'Gentle giants': World's strongest men defy stereotypes
- The 2025 World's Strongest Man competition took place from Thursday to Sunday in Sacramento, California, featuring athletes lifting extremely heavy weights.
- The event traces back to 1977 at Universal Studios California and has grown more professional while maintaining the original competition concept.
- Competitors like Eddie Williams, a schoolteacher and wedding singer, and newcomers such as 30-year-old South African Rayno Nel follow strict nutrition and intense training to compete.
- Athletes face misconceptions that portray them as aggressive or lacking education, but figures like Mitchell Hooper and Rob Kearney highlight the importance of education, community, and the idea that true strength goes beyond just lifting heavy weights.
- Although competitors endure persistent physical pain, the encouragement they receive from fans and fellow athletes highlights that genuine strength is defined by both individual character and a sense of community, as Kearney expressed when observing how mutual support among them reveals the true essence of strength.
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'Gentle giants': World's strongest men defy stereotypes
Eddie Williams is a schoolteacher from Monday to Friday and a wedding singer on weekends. In his spare time, he lifts enormously heavy weights as he competes to be the world's strongest man.
·Chariton, United States
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‘Gentle giants’: World’s strongest men defy stereotypes
Eddie Williams is a schoolteacher from Monday to Friday and a wedding singer on weekends. In his spare time, he lifts enormously heavy weights as he competes to be the world's strongest man. Some people think weightlifters are "a lot of angry people who just like to throw weight around," the 420-pound (190-kilogram) Australian told
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