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  2. Paul Edward Anderson (October 17, 1932 – August 15, 1994) was an American weightlifter, strongman, and powerlifter. He was an Olympic gold medalist, a world champion, and a two-time national champion in Olympic weightlifting. [3]

  3. Jul 31, 2023 · With official numbers at a 199.5kg (440lb) clean & jerk, a 420kg (930lb) back squat, and unofficial numbers like a 285kg (628lb) bench press, and a 2,840kg (6,270lb) backlift, Paul Anderson...

  4. This video explains how Anderson, without aid of PEDs, broke virtually all records in the Olympic and power lifts plus a full-body back lift of over 3 tons!

    • 6 min
    • 154.4K
    • ET'S RAMBLINGS: BOXING & STRENGTH HISTORY
  5. Paul Edward Anderson was an American weightlifter, strongman, and powerlifter. He is an Olympic gold medalist, World Champion and two-time National Champion...

    • 5 min
    • 1.3M
    • Vitor Caldeira
  6. Nov 2, 2014 · Throughout his career, Paul Anderson showed extraordinary creativity by inventing numerous dramatic feats of strength. Check out this crazy feat performed by the Mighty Young Apollo. At that time of my career, which was in the 50’s around 1954 I had performed this feat quite a few times.

  7. Dec 15, 2017 · Back in the mid-1940’s, Paul Anderson started lifting weights to get bigger for football and just kept growing. He eventually became one of the strongest men of all time while establishing many strength records and winning the Gold Medal at the 1956 Olympic Games in Melbourne, Australia.

  8. Feb 14, 2013 · Paul Anderson was not only an Olympic gold medalist, but he won the National Champion in Olympic weightlifting twice and is considered to be one of the strongest men in history. He is also well-known for many feats of strength, such as 6,270 lb Backlift which is thought to be the greatest lift ever performed by a human.