Strength athletics in Iceland

Strength athletics in Iceland refers to the participation of Icelandic competitors and holding national strongman events. The sport's roots have a long and ancient history going back many centuries with the legends of Orm Storolfsson and Grettir Ásmundarson to the 19th century traditional strongmen including Snorri Björnsson, Brynjólfur Eggertsson and Gunnar Salómonsson; before the televisation of modern strongman competitions in the late 1970s.

Iceland Iceland
CapitalReykjavík
64°08′N 21°56′W / 64.133°N 21.933°W / 64.133; -21.933
Area
• Total
103,125 km2 (39,817 sq mi)
Population
• 2024 census
377,320[1] (world rank: 180th)
• Density
3.66/km2 (9.5/sq mi)
ISO 3166 codeIS

Iceland has held a preeminent position as a nation due to the enormous success of its competitors on the international stage, who between them have won Nine World's Strongest Man titles and numerous other international strongman competitions, and is often regarded as 'the strongest nation of the world'.[2][3][4]

History

The origin of Icelanders testing each other through feats and tests of strength predates the introduction of strength athletics and in terms of strength based sports there had been a number of noted powerlifters and weightlifters during the twentieth century. However, in the era of strongman competition Iceland has a record that belies the size of the nation's population having won 9 World's Strongest Man titles, second only to the USA who have won 12 titles. Before Iceland had its own national competition, it already had men competing on the international circuit. In 1983, the young powerlifter and bodybuilder, Jón Páll Sigmarsson entered the 1983 World's Strongest Man competition and was only beaten into second place by the experienced Geoff Capes. Sigmarsson went on to win the competition the following year and in total won the World's Strongest Man four times, and became the first man to win the title 4 times. Sigmarsson was also a six times World Muscle Power champion, 2 times Europe's Strongest Man and winner of the Pure Strength title. His contemporary, and good friend Hjalti Árnason, was also competing at this time and as well as podium finishes in World Muscle Power and World Strongman Challenge, he won the highly regarded Le Defi Mark Ten International competition. Magnús Ver Magnússon followed in their footsteps and emulated Sigmarsson's four World's Strongest Man titles, becoming the second man to win the title 4 times. He also won World Strongman Challenge, Europe's Strongest Man and European Hercules competitions. Ver Magnússon and Árnason also won the 1989 Pure Strength team competition. There have also been several other highly acclaimed Icelandic competitors in the top international events including Andrés Guðmundsson, Benedikt Magnússon, Torfi Ólafsson and most notably Stefán Sölvi Pétursson who achieved fourth-place in the 2010 World's Strongest Man competition. The next entire decade of Icelandic Strongman competitions was dominated by Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson who won the main National title 10 consecutive times in addition to winning several other national competitions multiple times and also winning 9 Giants Live tours including the Europe's Strongest Man 5 times, 8 Strongman Champions League titles, the Arnold Strongman Classic 3 consecutive times, the World's Strongest Man and the World's Ultimate Strongman becoming the most decorated Icelandic Strongman of All time.[5]

National Competitions

Since 1985, Iceland has had its own national competition, Iceland's Strongest Man. There have also been three other major titles contested in Iceland, including Strongest Man in Iceland, Iceland's Strongest Man (IFSA) and Iceland's Strongest Viking; in addition to Westfjord's Viking, Grundarfjord Viking, Highland Viking, Eastfjord Strongman Championships and Thor's Powerlifting Challenge.

Iceland’s Strongest Man

Iceland’s Strongest Man
Tournament information
Location Iceland
Established1985; 39 years ago (1985)
Number of
tournaments
39
FormatMulti-event Strongman competition with 6-10 athletes
Venue(s)Mosfellsbær, Reykjavík, Selfoss
Current champion
Kristján Jón Haraldsson (2023)

In 1985, the very first Iceland's Strongest Man contest was held[6] and it was not for the faint-hearted. Three of the six competitors ended up in hospital.[7] Jón Páll won the competition while Hjalti Árnason emerged second and Magnús Ver third. Thus, in the very first contest the podium finishers would between them go on to win the World's Strongest Man eight times, the World Muscle Power Classic seven times, the World Strongman Challenge, Le Defi Mark Ten International and numerous powerlifting titles including the super-heavyweight IPF World Powerlifting Championships. The contest's profile was immediately internationally renowned and it eventually became an open competition, although if a non-Icelander wins, the title of Iceland's Strongest Man defers to the highest placed Icelander. This has only happened on 2 occasions when the legendary Bill Kazmaier of the United States and Regin Vagadal of the Faroe Islands won. Tom Stoltman, Terry Hollands and Adrian Rollinson of the United Kingdom and Don Pope of the USA have all placed second. Luke Stoltman of the United Kingdom has placed third.

Being held for 39 consecutive years since its inception in 1985, Iceland's Strongest Man is the oldest continuously held strongman competition in the world. With 10 consecutive titles from 2011 to 2020 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson holds the record for the most number of wins while Magnús Ver Magnússon and Jón Páll Sigmarsson have 7 and 5 wins respectively.

YearChampionRunner-Up3rd Place
1985 Jón Páll Sigmarsson Hjalti Árnason Magnús Ver Magnússon
1986 Jón Páll Sigmarsson Hjalti Árnason Magnús Ver Magnússon
1987 Jón Páll Sigmarsson Hjalti Árnason Magnús Ver Magnússon
1988 Bill Kazmaier Magnús Ver Magnússon Hjalti Árnason
1989 Magnús Ver Magnússon Hjalti Árnason Torfi Ólafsson
1990 Jón Páll Sigmarsson Andrés Guðmundsson Hjalti Árnason
1991[8][9] Magnús Ver Magnússon Hjalti Árnason Björgvin Filippusson
1992 Jón Páll Sigmarsson Andrés Guðmundsson Pétur Guðmundsson
1993 Magnús Ver Magnússon Andrés Guðmundsson Pétur Guðmundsson
1994 Gunnar Þór Guðjónsson Torfi Ólafsson & Audunn Jónsson
1995 Magnús Ver Magnússon Torfi Ólafsson Andrés Guðmundsson
1996 Magnús Ver Magnússon Hjalti Árnason Andrés Guðmundsson
1997 Torfi Ólafsson(To be confirmed)(To be confirmed)
1998 Regin Vagadal Gunnar Þór Guðjónsson Torfi Ólafsson
1999[10] Gunnar Þór Guðjónsson Audunn Jónsson & Torfi Ólafsson
2000[11] Gunnar Þór Guðjónsson Torfi Ólafsson Audunn Jónsson
2001 Magnús Ver Magnússon Magnús Magnússon Kristinn Óskar 'Boris' Haraldsson
2002[12] Magnus Magnusson Audunn Jónsson Grétar Guðmundsson
2003 Benedikt Magnússon Audunn Jónsson Grétar Guðmundsson
2004 Magnús Ver Magnússon Benedikt Magnússon Audunn Jónsson
2005[13] Kristinn Oskar 'Boris' Haraldsson Adrian Rollinson Guðjón Gíslason
2006[14] Kristinn Óskar 'Boris' Haraldsson Don Pope Jens Fylkisson
2007[15] Kristinn Óskar 'Boris' Haraldsson Terry Hollands Don Pope
2008 Kristinn Óskar 'Boris' Haraldsson Stefán Sölvi Pétursson Orri Geirsson
2009 Stefán Sölvi Pétursson Kristinn Óskar 'Boris' Haraldsson Páll Logason
2010 Stefán Sölvi Pétursson Benedikt Magnússon Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson
2011[16] Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Ari Gunnarsson Páll Logason
2012 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Ari Gunnarsson Páll Logason
2013 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Páll Logason Ari Gunnarsson
2014 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Páll Logason Úlfur Orri Pétursson
2015 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Ari Gunnarsson Fannar Smári Vilhjálmsson
2016 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Stefán Sölvi Pétursson Ari Gunnarsson
2017 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Ari Gunnarsson Sigfús Fossdal
2018 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Eyþór Ingólfsson Melsteð Sigfús Fossdal
2019 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Tom Stoltman Luke Stoltman
2020 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Eyþór Ingólfsson Melsteð Ari Gunnarsson
2021 Stefán Karel Torfason Eyþór Ingólfsson Melsteð Kristján Sindri Níelsson
2022 Kristján Jón Haraldsson Stefán Karel Torfason Páll Logason
2023 Kristján Jón Haraldsson Vilius Jokužys Theodór Már Gudmundsson

Champions breakdown

ChampionTimesYears
Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson10 (consecutive)2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020
Magnús Ver Magnússon71989, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1996, 2001, 2004
Jón Páll Sigmarsson51985, 1986, 1987, 1990, 1992
Kristinn Óskar 'Boris' Haraldsson4 (consecutive)2005, 2006, 2007, 2008
Gunnar Þór Guðjónsson31994, 1999, 2000
Stefán Sölvi Pétursson2 (consecutive)2009, 2010
Kristján Jón Haraldsson2 (consecutive)2022, 2023
Torfi Ólafsson11997
Magnús Magnússon12002
Benedikt Magnússon12003
Stefán Karel Torfason12021
Bill Kazmaier11988
Regin Vágadal11998

Most podium finishes without winning the title

AthleteTimes (breakdown)
Hjalti Árnason8 (6 x 2nd, 2 x 3rd)
Ari Gunnarsson7 (4 x 2nd, 3 x 3rd)
Audunn Jónsson6 (4 x 2nd, 2 x 3rd)
Páll Logason6 (2 x 2nd, 4 x 3rd)
Andrés Guðmundsson5 (3 x 2nd, 2 x 3rd)
Eyþór Ingólfsson Melsteð3 (3 x 2nd)
Pétur Guðmundsson2 (2 x 3rd)
Grétar Guðmundsson2 (2 x 3rd)
Sigfús Fossdal2 (2 x 3rd)

Strongest Man in Iceland

YearChampionRunner-Up3rd Place
2010[17] Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Benedikt Magnússon Páll Logason
2011[18] Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Ari Gunnarsson Georg Ögmundsson
2012[19] Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Ari Gunnarsson Páll Logason
2016[20] Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Ari Gunnarsson Stefán Sölvi Pétursson
2017[21] Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Òskar Pétur Hafstein Eyþór Ingólfsson Melsteð
2018 Ari Gunnarsson Eyþór Ingólfsson Melsteð André Bachmann
2019 Ari Gunnarsson Eyþór Ingólfsson Melsteð Kristján Jón Haraldsson
2020 Eyþór Ingólfsson Melsteð Stefán Karel Torfason Òskar Pétur Hafstein
2021 Eyþór Ingólfsson Melsteð Kristján Jón Haraldsson Tómas Darri Thorsteinsson
2022 Kristján Jón Haraldsson Vilius Jokužys Theodór Már Gudmundsson
2023 Kristján Jón Haraldsson Vilius Jokužys Pálmi Guðfinnsson

Iceland's Strongest Man (IFSA)

The IFSA organised the Iceland's Strongest Man competition for a number of years before 2005. However, when the IFSA disassociated from the World's Strongest Man competition, Iceland's Strongest Man remained the official qualifier with no IFSA involvement. The IFSA did continue to promote their own version until their financial demise at the end of 2008.

YearChampionRunner-Up3rd Place
1999 Andrés Guðmundsson(To be confirmed)(To be confirmed)
2005[22] Benedikt Magnússon(To be confirmed)(To be confirmed)
2006 Benedikt Magnússon Stefán Sölvi Pétursson Georg Ögmundsson
2008 Stefán Sölvi Pétursson Páll Logason Grétar Guðmundsson

Iceland's Strongest Viking

This contest dates back to 1992[23] however, in some years the results of this contest have been combined with those of Iceland's Strongest Man in order to ascertain who qualifies for the World's Strongest Man.

YearChampionRunner-Up3rd Place
2000 Magnús Ver Magnússon Audunn Jónsson Svavar Einarsson
2001 Magnús Ver Magnússon Guðmundur Otri Sigurðsson Jón Valgeir Williams
2002 Magnús Ver Magnússon Jón Valgeir Williams Magnús Magnússon
2003 Magnús Ver Magnússon Jón Valgeir Williams Audunn Jónsson
2004 Magnús Ver Magnússon Benedikt Magnússon Jón Valgeir Williams
2005[24] Magnús Ver Magnússon Magnus Magnusson Georg Ögmundsson
2006[25] Stefán Sölvi Pétursson Georg Ögmundsson Jón Valgeir Williams
2007 Benedikt Magnússon Pétur Bruno Thorsteinsson and Georg Ögmundsson
2009 Stefán Sölvi Pétursson Páll Logason(To be confirmed)
2010[23] Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Páll Logason Ari Gunnarsson
2011 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Stefán Sölvi Pétursson Ari Gunnarsson
2012 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Stefán Sölvi Pétursson Georg Ögmundsson
2020 Eyþór Ingólfsson Melsteð Ari Gunnarsson Stefán Karel Torfason
2021 Ari Gunnarsson Kristján Jón Haraldsson Stefán Karel Torfason
2022 Kristján Jón Haraldsson Stefán Karel Torfason Kristján Sindri Níelsson
2023 Vilius Jokužys Kristján Sindri Níelsson Sigfús Fossdal

Other competitions

  • Westfjord's Viking (Vestfjarðarvíkingin)
  • Grundarfjord Viking (Grundarfjarðartröllið)
  • Highland Viking (Upsveitarvíkingin)
  • Eastfjord Strongman Championships (Austfjarðartröllið)
  • Thor's Powerlifting Challenge

Iceland's Strongest Woman

Iceland's Strongest Woman has been held since 1995 through different organizers, but from 2019 onwards Sigfús Fossdal took over and holds the competition annually in Akureyri.

YearChampionRunner-Up3rd Place
1995 Bryndís Ólafsdóttir(To be confirmed)(To be confirmed)
1996 Bryndís Ólafsdóttir(To be confirmed)(To be confirmed)
1997 Bryndís Ólafsdóttir(To be confirmed)(To be confirmed)
1998 Bryndís Ólafsdóttir(To be confirmed)(To be confirmed)
2009 Jóhanna Eivinsdóttir(To be confirmed)(To be confirmed)
2010 Thora Thorsteinsdóttir(To be confirmed)(To be confirmed)
2011 Bryndís Ólafsdóttir Thora Thorsteinsdóttir Jóhanna Eivinsdóttir
2012 Bryndís Ólafsdóttir(To be confirmed)(To be confirmed)
2013 Thora Thorsteinsdóttir(To be confirmed)(To be confirmed)
2014 Ingibjörg Lilja(To be confirmed)(To be confirmed)
2015 Jóhanna Eivinsdóttir(To be confirmed)(To be confirmed)
2016 Ingibjörg Óladóttir Anna Björg Hjaltadóttir Ragnheiður Jónasdóttir
Hún Zane Kauzena
2017 Hún Zane Kauzena Ragnheiður Jónasdóttir Berglind Rós Bergsdóttir
2018 Ragnheiður Jónasdóttir Ellen Lind Ísaksdóttir(To be confirmed)
2019 Ellen Lind Ísaksdóttir Ragnheiður Jónasdóttir Lilja B Jónsdóttir
2020 Ellen Lind Ísaksdóttir Ragnheiður Jónasdóttir Lilja B Jónsdóttir
2021 Ellen Lind Ísaksdóttir Ragnheiður Jónasdóttir Lilja B Jónsdóttir
2022 Ragnheiður Jónasdóttir Ellen Lind Ísaksdóttir Erika Mjöll Jónsdóttir
2023 Ragnheiður Jónasdóttir Erika Mjöll Jónsdóttir Lilja B Jónsdóttir

Regional Competitions

Nordic Strongman Championships

Nordic Strongman Championships consists of athletes from Iceland, Norway, Sweden, Finland and Denmark.[26]

YearChampionRunner-Up3rd Place
2005 Svend Karlsen Magnus Samuelsson Juha-Matti Räsänen
2012[26] Johannes Årsjö Lars Rorbakken Michael Licht
2013 Johannes Årsjö Ole Martin Hansen Juha-Matti Järvi

International Competitions

Jón Páll Sigmarsson Classic

The competition was organized by Hjalti Árnason to commemorate Jón Páll Sigmarsson, and 3 tournaments were held from 2010 to 2012 with the participation of the top athletes of the world.

YearChampionRunner-Up3rd Place
2010 Brian Shaw Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Mark Felix
2011 Brian Shaw Laurence Shahlaei Páll Logason
2012 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson Jarno Jokinen Mark Felix

Magnús Ver Magnússon Strongman Classic

The competition is noted for its vintage events and is held annually outdoors during winter season.

YearChampionRunner-Up3rd Place
2021 Maxime Boudreault Eyþór Ingólfsson Melsteð Sami Ahola
2022 Rongo Keene Maxime Boudreault Eyþór Ingólfsson Melsteð
2023 Tristain Hoath Rongo Keene Shane Flowers

See also

References