Where it's like, man, that looks like a good lift.
Yeah.
And I don't think they did a bad job or anything like that,
but it was just not – and I don't think it was inconsistent,
but I just didn't understand it. I definitely – for just, I didn't, I didn't understand it. You know,
I definitely, for me, I kind of just go off of the eye test, which is like, well, that,
you know, looks like a lift to me. I'm going to count it because all of them, I guess the gym's
not to me, but every one of the, like Larry's lift in a gym, everyone in the gym would say,
nice, nice. You wouldn't even poke a hole in it.
No.
You wouldn't even mention it.
Right.
But I guess that's why a meat's a meat, you know.
Yeah.
So he just missed breaking 1,500 for the first time ever.
Larry lifts in the 220 class, and he's just a shade under 40.
So that's pretty damn good.
I think they were just trying to hold him back because they hashtag fear the legend.
So he did good, though.
So he's still getting stronger.
Mount Rossmore did the bench only.
He weighed in at like 244.
So he's in the 275 class because it's 242.
Oh, did he want to try to hit 242 not really he just he
just thought he was even a little heavy you know that feeling you you kind of weigh your been
weighing yourself and you think you're a certain weight but a lot of times when you weigh in
in your underwear at the meet and everything you have a tendency to maybe be a little bit lighter
than what you're oh yeah well and what you think well especially i think that the night of you're
you kind of have nerves so your body is just working in overtime like you're resting i think
like metabolic state is much it's just your body's burning for sure so he could have easily done that
two pounds if he you know if if you want i don't he doesn't he didn't care about that anyways he
just wanted to do what he could do uh first attempt he did 369 very easy second attempt he did 386 which was uh pretty solid easy
lift yeah it was really easy too so then you know he wanted to break 400 uh so his selection was
probably between 402 and 407 and i went over there with him and i i thought i i said 407 that's kind
of what he was thinking too and i i said yes, that's what I thought he had too, and he just missed it, he had it, you know, halfway, two-thirds of the way, and it just stopped, and you know that, you know, like, when it stops, there's not much else that's going to happen then, and the judges said to grab it from him because he struggled there for a while.
If he would have done 4.02, he would have hit it, I don't doubt.
But I still don't think that was a bad choice.
No, I don't think if he'd have come in and pushed 4.02 that he'd have been super happy.
I mean, it would have been okay to go 3 for 3, but I think he would have been,
yeah, fuck, maybe I should have tried a little heavier.
So that was his first meet experience. What were his takeaways from it? I think he would have been, yeah, fuck, maybe I should have tried a little heavier. So that was his first meet experience.
What were his takeaways from it?
I think he really liked it.
I think he'll probably be doing more of them.
I think he's probably going to do full power soon.
Part of his thought on this is,
A, he really likes bench better than any of the other lifts.
It's his best lift, which just makes you like it more.
And then also, it's his his best lift so which just makes you like it more and then you know also it was his first meet so he was kind of thinking it's a way to uh get your feet wet yeah get a feel for
it and um he would have done just fine in full power too he could have done that too but i think
he will do that and then we had another first time guy from from the gym, Adam. Oh, yeah, that's right, yeah.
He did well.
He lifted in the 181 class.
He's never done a powerlifting meet before.
He's only been training powerlifting for not even a full year.
And he squatted 363 on his second, missed his third at a little heavier,
benched 248, which is very easy on his third.
He probably could have done well 10, 15 more pounds than that.
Dead lifted 418 on his second.
Tried like 440 on his third, and he got it, but, you know,
he kind of hitched or rammed it.
Like, you couldn't argue with those red lights on that attempt.
But still a good meet for him.
He totaled over 1,000 pounds, and I think that was kind of his goal going over into his first meet.
And then I didn't really bench.
I did take one bench attempt at 303 pounds on my first,
and I weighed my second and third because of my shoulder.
And it felt good and easy.
And it was like...
And you said that 300 is the most you've taken on bench
in a very long time. in seven months i i mean but i did it in the gym yeah just five days before
because i wasn't gonna try more in the meet than i i was had no interest in hurting in making it
worse your cell phone right so then my and then my deadlift i took 606 on my opener. It was easy.
633 on my second felt easy.
And then I knew I wanted to break 650 on my third.
I knew I could get 650 for sure.
And I was thinking about going 660, which is 300 kilos.
In hindsight, I wish I would have done that, but that's easy to say after the fact.
I went 650
in it it i think probably if you had a stopwatch it would have timed exactly the same as my second
attempt you know so but i was happy with that well and and tanner comes and grabs 650 like
most guys will get it and they'll grab it they'll get a little get a little tight tanner just grit
down puts his hands on the bar and then it just starts moving up.
Like what the fuck are you doing?
You're supposed to mess around with it for a little bit,
you know,
like kind of like maybe shake the bar up and down.
Where's the ritual here?
Well,
cause like a guy right before me pulled 650,
you know,
and it was a PR attempt for him as most you've ever pulled.
It was actually a national APF record in M1 his weight division he's a man he was
just over 40 years old and he was in much more outwardly intense than than me very nice guy
really cool guy but very like you know shaved head huge beard nose rings tattoos everywhere
a tattoo of mike tyson on his, you know, very short singlet.
And he comes up there and he's like grabbing the bar.
And it wasn't just that guy.
There's quite a few guys.
Like there's so many people that like will lift differently.
You know, like you'll have guys that will come out and be just kind of calm.
You know, they just know what they have to do and they'll go there and they just get, you know,
it's a process for them. And then there's some people that have to have their headphones on
until literally the moment they hit the nose torque and then the headphones come off and they
fucking come screaming out there and everyone's getting, you know, like that's the way they,
you have to lift at like some weird level of adrenaline. And that was the way that guy was.
you have to lift at like some weird level of adrenaline.
And that was the way that guy was.
He comes out and it's just fucking,
it was,
uh,
but it's pretty wild.
But then Tanner comes up and it's just like,
okay,
let's go.
So it was very,
two very different.
And he also,
uh,
deadlifts more differently than I do.
He very good form,
but he,
uh,
jerks it very fast off the floor. Like he doesn't round his back by any means or anything, but he jerks it very fast off the floor.
Like he doesn't round his back by any means or anything,
but he, like it's a very violent movement off the floor, you know,
and mine's a lot different than that.
You know, mine's a slower pull at that first part of it.
But so they look, two lifts that look very, very different.
But I should have done more than that, but there's always next time.
Yeah, I suppose. And I think I totaled 15.38, which would technically be my worst total ever by 10 pounds.
My first meet I totaled 15.48, and this was 15.38.
But my bench was down 137 pounds from last year.
my bench was down 137 pounds from last year.
If I would have had the same bench, I would have been 1675,
which would be a huge PR. I think next year, the same meet, I'll break 1700 as long as I...
Deadlift and squat go up, bench gets near where it used to be.
It could even be down slightly from last year,
and I think I could still do that. I'm happy with that.
So now we've got a much bigger crowd for the next meet.
Tommy, you're lifting. Ryan's lifting. Tanner,
you're not lifting? Probably not. I mean, I am going to do the
strongman, so I'd really have to get really stupid.
It's a lot to handle. I'd have to be really, really have to get really stupid yeah it's a lot to handle i'd have to be really really
dumb to do it but no one ever said you were exactly exactly if the stars align it could
could happen um so who else do who do we have lifting in march we've got tommy tommy ryan i
think cory larry larry is for sure um thick nick Nick is out now, obviously.
Big Jake will be doing it.
I think Ross probably is going to.
Oh, is he?
Full power, I'm pretty sure.
I don't think he's officially signed up, but that's kind of the way he's talked, that he will.
Did you say Adam was going to?
Adam is going to, too.
Shit.
So I go, and we go meet at shane's before we before we hit the road and as i did you
find his house because there's a statue of arnold out front i did not actually it was dark it was
that early in the morning so i had a very difficult time finding his house but i get there and i'm
like fuck shane's wearing his black mass and i'm sure too and i'm looking through all my mass
and i'm sure and i was sure that like well he'll probably
wear this one or this one nope he wore his black massonomic shirt i figured he was going to be
sporting the massonomics as numero uno i wish he would have yeah so then we wait for thick nick and
thick nick comes in and he's wearing his black massonomic shirt like fuck well i guess we're
just those guys better three of us do it than two.
Yeah.
You don't want to look like a couple or anything.
Yeah.
And then.
And then we get to the meet and Tanner, Ross, Adam are all wearing.
And Larry.
And Larry are all wearing their black.
And the issue wasn't so much that we were all wearing the matching shirt.
Because there's lots of people on teams and stuff like that that wore the matching shirts.
The problem is we try so hard to offer a diverse amount of shit in our store.
We don't, we're not some cut rate fucking website here that just has one t-shirt you can buy.
You know, we've got kind of a pile of different offerings and here we're all wearing the fucking original shirt um but yeah there was uh i'm trying to think of what other teams there was a
like pit power lifting yeah they had a few lifters there omaha barbell the gym from spearfish south
dakota can't remember the name of the gym they had a ton of lifters there a lot of strong people um big big iron big iron in uh
is that with that um big lucas yeah yeah yeah lucas bonefield yeah he's a big boy he's a super
heavyweight uh very strong guy lucas lucas makes me look small when i stand next to lucas and then
so so great story yeah lucas has a picture of, he lifted it, was it Wyoming?
Wyoming State USAPL.
And ran into Blaine Sumner there.
And so he has a picture of him next to Blaine Sumner.
And he pulls his picture up.
And Lucas is big.
He's probably 6'7".
What's he weigh?
3'30".
3'35".
Thick.
Son of a bitch, you know?
And so he pulls up this picture of Blaine Sumner,
and Blaine Sumner is twice as wide as Lucas.
Like, Lucas literally looked like a tiny.
Lucas, like, so that's what was crazy to me.
So I see this picture, and I'm like, initially, I'm like,
well, that must have been five or ten years ago
before Lucas started eating.
Yeah.
You know, because my first reaction was like, well, when did you gain all this weight?
Like, you could literally hold the picture right here and have him stand right here.
And you're like, what?
Like, that's not right.
So, apparently, Blaine Sumner is, like, the size of two Coke machines.
Apparently, Blaine Sumner is like the size of two Coke machines.
And it was like an angled view of Blaine, so you could see his width and his other width.
His depth.
Yeah, his depth and his width.
It's the same both directions. It was like Sumner cubed.
It was fucking crazy.
That is nuts, though. Yeah, man. like when you see a man you would consider to
be huge by a mile the biggest person at this power lifting meet really big people and uh
and not even really wasn't anybody in close second no and and uh i mean some are twice the man
that lucas was like twice yeah it was fucking i don't even understand i suppose the only time And, I mean, Sumner's twice the man that Lucas was. Like, twice.
Yeah. It was fucking, I don't even understand it.
I suppose the only time you can really even, I'm trying to think of, like, videos and pictures I've seen of Blaine Sumner,
and probably the thing that gives you the best feel for that is when he's benching, just the thickness of person on the bench.
Like, it's like that's a couple feet of person laying down right there.
Right.
And he doesn't have, like, a next level arch.
So it's just
it's just like no that's just all that's just all dude yeah yeah uh that power lifting meet was
a lot of fun though too and something that i was thinking about too if you've never done a meet and
you're on the fence about it it's just a really good experience it's a lot of fun and uh you see all these really big guys
and your first most of them look angry and mean like not nice and like if you 99 of them if you
say one word like oh hey or where are you from or what's your attempt on this it's like they're
your new best friend yeah you know like seriously every every person i've ever power lifted with
outside of i don't know maybe maybe every single one like at, every person I've ever power lifted with outside of,
I don't know, maybe, maybe every single one, like at a meet that I've ever gone out of my way to
say anything to ends up being really nice and interested in your lifting. And, uh, so if you,
if you're willing to maybe even just like say one word to a bunch of people, you'll walk away with
like a lot of, uh, at least, I don't know, friends or contacts or
acquaintances that probably know more than, than you, you know, or, you know, you get
to learn things that you don't know about.
And also it's super, uh, super encouraging.
Like if, if you're also like, you don't have a lot of confidence about your lifting or
anything like that, like it doesn't matter what weight you're doing.
If you go up there
and get it when you walk away you're gonna walk past like 30 other lifters that are all like
high-fiving you and yeah everyone's on the back like oh nice lift man nice lift like they don't
even care what the weight is well and it's kilos so no one really knows anyways it's like you don't
even know what you're looking and plus some of the plate sizes are so weird they're like i don't even know like i i wouldn't i didn't know if some of the smaller guys were
lifting a ton like if they were just lifting so much weight or if the plates were just i really
couldn't tell there were some big bigger guys that got out lifted by some little like yeah so
it just didn't matter i think everybody there just kind of appreciates the the grind of it you know
for sure so yeah it's a it's there's like no negativity
surrounding it whatsoever i would say you know not that i experienced even even if even when
people got you know dinged by the judges like there really wasn't that nobody was like what
the fuck no fuck all this right and if you do have that attitude then you probably need to find
something else to do yeah exactly like nobody else is gonna likes people like that there and you know it's because no one's gonna remember your weird state record that you
said at your weight class for your age yeah exactly division that's you have to take all of
that with a grain of salt and stuff too it's it's yeah i understand it and i understand both sides
of that too you know like it's it's motivating in some ways, or it gives people incentives to do things,
but some of it's ridiculous, without a doubt.
Well, it can be important to you if you want to hold the national record
for men aged 30 to 31 1 a half without any tattoos that weigh exactly on the pound.
247.3 pounds.
To 248.3 pounds.
Which they probably don't even weigh that because with this one, it's a 24-hour weigh-in.
Your weight, it's just a total.
That's true.
We didn't take advantage of the 24 hour away.
We went like 12 hour away.
And so our extreme cuts didn't really pay off.
Like you said yesterday though, you're like, it's powerlifting and we all got first.
Someone, that's the guy that near at my knees and stuff.
He didn't stay for the awards and he texted me and asked me like what
how we ended up and i was i accidentally sent that to you in response i was like oh you know
how we did it's powerlifting i got first it's like uh someone this morning like uh my father-in-law
some people they were over and then i asked me how i did and like oh i got got first place and
they're like oh nice how many people are left and oh I got first place. And they're like, oh, nice. How many people are left? Oh, 55 got first place.
Me and everyone else.
55 people got first place.
But when you think about it, there's what?
There's 10 weight classes around there?
Yeah.
Just wait.
Stop right now.
We have to do an emergency sack segment.
Okay.
All right.
Emergency sack segment.
Like this sack needs to be
emptied right now, immediately.
I feel like that's
something his wife has heard.
Emergency sack.
This sack needs to be emptied.
Tommy, close your eyes.
Tyler's already seen it.
My eyes are closed.
Alright, just wait.
Alright. Hold out your hands. My eyes are closed. All right, just wait. All right.
Hold out your hands.
What do you feel there?
You know, my guess wants to be a trophy, but I don't know what I'm feeling, though.
It's round.
It feels like it has a base to it.
Is it hairy?
It's kind of hairy uh it's
sort of warm i don't know can i take a look yeah you can take a look oh very cool so this is a it
doesn't matter that it's my trophy i just wanted to bring this into to talk to talk about power
lifting trophies you know yeah we were starting to talk about so that's why it was an emergency because there is only three powerlifting trophies that exist in the world well at least i
think this is cool and with the you know it's not like a bodybuilder flexing which kind of isn't
the same trophy for power i mean that trophy isn't doesn't exactly carry over to powerlifting but
um yeah it's cool a 50 kilo plate it plate sweet but and more even i also did want
to talk about the what we're talking about right now uh but more like the idea of trophies that
and medals that powerlifting what we were starting to talk about so there's was 55 lifters the table
had 90 medals and trophies on it. And that's,
I'm not exaggerating.
That is the actual number.
There was.
Well,
and then when you think of it though,
it's like,
it's,
it's really hard to even like get fifth.
Like it's probably more of an accomplishment to get fifth than it is to get first.
If you got fifth,
you're yeah,
go ahead.
Because there's,
so we'll just say there's 10 weight classes.
I don't know.
There's probably, depending on men or, well, just for men.
So we're talking just men right now.
So there's probably around 10 weight classes.
Yeah, I think there's eight or nine.
Okay.
We're going to call it 10 for the sake of even.
It might be 10.
It might be 10.
So we'll say 10 weight classes.
And then there's, at least in this one, there's probably just like an open and then like a master's division.
They probably don't have teen and all that stuff, do they?
Well, they do because there was a 16-year-old kid there.
There was a 16-year-old kid that squatted almost 550 and deadlifted like 550.
Okay.
So then those 10 weight classes then have.
He deadlifted like 560 or something.
Okay, yeah.
So then have, what, three options, a so then have what three options a teen and open and
then a master one possibly more master options yeah so let's get split four ways there yeah and
then on top of those four divisions you can do equipped are multi-ply single ply classic raw
and raw raw so now we times every one of those other things you just mentioned. Yeah.
And then that's just men.
And now you do the same thing for women.
And there's literally hundreds of... I think hundreds.
I mean, over 100, I would think.
Because 10 weight classes and four different groups, that's 40.
Men and women, that's 80.
But that's not counting masters,
all the different masters of all those weight classes so yeah there's hundreds and then when you consider
and then how many had so i suppose they don't just i mean they're not just like running awards
out ahead of time so depending on the people that sign up i think there might be like 400
possible things you possible classes or something like yeah yeah and that's just the men that's not
considering the women's side.
Which then equals 800.
Yeah, and then when you see a meet has 50, 70.
How many men were actually in this meet then?
It was two-thirds men, I suppose, so 35.
Yeah, well, there's two flights of men, one of women,
and the women's flight was full.
Yeah.
It was a full.
There's about 15 women and 40 guys or yeah 35 and 20 so did everybody get
by my math what would that be like like 17 or 18 trophies
well or it's like they didn't get them all out okay and technically they don't even i mean
once everyone signed up you know how many trophies to get. Yeah, yeah.
But other than that, you don't know how many trophies to get because it just depends on who signs up.
And that's also why this trophy doesn't say.
Well, and who's going to make it at their class.
Classic, raw.
Oh, we forgot there also would have been the bench only.
Oh, yeah.
Every single category we described. Bench only, deadlift only, the bench only. Oh, yeah. Every single category we described.
Bench only, deadlift only, and push pull.
Oh, really?
Of everything we already talked about times three,
there's thousands of possibilities.
Our 800 potential trophies for this one meet with 55 competitors
turns into times three.
I'm no math scientist.
What is that?
2,400 potential options. And that's not like hating math scientist. What is that? 2,400 potential options.
And that's not like hating on this.
No, only the men.
Yeah.
Which means there could be 4,800 trophies for this one meet if enough people showed up.
Which the USAPL is just as guilty of it because they have team one, team two, team three open.
Master one, master two, master three.
open master one master two master three they do make it slightly easier and that your options are raw or equipped but they also segment out your age by like eight profiles right and then there's
and then there's blonde brunette short hair there's the white people only division
a highly contested division and the funniest thing is is the USAPL has, they have like teen one, it's teen one, two and
three, right?
And junior.
And junior.
And then on top of that, they also have high school and collegiate.
And they have a, I think a armed forces division too, or a military division.
It's just like, what's the point?
So what I want to know is, so let's say we we counted there was
90 trophies that were there for this at at the moment that everybody had signed up
had everyone won a trophy well how many of those trophies were already basically assigned to a
person you know i mean like yeah like the master in this weight class has already got it you know
judging but well you could tell because second and third place also received awards.
So any weight class that they announced that had no second or third place.
They already might as well.
They already had the sticker.
And I would say that was 75% of them.
That's crazy.
And then I do think there may have been people there.
If you were number four, if you were in a weight class of four, which would have had to have been open in order for there to be that many.
There was some that got out all three.
And I'm not sure if there were, there may have been people there in that,
like possibly that fourth or fifth spot that did not receive an award.
They just send them home with an extra one just to be like, I'm sorry.
Like, and you could, if you wanted to pay 75 more dollars per,
And you could, if you wanted to pay $75 more per, you could sign up for full power, bench only, deadlift only, and push pull.
You could just do your regular meet, but sign up for all of those.
And if you were a certain age, you could sign up for open and masters.
You could win six first place and best lifter you could get seven trophies i think seven or eight trophies for just competing the one meet when you think about it it's kind of weird because
i don't know of any other really athletic organizations or bodies that segment things
that much like just just trying to think of things from like a testing your body standpoint,
like to me,
track and field is kind of a good comparison.
And there's not,
I mean,
first of all,
it's not really a amateur track and field organization,
but at the same time,
they're not organizing it by all right.
This is,
this is yeah.
Men's track and field from,
um,
I wish they didn't organize it by weight class.
Yeah. If you're crushing these motherfuckers.
That's the interesting thing, though, is if you think about
if this is actually a problem, and I don't know that it is
maybe a problem. That's my point. I'm not even saying this is good
or bad. I can make an argument for both ways. This is the most
I've ever thought about it though.
Yeah.
But it is interesting.
So if you think about if this is a problem and I don't know that it is,
what,
what is the solution?
Do you,
I mean like,
because the reason that they have the weight classes segment,
you know,
10 weight classes,
let's say you cut that to five.
Well,
is that fair to the people in the bottom?
I get the weight classes one. That one doesn't really bother me. But the people in the bottom i get the weight class that
one doesn't really buy me but the deal is so let's say they do that well that's maybe not fair to the
people at the bottom of weight class well we are at a point now where it's fair because we're giving
everyone fucking trophies like you know what i mean and it's not like the participation but that's
what ends up happening either you need way more people to show up, like to really flood the deal to make it,
to make it matter.
Yeah.
I don't know what like a solution would be to it.
Or you just do away with all the master stuff or you do away with all the
push,
pull bench only like you're either,
you're going to come and you're going to do it.
That's what I think,
you know,
I mean,
yeah,
it's tough or, you know, I mean, yeah, it's tough.
Or, you know, and then also all the different raw,
multi-ply, single-ply, and all that.
But there's always some people that want to do these things.
And there's federations that don't do all of those, too.
Right.
So, I mean, that's part of the way of filtering it, I guess.
Right.
And, you know, I think, like, within this podcast, we tend to look at all these things pretty objectively, you know, say, Tommy and I powerlift, you do CrossFit, you know, we do strongman, but we're not afraid to call something likeFit is stupid, you'll say it's stupid. For sure. Or if we think something's in powerlifting is stupid,
we're not afraid to say that we think it's stupid.
And this is one of those things that's probably...
It's definitely convoluted.
Yeah, you're right.
It definitely gets pretty convoluted.
I don't know what...
Like I said, I don't know.
The problem is it's probably just the way this particular federation
might just be structured is that, well. We do allow all of these things.
You're not going to have in South Dakota, you're not going to have a meat that is only multi-ply.
You could do only multi-ply, no other things, just full meat, only multi-ply, split to weight class, and it wouldn't get weird.
It wouldn't be weird.
But the problem is how many people are going to show up. meat only multiply split to weight class and it wouldn't get weird it wouldn't be weird but the
problem is how many people are going to show you and if you're going to do just raw how is a third
of the people going to show that if you live in southern california you can probably do these
different things where you're drawing from a pool of well thousands of lifters yeah you could put on
a meat like this and have 500 people right and you could be just multiply no masters or you could have a just master olympic weightlifting they have masters
only yeah where there's no open division it's just all the masters their their own separate thing
in south dakota in powerlifting you can't do in you can't segregate it like that because you'll have four people come and it's crazy that we even have two meets yeah from any federation it's great oh well
we've got two meets well what what are the you know if you ask me what what federation do you
compete in or what type it's like well just like whatever we can get to it's like well that's
multiply only well i guess i'm gonna figure that out that's the only reason you you lifted in knee
wraps yeah well yeah it's either that or bare knees at this meet and i was like well i guess i'm gonna figure that out that's the only reason you you lifted in knee wraps yeah yeah it's either that or bare knees at this meet and i was like well i guess i'm just gonna use
wraps and you don't train with wraps it's not probably anything that you're that you're into
no i'm not i'm going to continue to not train with the wraps you know like and i'll do it again
next year i'll see you next year but it's just it's a power lifting meet so you're just gonna do it yeah if if the
rule was you you know you had to squat with one leg and well i guess this is what i'm doing because
there's right it's a fucking power lifting meet and it's near me right if i got to the if i was
uh totaling 2 000 pounds i'd probably drive eight hours to go do a power lifting meet that fit all
of my perfect wants and preferences uh until that point
it doesn't matter like it's just like which at the rate you're going is probably going to be in
about six months i mean i don't know if that's quite right uh but you know the on the positive
side of this trophy thing kind of what we're talking about here not that many people power
left if you look at the general public and if that's what it takes to get people you know if that makes people
at the end of the day i feel like well this is pretty cool i get to take this home and i get to
show uh my spouse or my kids or my you know my friends that don't know about power lifting it's
like well i've i want to i want something you know and i like i had fun and this is something
that i get to remember that by if that gets more people interested in it that's definitely a good
thing yeah yeah but and i think also the people that if i wouldn't have got a trophy that's not
going to affect my outcome on how i enjoy powerlifting and stuff like that and that i got
one doesn't affect it.
But there are probably some people that did it for the first time ever and like, wow, I got to win something.
I don't normally get to win something.
Does any of them give out any money?
Not locally, but they do.
They are on a national level.
Yeah.
You can find that.
You get a sponsor back.
Right.
I mean, our little strongman thing we throw together can give out money.
I don't know why Powerlifting Meets couldn't.
Our strongman thing
gave out more money
than a lot of,
than a vast majority
of powerlifting.
Our strongman competition
gave out more money
than World's Strongest Man.
Than World's Strongest Man,
I think.
Or at least,
literally,
other than the Arnold
and the World's Strongest Man,
I think Massanomics
Strongman Showdown
is probably
the third highest.
And this next year is going to be bigger.
We've already had people ask us to offer to try to really sweeten the pot.
Right.
Sure, but I have to find a way for me to win.
We make it an invitational.
Yeah, so it's basically going to be me and Tanner,
and then we're going to get a bunch of, since there's Tanner. And then we're going to get a bunch of like,
since there's no weight class,
we can get a bunch of like 135 pound teenagers.
Yeah.
With the grand prize being a Buick 88.
Let's save her.
Let's save her. $10,000 cash from an unnamed sponsor.
Uh,
but talking about that,
Zadruna said one Arnold eight times.
And for several years they were giving away a Hummer because they used to do
the Hummer tire deadlift. So he won like five hummers and i'm sure in like lithuania you they
don't even fit he said it is ridiculous so he does not own any he sold all of them yeah like he owns
no hummers and my understanding is he just wanted the money is that if you win if you win like a like a car say you win a fifty thousand dollar car
you still have to pay the taxes on what that vehicle is worth so like if you're let's say
you're broke and you win a car it does you no good your only option is to sell that fucking car
because you're going to pay 20 percent in taxes wasn't it the same thing with uh when barry bonds
is getting close to breaking the home run record that whoever caught the ball was going to be liable for the taxes to pay on that ball.
Yeah, so you were just going to have to sell it.
Yeah, because this is the new world record home run ball, and it's worth to someone tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands.
And so I think I remember them saying that you're on the line for paying the taxes on that.
That's crazy.
Welcome to Massanomics. Yeah. CPA. them saying that you're on the line for paying the taxes on that that's crazy welcome to mass economics yeah cpa um what else did we have here for today guys did you have any other things about
the meat you wanted to cover tanner oh one other one other one other interesting not related to
anything specific but just a funny thing that struck me as really true when he said it uh
anything specific but just a funny thing that struck me as really true when he said it uh in a power lifting meet we were warming up uh in the warm-up room another guy i had never met
before we were just just kind of talking like we were talking about openers uh a couple different
things i guess openers versus your opening weight on the platform versus your last attempt you take in warmup.
This guy and I were both, he was opening a little lighter than me. I think I opened at 606 on
deadlifts and he opened, uh, maybe at 580 or something like that. The last attempt that he
took in warmups was like under 500 pounds, like four 55 or something like that making over 100 pound jump yeah and the last uh
that i took in warm-ups was 545 you know and i saw i was making a 50 pound jump and i think that
that i don't know what that there's right or wrong or that but that's just kind of a personal
preference thing but he said he really likes to do that to like make a very large like he does not
like to work up very close to his opener um but the the funnier thing that he had mentioned that i thought really was true he's like the most
stressful part about a power lifting meet is trying to time your warm-ups in the warm-up room
yeah because and i was like god that is so true like because by the time i get out to the platform
i'm not stressed like i'm ready to
you know i'm ready to go i'm not worried about anything it's just like then it's time to lift
but the worst part is the warm-up and kind of like working in with you know 10 other people
trying to work in on the same one or two pieces of equipment and trying to figure out your timing
of when you know you don't want to be taking your last warmup
10 seconds before you go out to take your opener and you don't want to take it 15 minutes
before your opener.
And that, that just kind of seemed like a true thing to me.
I wouldn't even know how to approach it.
You know, for me, like I, if I ever had anything normally, if I'm trying to like set a gym
PR, it's like, well, I don't feel like it now I'm going to do
it and then you know what I mean it's all on you and you have no control like if you're starting
you have no control over actually what time you'll be on the platform if it's 15 minutes from now
seven minutes from now or 20 minutes from now. All of that can change based on things that are out of your control starting now.
That would be the most stressful thing for sure,
and I'm kind of a control freak anyways,
so I would sit there and be like, I'm ready, what the fuck.
Well, and then you want to do four plates on the deadlift.
Someone else is stripping it down to one plate.
The guy that wants to go after him wants to go to six plates,
and you're like,
when can I do my four?
You know,
like,
it's like,
I want to go now.
You know,
I think I do think for a brand,
someone doing their first meet,
that would be like the hardest.
That's probably one of the hardest things.
I know.
I know my first meet.
Um,
I was lucky enough to the flight that I,
I mean, it was the same meet that you did,
but I was in a different flight than you guys and being lighter, I had to go first to, or
before you guys.
And I was lucky enough that in my flight, there was a guy that had competed.
I would say he's probably done at least eight meets.
And so with that, he completely was like guiding it.
He basically just was like, all right, just do what I do or just go on, go on my time
in here.
And then he'd go look and see, Oh're going too fast slow it down so then it's like i i'm gonna take your word because i have no idea and it worked out really well and i can't imagine doing
any of my stuff if this guy didn't show me the first time because you have no idea like when
they're warming up you know it's all right there's like in our case i think there was like 12 girls
in the flight before us and all right um you know they're in all right. There's like, in our case, I think it was like 12 girls in the flight before us. And all right. Um, you know, they're in, they're just starting their second attempts.
All right. So you still got a lot of time starting third attempts. All right. We should probably
start kind of getting through where we want to be with warmup so that the minute this, they get
done, you can go right out there and there is an art to it for sure. Yeah. I think if it's your
first time you, you need someone to help you on your first one. Otherwise, you're going to be like, if you don't have someone,
you have to just find someone that's there that's probably done it before
and ask them what to do, when to do it.
I think I would just half-ass my warm-up.
I'd just go through and I'd do it.
And I'd be like, okay, well, I did my things.
I hit all the things I wanted to do.
And now I'm just going to be out here and get cold.
And that's just what's going to happen.
Kind of like every time we did every strongman competition we do
we go out and we do some air squats yeah but like i never lift anything fucking heavy until you just
get out there and grab it yeah it's a miracle none of us get hurt but um the the plate loading
thing is weird too that they do it that way and that like i do think the thing that makes
the most sense is the way they do it in olympic weightlifting is they just start at the lowest
opener so you choose what your opener is going to be and more weight gets put on the bar
constantly there's no going back there's no changing off you just you get in when you get in
and then you pick your next one and you may wait between there but like there's no uh it was crazy there's people coming out doing like 600 pounds and then someone
coming out benching benching 250 pounds right well within a flight it tells you there's still
some some of that that goes on where they yeah kind of changed on the fly because i know that's
happening so they do that is the way it's supposed to be within the flight.
And even within your first and second and third attempts, they can reorder,
they'll reorder it.
And that's something that got me my first meet ever. I got used to,
I think the guys I was lifting around in my flight,
we were all kind of like,
it just worked out that every time when the flight would start the guys just our our jumps were keeping everyone in the same line like this guy just benched more
than everyone the whole time this guy deadlifted more than everyone or whatever or squatted more
but when we got to the deadlifts what maybe some people started low some people took some really
big jumps and all of a sudden they changed the order. So when I was so used to going after John.
Wait, I'm before him.
I need to get going.
I've been going after Johnny the whole time.
And so I'm like, Johnny hasn't gone yet.
So I'm just waiting.
And then the bar's loaded for me.
It's like, oh, shoot.
I'm going to get out there.
Because he took a bigger jump on third than you did.
Yeah, because his third attempt was a big jump.
And I didn't realize that in my first meet that that's how it actually went.
And I think at a weightlifting meet, if there's enough people, all you're doing is watching for the number.
So there's this.
Right now there's six in there.
They can change them, but you kind of know once the weight starts getting up towards what you're doing.
Yeah.
I apologize, guys.
We do have a bunch of white noise here.
My furnace is running.
I think it was running earlier in the episode, too,
that I forgot about.
I didn't even notice.
I didn't either until right now.
I hear it in my ears now.
I still have no snare in my headphones.
I'm farting on no goddamn snare drum.
What else do we have, guys?
We are at our hour.
Unless we want to Joe Rogan this and go three deep.
What's your Super Bowl prediction so when this comes out,
people can know how wrong?
This comes out, everybody can know how stupid I am.
I think I'd be foolish to bet money against the Patriots.
I'd be foolish to historically.
What's the score?
Because Super Bowls normally are not good games, I'm going to go with
like 17-3.
Patriots? No, I'm going to go 20-10. These are both
pretty good offenses though here. So what's your prediction, Tommy?
See, I think, first of all, I do not care at all about this game. I really
don't. I haven't watched the Patriots or the Falcons play a single game this year.
Patriots, we'll say.
And I don't know for the score.
I have no idea.
What would it be like 37 to 10?
Actually, I was going to say Patriots, and I'll say 34 to 13.
And if one of us is right, we get a trophy.
Six trophies.
And for the two of us that are wrong, we get a trophy.
Well, I'm younger than you guys, so I'm in a different age division.
So you get a couple trophies.
So you get a trophy no matter what.
And I get Masters. I'm 32, trophy no matter what. And I get Masters.
I'm 32 and I'm taller, so I get Masters and the 3XL division.
That's true.
Everybody wins.
Except the Falcons, apparently, according to us.
So thanks a lot for listening, guys.
That will do it for us today.
I'm going to see if I can zoom in on this screen here.
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we're rocking the video um that's probably the hottest place to to follow us um go to itunes
leave us a five-star review and is there anything else we need them to do we're not asking for much
just your money and to sign up for all this shit and do all this stuff yeah that's yeah i think if
they listen to the podcast and have never checked out the video,
you should try it out.
Yeah,
for sure.
Um,
and if you do listen to the podcast and we know how many people listen to the
podcast and it's way more than have left us five star reviews,
the numbers are close,
but it's not really.
No,
I do know that we have close to being like 1%.
Yeah.
I was going to say,
I think there's 200 times the viewers.
We are into the many thousands.
This is not an exaggeration.
Many thousands of listens a month.
Normally we just exaggerate all these
to ridiculous numbers, but that's actually true.
We accurately have many thousands
of people listen to this a month
just on the podcast, audio only.
I think we've got
15 five-star ratings so get your shit
you know we've been asking for these for a couple weeks now and those those episodes are probably
just coming out so i'm going to assume like next week the ratings are just going to come piling in
and we'll have sure we'll probably have a whole a whole episode of just reading reviews again yeah
we're going to read the review leave us one if you leave us a one-star review and you're an asshole,
we'll probably give you more time,
but I would like to discourage you from doing that.
Well, have you guys checked the reviews lately,
just in case they're...
You know, I haven't.
I'm just assuming...
I checked a couple of days ago.
There wasn't anything good.
No good ones to read.
I did also notice...
I watched one of our podcast episodes.
I was just checking out some numbers on YouTube,
and it is a weird thing for guys like us who do you know a podcast and video audio we do a bunch of online content we're kind
of you know do internet things and yet i got one thumbs down vote on one of our youtube
fucking videos like one thumbs down on one of our podcasts and And I fucking stewed. I was like, how do I find out who did that?
Like, is there a metric that I can find out who gave me that down vote?
So if you did do that, fuck off.
And you know what we should call it?
I think we need thicker skin.
We did have a review.
We have a review from January 30th.
Oh.
So that would be.
That's like four days ago.
Yeah.
Four days ago.
So should I read it?
Do it.
You better.
All right.
From.
How many stars?
Five stars.
Okay.
Okay.
Yeah.
I'm so surprised we actually have like a new review.
So are we really going to read it like we've been saying,
or are we just going to say fuck these guys?
We better read it as long as it's good.
I'm excited.
Okay.
It's the title of it is powerful exclamation mark, and it's good. I'm excited. The title of it is Powerful!
And it's a 5 out of 5.
And it's from Big K underscore D.
Big K D.
As a newbie to working out, this show has provided helpful insights so that I can maximize gains and reach my personal goals.
Holy shit, that's like a real review.
Either that's someone trying to be funny that they went really real like they're trying to be so funny that they're like i just have to make it
really realistic if you're real big k underscore d we're happy to have helped yeah uh if you're not
thanks though because nobody else is going to read that no one totally different yeah
you know aren't you surprised that it was like a really real sounding review
and not just like
once that we wrote?
Yeah.
They didn't use any weird
like lifting slang talk
or anything.
It was just like
a person talking.
They also didn't make it sexual,
which we encourage.
Right.
Well, yeah.
So on that note,
that'll do it for us.
There is one other thing though.
We,
as long as we're on the topic of feedback and ratings and stuff,
people are, one man did leave us a comment on an article.
A real, real comment.
Oh, yeah, that's right.
And he listens to the show,
and then we talk about how no one leaves comments,
and he left us a comment.
That's right.
We didn't ever, I just remembered that.
No, I think I responded to it, didn't I?
Yeah, it was on the website.
The hard part is, so I'd still encourage,
we get, if you comment on an article,
we do see it and we usually try to respond.
On the website.
On the website.
I do wonder though, like,
if you leave a comment on an article
and I reply to it,
it's not like they get a fucking email.
Yeah, they don't know.
And I never read the same article twice.
So I don't know.
If you left a comment on an article of ours, go back and check it.
Yeah, because we'll try and make sure we respond.
On Facebook, of course, you'll see a notification.
We try and...
We certainly respond.
If it's not like a dickhead comment, we'll respond to it for sure.
And if it is a dickhead comment, we chill for a little bit and we try to find the best approach and we decide
if either sean's is going to handle this one or mostly we let tanner do it so it stays fairly pc
instead of like all right listen all right listen you fucking idiot
but uh anyway you can uh make sure you like us on Facebook for sure. Let's start there.
But you can follow me on Instagram at Tyler Effingstone.
That's Tyler E-F-F-I-N-stone.
Not Tyler Effingston.
Not Effingston.
Effingston E.
I think I heard Ryan say that one day.
Like, what's Effingston?
I mean Effingstone.
It's an alias. Effingston? I mean Effingstone. It's an alias.
You can find me on Instagram at Tomahawk underscore D.
Instagram at Massanomics for all your Massanomics Instagram needs.
You got it.
All right.
Thanks a lot for listening, guys, and stay strong.
See you.
See you.
Wave to the camera.
I don't know which camera.
All of the cameras.
Peace.
You just heard the Masanamics podcast.
With your ears, you're welcome.
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Find us on Instagram at Masanamics.
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From your friends at Masanamics Studio, home of the world's strongest podcast, stay strong.