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'''Hjalti 'Úrsus' Árnason''' (born 18 February 1963),<ref name="Bill">{{Cite web|url=http://strongestman.billhenderson.org/bios/hjalti.html|title=Hjalti Árnason|website=strongestman.billhenderson.org}}</ref> is an [[Iceland]]ic former [[strongman (strength athlete)|strongman]] competitor and world champion [[powerlifter]]. Known by the nickname 'The Great Ursus', Hjalti first began in strength sports by competing as a junior powerlifter in 1983. He also coached [[Jón Páll Sigmarsson]] and won the 1988 [[Le Defi Mark Ten International]]. Hjalti also competed with [[Magnús Ver Magnússon]] in [[Pure Strength]] team competitions in 1989 & 1990.<ref name="Bill"/>
'''Hjalti 'Úrsus' Árnason''' (born 18 February 1963),<ref name="Bill">{{Cite web|url=http://strongestman.billhenderson.org/bios/hjalti.html|title=Hjalti Árnason|website=strongestman.billhenderson.org}}</ref> is an [[Iceland]]ic former [[strongman (strength athlete)|strongman]], [[powerlifter]] and a [[Strength athletics|strength sports]] promoter. Known by the nickname 'The Great Ursus', Hjalti first began in strength sports by competing as a junior powerlifter in 1983. He also coached [[Jón Páll Sigmarsson]] and won the 1988 [[Le Defi Mark Ten International]]. Hjalti also competed with [[Magnús Ver Magnússon]] in [[Pure Strength]] team competitions in 1989 & 1990.<ref name="Bill"/>


==Biography==
==Biography==
Hjalti was born in [[Reykjavík]] in 1963.<ref name="Samson">David Webster, ''Sons of Samson - Volume 2'', pages 71-2, (Ironmind Enterprises Inc: Nevada City), {{ISBN|0-926888-06-4}}</ref> He grew up in the same neighbourhood as Jón Páll Sigmarsson and they attended the same school. His sports career began with training in [[karate]] and he also participated in [[soccer]], [[team handball|handball]], and [[track and field]]. He had a talent for powerlifting and shot to fame when he began competing internationally from 1983. In that year, he came first in the Junior European Championships and made the senior national team. Then he began to compete in [[Strongman]] to make a living as a semi-professional. He found at an early stage that powerlifting had little money or publicity associated with it and also his friend, Jón Páll, was beginning to make waves in the higher-profile world of the [[World's Strongest Man]] and its associated circuit. His forays into strength athletics consisted of a mixture of [[Strength athletics]] including [[Highland Games]]. It was noted that Hjalti primarily relied on his 'brute strength' and sacrificed technique and suffered from a lack of proper, regular coaching.<ref name="Samson"/>
Hjalti was born in [[Reykjavík]] in 1963.<ref name="Samson">David Webster, ''Sons of Samson - Volume 2'', pages 71-2, (Ironmind Enterprises Inc: Nevada City), {{ISBN|0-926888-06-4}}</ref> He grew up in the same neighbourhood as Jón Páll Sigmarsson and they attended the same school. His sports career began with training in [[karate]] and he also participated in [[soccer]], [[team handball|handball]], and [[track and field]]. He had a talent for powerlifting and shot to fame when he began competing internationally from 1983. In that year, he came first in the Junior European Championships and made the senior national team. Then he began to compete in [[Strongman]] to make a living as a semi-professional. He found at an early stage that powerlifting had little money or publicity associated with it and also his friend, Jón Páll, was beginning to make waves in the higher-profile world of the [[World's Strongest Man]] and its associated circuit. His forays into strength athletics consisted of a mixture of Strength athletics including [[Highland Games]]. It was noted that Hjalti primarily relied on his 'brute strength' and sacrificed technique and suffered from a lack of proper, regular coaching.<ref name="Samson"/>


In 1985, Hjalti competed in the very first [[Iceland's Strongest Man]] contest<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.ironmind.com/ironmind/opencms/Articles/2009/Jun/Stefan_Solvi_Petursson_Wins_Icelandxs_Strongest_Man.html|title=Wednesday, June 17, 2009, ''Stefán Sölvi Pétursson Wins Iceland's Strongest Man'' by Randall J. Strossen, Ph.D., IronMind|access-date=September 27, 2010|archive-date=January 3, 2013|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130103083059/http://www.ironmind.com/ironmind/opencms/Articles/2009/Jun/Stefan_Solvi_Petursson_Wins_Icelandxs_Strongest_Man.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> and was second to Jón Páll whilst [[Magnus Ver Magnusson|Magnús Ver Magnússon]] came third. He would repeat podium finishes in this contest multiple times whilst in the company of two men who between them won the [[World's Strongest Man]] title eight times. In one such contest, his 'animalistic approach' was demonstrated when he broke his opponent's arm in an arm wrestling bout.<ref name="Samson"/> Upon being asked to do 'something spectacular for the TV cameras' by a sponsor, he was reported to have picked the sponsor up by an arm and a leg and hurled him some distance to the astonishment of bystanders.<ref name="Samson"/>
In 1985, Hjalti competed in the very first [[Iceland's Strongest Man]] contest<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.ironmind.com/ironmind/opencms/Articles/2009/Jun/Stefan_Solvi_Petursson_Wins_Icelandxs_Strongest_Man.html|title=Wednesday, June 17, 2009, ''Stefán Sölvi Pétursson Wins Iceland's Strongest Man'' by Randall J. Strossen, Ph.D., IronMind|access-date=September 27, 2010|archive-date=January 3, 2013|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130103083059/http://www.ironmind.com/ironmind/opencms/Articles/2009/Jun/Stefan_Solvi_Petursson_Wins_Icelandxs_Strongest_Man.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> and was second to Jón Páll whilst [[Magnus Ver Magnusson|Magnús Ver Magnússon]] came third. He would repeat podium finishes in this contest multiple times whilst in the company of two men who between them won the [[World's Strongest Man]] title eight times. In one such contest, his 'animalistic approach' was demonstrated when he broke his opponent's arm in an arm wrestling bout.<ref name="Samson"/> Upon being asked to do 'something spectacular for the TV cameras' by a sponsor, he was reported to have picked the sponsor up by an arm and a leg and hurled him some distance to the astonishment of bystanders.<ref name="Samson"/>
Line 77: Line 77:
On the world stage, he was a top performer in Highland Games. His wrestling match with [[Bill Kazmaier]] at Earlshall has been described as one of the best ever.<ref name="Samson"/> He was highly rated at the [[World Muscle Power Championships]] and in breaking the world record in the platform lift, became the first European to win the prestigious [[Le Defi Mark Ten International]] in Canada. However, in his only appearance at [[World's Strongest Man]] in 1996, he failed to qualify for the finals. Prior to that, he had been to many events as a tester, alongside his friend [[Mark Higgins (athlete)|Mark Higgins]]. Prior to 1994, the WSM had a limited field with no heats. As such countries were rarely granted multiple competitor places. For Hjalti, when in the prime of his strength sporting career, this left him in the shadow of Jón Páll, and later the rise of [[Magnus Ver Magnusson|Magnús Ver Magnússon]]. This has been described by [[David Webster (World's Strongest Man organizer)|David Webster]] as a pity because "he was undoubtedly one of the world's strongest men."<ref name="Samson"/>
On the world stage, he was a top performer in Highland Games. His wrestling match with [[Bill Kazmaier]] at Earlshall has been described as one of the best ever.<ref name="Samson"/> He was highly rated at the [[World Muscle Power Championships]] and in breaking the world record in the platform lift, became the first European to win the prestigious [[Le Defi Mark Ten International]] in Canada. However, in his only appearance at [[World's Strongest Man]] in 1996, he failed to qualify for the finals. Prior to that, he had been to many events as a tester, alongside his friend [[Mark Higgins (athlete)|Mark Higgins]]. Prior to 1994, the WSM had a limited field with no heats. As such countries were rarely granted multiple competitor places. For Hjalti, when in the prime of his strength sporting career, this left him in the shadow of Jón Páll, and later the rise of [[Magnus Ver Magnusson|Magnús Ver Magnússon]]. This has been described by [[David Webster (World's Strongest Man organizer)|David Webster]] as a pity because "he was undoubtedly one of the world's strongest men."<ref name="Samson"/>


Hjalti continued to compete as a [[powerlifter]] and won the +125&nbsp;kg super heavyweight class of the [[International Powerlifting Federation|IPF World Powerlifting Championships]] in 1991 in [[Örebro]], Sweden. But he was later disqualified and the title passed to [[Hans Zerhoch]]. Hjalti was the first Icelander to break the 1000&nbsp;kg barrier in the total ([[squat (exercise)|squat]], [[bench press]] & [[deadlift]]).<ref name="Interview">{{Cite web|url=http://strongestman.billhenderson.org/int/int4.html|title=Interview with Hjalti Árnason|website=strongestman.billhenderson.org}}</ref>
Hjalti continued to compete as a [[powerlifter]] and won the +125&nbsp;kg super heavyweight class of the [[International Powerlifting Federation|IPF World Powerlifting Championships]] in 1991 in [[Örebro]], Sweden. But he was later disqualified and the title passed to Hans Zerhoch. Hjalti was the first Icelander to break the 1000&nbsp;kg barrier in the total ([[squat (exercise)|squat]], [[bench press]] & [[deadlift]]).<ref name="Interview">{{Cite web|url=http://strongestman.billhenderson.org/int/int4.html|title=Interview with Hjalti Árnason|website=strongestman.billhenderson.org}}</ref>


==Personal records==
==Personal records==
'' '''Powerlifting''' (performed in single-ply equipment)''
* [[Deadlift]] – {{convert|390|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} (Raw)
* Backlift – {{convert|862|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} (1987 Le Defi Mark Ten)
*[[Squat (exercise)|Squat]] – {{convert|385|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} (1991 IPF World Powerlifting Championships)
* Car [[Deadlift]] – {{convert|345|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} x 6 reps
*[[Bench press]] – {{convert|245|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} (1989 Íslandsmeistaramót í kraftlyftingum)
* Machine [[Squat (exercise)|Squat]] – {{convert|385|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} (1990 World Muscle Power Classic)
*[[Deadlift]] – {{convert|375|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} (1989 Íslandsmeistaramót í kraftlyftingum)
* [[Bench press]] (equipped) – {{convert|290|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}}
*Total {{convert|1000|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} {{small|''({{convert|380 + 245 + 375|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}})''}} (1989 Íslandsmeistaramót í kraftlyftingum)

* [[Bench press]] (raw) – {{convert|250|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}}
'' '''Strongman''' ''
* Backlift – {{convert|862|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} (1987 Le Defi Mark Ten International)
* Machine [[Squat (exercise)|Squat]] – {{convert|455|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} (1991 World Strongman Challenge)
* Car walk – {{convert|400|kg|lb|abbr=on|0}} for 30 metres in 28.7 seconds (1993 World Viking Challenge)
* Log press – {{convert|150|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} (1993 World Viking Challenge)
* Log press – {{convert|150|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} (1993 World Viking Challenge)
* Axle press – {{convert|170|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}}
* [[Húsafell Stone]] carry – {{convert|186|kg|lb|abbr=on|0}} for {{convert|29.01|m|ftin}} (1993 World Viking Challenge)
:→ ''Hjalti has carried the Húsafell Stone {{convert|52.45|m|ftin}} during training in late 80s''
* [[Lifting stone|Natural stone loading]] to 4 ft platform – {{convert|150|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} (1991 World Viking Challenge)
* [[Highland games#Heavy events|Braemar Stone]] throw – {{convert|12.5|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} for {{convert|8.05|m|ftin}} (1988 Le Defi Mark Ten International)
* [[Weight over bar]] – {{convert|25.5|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} over {{convert|4.70|m|ftin}} (1991 World Viking Challenge)
* [[Weight over bar]] – {{convert|25.5|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} over {{convert|4.70|m|ftin}} (1991 World Viking Challenge)
* [[Highland games#Heavy events|Caber toss]] – {{convert|50|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} for {{convert|10.08|m|ftin}} (1987 Viking Power Challenge)
* [[Highland games#Heavy events|Caber toss]] – {{convert|45|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} for {{convert|10.08|m|ftin}} (1987 Viking Power Challenge)
* [[Highland games#Heavy events|Sheaf toss]] – {{convert|7.3|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} over {{convert|5.48|m|ftin}} (1987 World Muscle Power Classic)
* [[Highland games#Heavy events|Sheaf toss]] – {{convert|7.3|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} over {{convert|5.48|m|ftin}} (1987 World Muscle Power Classic)
* [[Highland games#Heavy events|Braemar Stone]] throw – {{convert|12.5|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} for {{convert|8.05|m|ftin}} (1988 Le Defi Mark Ten)
* Farmer's walk – {{convert|165|kg|lb|abbr=on|0|}} in each hand (25 meter course) in 13.17 seconds (Raw grip)


==Personal life and career after sport==
==Personal life and career after sport==
From his marriage to Ethel Karlsdóttir, Hjalti has two sons, Greipur (born 1989) and Árni (born 1992). After divorcing, he moved in with his girlfriend, Halla Heimisdóttir. His careers were multiple and varied. He was a bouncer, caring supervisor in a psychiatric hospital, security agent and debt collector. He also became a system administrator for Post and Telecom in Iceland. His brother is a noted musician in Iceland.<ref name="Samson"/>
From his marriage to Ethel Karlsdóttir, Hjalti has two sons, Greipur (born 1989) and Árni (born 1992). After divorcing, he moved in with his girlfriend, Halla Heimisdóttir. His brother is a noted musician in Iceland.<ref name="Samson"/>
Outside of sports, his careers were multiple and varied. He was a bouncer, a caring supervisor in a psychiatric hospital, a security agent, a debt collector, and a system administrator for Post and Telecom in Iceland.


Hjalti also remained close to sport and became a major promoter of [[strongman]] and other strength athletics in Iceland. He created and organized the [[Jón Páll Sigmarsson Classic]] from 2010 to 2012<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ironmind.com/ironmind/opencms/Articles/2010/Nov/Brian_Shaw_Wins_the_Inaugural_Jon_Pall_Sigmarsson_Classic_Strongman_Contest.html |title=Brian Shaw Wins the Inaugural Jon Pall Sigmarsson Classic Strongman Contest |website=www.ironmind.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101123074258/http://ironmind.com/ironmind/opencms/Articles/2010/Nov/Brian_Shaw_Wins_the_Inaugural_Jon_Pall_Sigmarsson_Classic_Strongman_Contest.html |archive-date=2010-11-23}}</ref> and to this date organizes and hosts the countries main title [[Strength athletics in Iceland#Iceland’s Strongest Man|Iceland's Strongest Man]].
Hjalti also remained close to sport and became a major promoter of [[strongman]] and other strength athletics in Iceland. He created and organized the [[Jón Páll Sigmarsson Classic]] from 2010 to 2012<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ironmind.com/ironmind/opencms/Articles/2010/Nov/Brian_Shaw_Wins_the_Inaugural_Jon_Pall_Sigmarsson_Classic_Strongman_Contest.html |title=Brian Shaw Wins the Inaugural Jon Pall Sigmarsson Classic Strongman Contest |website=www.ironmind.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101123074258/http://ironmind.com/ironmind/opencms/Articles/2010/Nov/Brian_Shaw_Wins_the_Inaugural_Jon_Pall_Sigmarsson_Classic_Strongman_Contest.html |archive-date=2010-11-23}}</ref> and to this date organizes and hosts the countries main Strongman title [[Strength athletics in Iceland#Iceland’s Strongest Man|Iceland's Strongest Man]].


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 00:24, 1 December 2024

Hjalti Árnason
Personal information
NationalityIcelandic
Born (1963-02-18) 18 February 1963 (age 61)
Reykjavík
Occupation(s)Strongman and Powerlifter
Height6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)[1]
Weight125–145 kg (276–320 lb)
Hjalti Árnason
Medal record
Representing  Iceland
Powerlifting
EPF European Powerlifting Championships[2]
3rd 1985 EPF Europe's +125kg
3rd 1990 EPF Europe's +125kg
3rd 1991 EPF Europe's +125kg
NPF Nordic Powerlifting Championships[2]
3rd 1983 NPF Nordic's 125kg
IPF Junior World Championships[2]
4th 1985 IPF Junior's +125kg

Hjalti 'Úrsus' Árnason (born 18 February 1963),[1] is an Icelandic former strongman, powerlifter and a strength sports promoter. Known by the nickname 'The Great Ursus', Hjalti first began in strength sports by competing as a junior powerlifter in 1983. He also coached Jón Páll Sigmarsson and won the 1988 Le Defi Mark Ten International. Hjalti also competed with Magnús Ver Magnússon in Pure Strength team competitions in 1989 & 1990.[1]

Biography

[edit]

Hjalti was born in Reykjavík in 1963.[3] He grew up in the same neighbourhood as Jón Páll Sigmarsson and they attended the same school. His sports career began with training in karate and he also participated in soccer, handball, and track and field. He had a talent for powerlifting and shot to fame when he began competing internationally from 1983. In that year, he came first in the Junior European Championships and made the senior national team. Then he began to compete in Strongman to make a living as a semi-professional. He found at an early stage that powerlifting had little money or publicity associated with it and also his friend, Jón Páll, was beginning to make waves in the higher-profile world of the World's Strongest Man and its associated circuit. His forays into strength athletics consisted of a mixture of Strength athletics including Highland Games. It was noted that Hjalti primarily relied on his 'brute strength' and sacrificed technique and suffered from a lack of proper, regular coaching.[3]

In 1985, Hjalti competed in the very first Iceland's Strongest Man contest[4] and was second to Jón Páll whilst Magnús Ver Magnússon came third. He would repeat podium finishes in this contest multiple times whilst in the company of two men who between them won the World's Strongest Man title eight times. In one such contest, his 'animalistic approach' was demonstrated when he broke his opponent's arm in an arm wrestling bout.[3] Upon being asked to do 'something spectacular for the TV cameras' by a sponsor, he was reported to have picked the sponsor up by an arm and a leg and hurled him some distance to the astonishment of bystanders.[3]

On the world stage, he was a top performer in Highland Games. His wrestling match with Bill Kazmaier at Earlshall has been described as one of the best ever.[3] He was highly rated at the World Muscle Power Championships and in breaking the world record in the platform lift, became the first European to win the prestigious Le Defi Mark Ten International in Canada. However, in his only appearance at World's Strongest Man in 1996, he failed to qualify for the finals. Prior to that, he had been to many events as a tester, alongside his friend Mark Higgins. Prior to 1994, the WSM had a limited field with no heats. As such countries were rarely granted multiple competitor places. For Hjalti, when in the prime of his strength sporting career, this left him in the shadow of Jón Páll, and later the rise of Magnús Ver Magnússon. This has been described by David Webster as a pity because "he was undoubtedly one of the world's strongest men."[3]

Hjalti continued to compete as a powerlifter and won the +125 kg super heavyweight class of the IPF World Powerlifting Championships in 1991 in Örebro, Sweden. But he was later disqualified and the title passed to Hans Zerhoch. Hjalti was the first Icelander to break the 1000 kg barrier in the total (squat, bench press & deadlift).[5]

Personal records

[edit]

Powerlifting (performed in single-ply equipment)

  • Squat – 385 kg (849 lb) (1991 IPF World Powerlifting Championships)
  • Bench press – 245 kg (540 lb) (1989 Íslandsmeistaramót í kraftlyftingum)
  • Deadlift – 375 kg (827 lb) (1989 Íslandsmeistaramót í kraftlyftingum)
  • Total – 1,000 kg (2,205 lb) (380 + 245 + 375 kg (838 + 540 + 827 lb)) (1989 Íslandsmeistaramót í kraftlyftingum)

Strongman

  • Backlift – 862 kg (1,900 lb) (1987 Le Defi Mark Ten International)
  • Machine Squat – 455 kg (1,003 lb) (1991 World Strongman Challenge)
  • Car walk – 400 kg (882 lb) for 30 metres in 28.7 seconds (1993 World Viking Challenge)
  • Log press – 150 kg (331 lb) (1993 World Viking Challenge)
  • Húsafell Stone carry – 186 kg (410 lb) for 29.01 metres (95 ft 2 in) (1993 World Viking Challenge)
Hjalti has carried the Húsafell Stone 52.45 metres (172 ft 1 in) during training in late 80s
  • Natural stone loading to 4 ft platform – 150 kg (331 lb) (1991 World Viking Challenge)
  • Braemar Stone throw – 12.5 kg (28 lb) for 8.05 metres (26 ft 5 in) (1988 Le Defi Mark Ten International)
  • Weight over bar – 25.5 kg (56 lb) over 4.70 metres (15 ft 5 in) (1991 World Viking Challenge)
  • Caber toss – 45 kg (99 lb) for 10.08 metres (33 ft 1 in) (1987 Viking Power Challenge)
  • Sheaf toss – 7.3 kg (16 lb) over 5.48 metres (18 ft 0 in) (1987 World Muscle Power Classic)

Personal life and career after sport

[edit]

From his marriage to Ethel Karlsdóttir, Hjalti has two sons, Greipur (born 1989) and Árni (born 1992). After divorcing, he moved in with his girlfriend, Halla Heimisdóttir. His brother is a noted musician in Iceland.[3]

Outside of sports, his careers were multiple and varied. He was a bouncer, a caring supervisor in a psychiatric hospital, a security agent, a debt collector, and a system administrator for Post and Telecom in Iceland.

Hjalti also remained close to sport and became a major promoter of strongman and other strength athletics in Iceland. He created and organized the Jón Páll Sigmarsson Classic from 2010 to 2012[6] and to this date organizes and hosts the countries main Strongman title Iceland's Strongest Man.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Hjalti Árnason". strongestman.billhenderson.org.
  2. ^ a b c "Árnason Hjalti - results in powerlifting and benchpress, records, personal data, photos and video". en.allpowerlifting.com.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g David Webster, Sons of Samson - Volume 2, pages 71-2, (Ironmind Enterprises Inc: Nevada City), ISBN 0-926888-06-4
  4. ^ "Wednesday, June 17, 2009, Stefán Sölvi Pétursson Wins Iceland's Strongest Man by Randall J. Strossen, Ph.D., IronMind". Archived from the original on 3 January 2013. Retrieved 27 September 2010.
  5. ^ "Interview with Hjalti Árnason". strongestman.billhenderson.org.
  6. ^ "Brian Shaw Wins the Inaugural Jon Pall Sigmarsson Classic Strongman Contest". www.ironmind.com. Archived from the original on 23 November 2010.