TRAINING
With our sport of power lifting for Para Olympians, it is only the one lift, which is bench press. The term power lifting means 3 lifts for able bodied, which is the deadlift, the squat and the bench press and if you can do all of those then the 3 totals get added up for the overall total. With ours it is purely the bench press. Lots of the Para Olympians actually out lift the able bodied lifters pound for pound, so a 67 and a half kilo lifter - Para Olympic total might be something like 225 kilos, the able bodied lifting on the bench press wouldn’t be anywhere near that. But in terms of Guinness book of records we cannot hold the Guinness book of records for Para Olympic lift because you can only hold it in the Guinness book of records if you can do the 3 lifts - the squat, the deadlift and the bench press. In the early days - prior to 84 and it sort of changed between 84 to 88 - they used to actually make you off a rack. And the rack was set at your chest height and the way they would do it was to put a one inch square timber baton - you would put your inflated chest up as high as you could go and then they would fix the racks that moved on a cog on either side and the bar would be set onto these racks and then you would lift from that position. So the actual bar would be in a stationary position and you would lift from that stationary position up and down and the idea with that was that they thought it was safety for the disabled lifters because if they did drop the bar it would hit the racks first. But people like myself with polio that were competing against paraplegics and amputees, we found that some of the paraplegics were able to enhance their chest because their spinal cords - I don’t know it was almost like they could stack them in two and were able to get great big elevated chests - and some seemed as if they were only lifting the bar one or two inches and getting a gold medal. Ours were right the way up. So in terms of that we also had a big beating and it was felt by a lot of lifters that they wanted to go nearer the power lifting of the able bodied side. One it made it fairer for all - not just the person that could inflate their chest the highest, the who had the biggest spinal injury that could almost cheat really because you are only doing a part of the lift, but we felt that if everybody brought the bar down to their chest the same way the able bodied did it would make it a much fairer lift for everybody all round. A lot of the paraplegics argued about it. I even went to a meeting where I thought I was going to get lynched, because there was about 300 paraplegic lifters - all in their wheelchairs and great big guys. I actually explained to them that I think what they are doing is inferior and they should actually start to do it the proper way. They actually wanted the able bodies to change it and do it their way. They eventually came round, they saw the ways that it wasn’t fair and now lots of them are enjoying it and wouldn’t ever go back to the way they were doing it. We have 10 body weight classes, the ladies are very similar but sort of 4 kilos off each body weight class but the same sort of number. The rules are much like the able bodied. From the time your name is called we have 2 minutes to actually start your lift, the able bodied have one minute. For us, the extra minute is allowed because it takes somebody with a disability to wheel themselves or to use their crutches to get up on the platform and position themselves. Our bench is a full size bench - its about 7 foot long, it’s in the shape of a cricket bat so that the narrow bit is at the head where you are laying down, the wider bit is for your body. You are allowed to use 2 Velcro straps that go right the way underneath the bench and right the way around your legs so you have the Velcro straps about 4 inches wide above your knee, just below your knee and one around the ankles because the rules state that when you are actually lifting - you have 3 referees, a head referee and 2 side referees - you have to take the bar, you hold the bar at arms length, you say “My bar”, everybody’s clear of that so it’s clear, you have to hold it so it’s actually horizontal. The chief referee will then say “Start”, you bring the bar down to touch your chest and then you have to hold that on the chest until it’s stationary. One way that I used to do it was to count for 2 seconds, so bring it down to the chest 1000, 2000 and push back up. When you are pushing back up it has to go up parallel, if your pushing back up like this, and it doesn’t actually lock out correctly it’s no lift, if you bring it down and you actually bounce the bar that’s no lift. It has to be in strict accordance all the way up. If your head comes off while you are actually lifting it’s a no lift, if your buttocks come off when you are lifting it’s a no lift, if your leg comes off it’s a no lift. A lot of disabled lifters suffer from spasm. Their legs could come off automatically - you know not voluntary - so they are allowed to have these straps to assist in that and that also allows you to assist a bit in actually taking that strain. With able bodied they can actually have their feet on the floor and push through their feet. With ours - some people say it’s a harder lift because you haven’t got the assistance of the thighs and the pushing through the feet. Poland were one of the leading lifters in those days. The top winning silvers and gold’s etc. One of the lifters asked me, “Ali how much training you do?” I thought I’d impress him by training 4 days a week, 2 hours every time and swimming once a week - thinking that would impress him. And I said, “How much training do you do?” He gave me a funny look. He said, “Well that is the amount I rest!” “You rest how?” He actually trained every day, he stopped work as well, his government pulled him out of work and they gave him funds. They supplied him with his own physio, dietian and he was almost in a training camp really but they did produce the results. Some of their top lifters if they got gold they were almost given an apartment block back in Poland, this was in the 80’s.
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