Why Hooper is so STRONG?!

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  • Опубликовано: 20 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 547

  • @mitchellhooperstrongman
    @mitchellhooperstrongman Месяц назад +432

    Thanks for this mate! 100% accurately represented.. the only exception is I believe in physio if you are injured. I don’t believe in it for ongoing prevention.
    To me, it’s boiled down to being extremely genetically gifted and focusing on the small handful of things that matter the most.

    • @paodwyer__
      @paodwyer__  Месяц назад +101

      Sorry yes I should’ve stated that, ongoing prevention physio you’re not a believer in! See you soon 👊🏼

    • @Deegster96
      @Deegster96 Месяц назад +4

      How much walking do you usually do for your recovery Mitch? Do you wear those barefoot shoes? Big fan from the UK

    • @ClockCutter
      @ClockCutter Месяц назад +11

      The genetic gift to respond extremely well to trenning anavar giving up?

    • @torringtonstonekeeper
      @torringtonstonekeeper Месяц назад +1

      The moose is the strongest man on earth without a doubt . All the hate is coming from woke betas, having no weaknesses means having many strengths

    • @gamespotlive3673
      @gamespotlive3673 Месяц назад +22

      @@ClockCutter No matter how much you dedicate to tren anavar give up you still can't go from Marathon Runner to the literal strongest human being on the planet without impeccable genetics.

  • @boom-bm1kl
    @boom-bm1kl 29 дней назад +53

    He knows anatomy, he knows recovery, he has the knowledge from his degree, you're kidding yourselves if you don't think he has his PED's dialed in perfectly as well. You add all that together and you get Hooper

    • @Bmxae
      @Bmxae 29 дней назад +5

      And a lengthy athletic background since he was a kid

    • @boom-bm1kl
      @boom-bm1kl 29 дней назад +10

      @@Bmxae 💯. I'm not taking anything away from him. There's plenty of people that could have that same combination and not achieve what he has

    • @lawsong6663
      @lawsong6663 26 дней назад +4

      and of course top teir strength genetics. you can have everything else and not make it to the top without them

    • @narendragandhi2435
      @narendragandhi2435 20 дней назад

      @@lawsong6663 i have all these except iam lazy af

  • @ThunderbackOG
    @ThunderbackOG Месяц назад +110

    Mitch is a biomechanical prodigy who loves to challenge himself. On top of that, he is a huge nerd. Put it all together and you get THE MOOSE.
    And he is not even at peak physical strength yet. He keeps growing every year. Love that guy. What an athlete.

    • @pupper5580
      @pupper5580 Месяц назад +13

      I feel like Mitchell Hooper has kind of a Jouko Ahola approach to strongman. In Finland we had two talented strogmen Jouko Ahola and Riku Kiri (also Janne Virtanen, but I'll not discuss him now). Jouko Ahole was very small compared to Riku Kiri, who was a powerliting phenom being able to bench press 300 kg raw. Jouko Ahola used his brains a lot when preparing for the competitions: he would try to predict what kind of events there would be, and he would custom-make training implements which would help him prepare for events. Jouko Ahola would end up winning 2 titles, while Riku Kiri would only get second place finishes during his career. Ahola said that if he had his brain and Riku Kiri's body, he would have won 7 WSM titles.
      I'm guessing Mitch Hooper has a similar approach to strongman as Jouko Ahola - in that he uses his brains a lot, and tries to find the most efficient ways of doing things. On top of that, Mitch is pretty damn huge!
      For example, I was always wondering why strongmen don't use olympic lifting techniques for overhead press. Mitch Hooper saw the potential and started utilizing techniques like split jerk. And It's a good thing that he does this - because if other strongmen start doing the same, there will be a lot of new crazy world records, and a lot of excitement. Mitch breaking Big Z's overhead press (edit, correction: axle press) record was pretty cool.

    • @ThunderbackOG
      @ThunderbackOG Месяц назад +5

      @@pupper5580 Love both, Riku Kiri and Ahola. And I see your point. Mitches OH training he recently did is the perfect example. He figures out how to do movements perfectly before focusing on crazy weights and building up the specific strength needed to break records.
      Mitch wastes no time building muscles that do not help him, just to brute strength his way through. I mean that approach also works in some way, as you need to be flexible in your strength depending on what awkward variations of lifts you gonna encounter. But the results speak for themselves. Can not wait to see how the sport is going to evolve in the coming years. Greetings from Berlin.

    • @bartjaku9174
      @bartjaku9174 Месяц назад

      ​@@pupper5580yes and no. Domek people have radę strenght a not that much of a power If they could u honestly think that they wouldnt figure it out? I know people that can push press more then can jerk. Mitchell is great no doubt.

    • @PubGeniusOfficial
      @PubGeniusOfficial 29 дней назад

      Well said!! Absolutely prodigy! We are witnessing Greatness!

  • @jamesgillam6478
    @jamesgillam6478 Месяц назад +36

    ‘tree huntret and tirty too’ is just so fun to listen to haha

  • @Strongah359
    @Strongah359 Месяц назад +218

    It’s nice to see a strongman, not one that’s retired, put some respect on Mitch’s name. The fans are the worst, so many people hate on him for being as good as he is. Instead of being bitter people should enjoy the greatness they’re witnessing

    • @paodwyer__
      @paodwyer__  Месяц назад +45

      I 100% agree

    • @GodwinCarpenter
      @GodwinCarpenter Месяц назад +19

      I don't think it's that way mate, there's a small number of people who hate him and they are usually the loudest on Internet forums etc.

    • @Nolan-55
      @Nolan-55 Месяц назад +3

      I think sometimes people confuse the two. I hate how much Hooper wins, as a fan of close and exciting competitions...when you know who wins with 2 or 3 events left its boring.
      But that doesn't take away from Hooper. He's an incredible athlete and an even better person. He's said himself he doesn't think he's statically the strongest(although I think the debate could be made), but he's got no weaknesses. And if he has one, he trains it hard, so it's not a weakness. In fact, his pressing was a weakness at one point, now he's got a record.
      As for the athletes, they all praise him. I don't see anyone not praising him.

    • @Strongah359
      @Strongah359 Месяц назад +6

      @@GodwinCarpenter you make a good point, I just don’t understand the hate. One thing that sets strongman apart from most sports is that you can have your favourites but you still want every athlete to do well

    • @ThunderbackOG
      @ThunderbackOG Месяц назад +13

      How can someone dislike Mitchell? He is one of the nicest guys in strength-related sports.

  • @dannyboy91
    @dannyboy91 Месяц назад +9

    I think his success comes from 3 things:
    1. He is obviously a genetic freak
    2. His previous history in other sports (especially running) has equipped him with a level of fitness that has never been seen before in strongman.
    3. His background in kinesiology and focus on great technique in strongman events

  • @alcole1k178
    @alcole1k178 Месяц назад +30

    He recovers fast BECAUSE he was conditioned to endure BECAUSE he trained for marathon running. He didn't have a marathon runner body shape, still tall and muscular. But the conditioning it took for him to run 40k gave him a huge gas tank that helped him train strength at insanely high volumes. He thus gained a lot, and fast. Most strongmen have no gas tank at all. They target high body weight were cardio conditioning would just wreck their joints. Eddie Hall used to be an elite swimmer, I'm sure he had a decent tank before he went overboard and ballooned up to 400lbs.

    • @paodwyer__
      @paodwyer__  Месяц назад +19

      I do think the marathon training has something to do with his speedy recovery

    • @sagebauer1077
      @sagebauer1077 29 дней назад +3

      in the running world there is a big emphasis on increasing your VO2 max and Zone 2 training... Strongman training has tiiiny bit of vo2 max training if they do some longish medleys, but it's still minimal, and afaik they do almost no zone 2 work. There some studies that talk about those training methods improving mitochondrial efficiency and improving your resting heart rate and such. Those things have such a huge effect on recovery.

    • @fitnesswithsaswatsahoo2116
      @fitnesswithsaswatsahoo2116 29 дней назад +1

      ​@@sagebauer1077 No activity is 100% aerobic. High VO2 max means less anaerobic energy needed and faster recovery.

  • @morgothbauglir4898
    @morgothbauglir4898 20 дней назад +2

    Hooper is an intelligent guy. He has great genetics, but I think what really gives him the edge is that he lifts smart, recovers smart, and (presumably) dopes smart.

  • @BasSoldaat
    @BasSoldaat Месяц назад +67

    Once Thor gets his pressingpower back, like before the pec tear, it will be alot harder for Hooper to win the titles. But to be fair, he's allround strong and smart.

    • @paodwyer__
      @paodwyer__  Месяц назад +32

      Ya that’s fair but hooper has so many comps done back to back this year also

    • @xDeathBySpikesx
      @xDeathBySpikesx Месяц назад +8

      It's exciting for sure. And Tom would have been third if he even hit one stone so he's in the mix there still, also guys like Evan, Lucas, Austin etc it's an exciting field of guys right now

    • @PontiacLS
      @PontiacLS Месяц назад +26

      I don't agree with that. Mitch is only getting better Thor is near the end of his career

    • @Nolan-55
      @Nolan-55 Месяц назад +7

      ​@paodwyer__ I think that's important to remember for us fans. You guys who compete at the highest level can't be at your top every show. It's smart for Thor to do 3 major shows because they're spaced out and he could peak for each.
      But those who do 6-10 competitions like Tom and Hooper. You can't be at your best for every single one. Maybe 2 or 3, others you just hope to be "good enough".
      Which Hooper is 😂😂

    • @martj1313
      @martj1313 Месяц назад +8

      Thor doesn't have age on his side.

  • @marcoddy6812
    @marcoddy6812 29 дней назад +3

    As a Brit and a big Tom Stoltman fan, It's a shame that he exists in the time of Mitchell Hooper. The guy is just a complete athlete and may very well go down as the greatest of all time. You can't really do anything other than admire how great he really is. I hope Tom and Thor up their games and fill in some weaknesses in order to truly push Mitchell to his absolute limit. Bravo Mitchell.

  • @jonathanking8800
    @jonathanking8800 Месяц назад +15

    It's quite evident that his heart is on a whole different level. I'm sure the marathon training plays into that but when he takes sometimes nearly twice as long to gas out on events he might not move as fast as other guys and he still beats them on distance or when every guy damn near faints at the end of an event where they went all out for a full minute and Mitch takes 2 quick breaths and then is up and looks good as new it really shows how different his heart is.

    • @antoniehm87
      @antoniehm87 Месяц назад

      I think I that just means he has better cardio than everyone else from years of running

    • @jonathanking8800
      @jonathanking8800 27 дней назад +1

      @@antoniehm87 I used heart as a double meaning. Yes, his cardio is peak but also his determination to push (or pull) just a bit more.

  • @trevtkd
    @trevtkd Месяц назад +36

    As a physical therapist myself, I LOVE the fact that hooper is so outspoken about the sham treatments we see for recovery. Red light, compression boots, ice baths all have weak evidence to support. The majority of valid and reliable studies show a negligible difference or no difference at all. I love that he cuts through the bullshit and shows us, in real time, that those things are useless. Apart from the good ol placebo effect.

    • @paodwyer__
      @paodwyer__  Месяц назад +12

      True, tho even if it’s placebo effect and it works do we care?

    • @trevtkd
      @trevtkd Месяц назад

      @@paodwyer__ the issue with placebo is the benefits are negligible and usually don’t last with repeated treatments. Placebo is only so strong. However, at the level y’all compete at I give a little grace with treatments that lack evidence as y’all actually benefit from a 1-2% improvement. The average person does not. So at a certain level, where 1-2% can mean the difference in a podium or better payout, I get it. But then we also have to look at efficiency. If we are doing 5-6 silly treatments just to gain a possible 1-2% improvements, are we spending our time wisely. Bottom line, do what works for you. If rubbing grape jelly on the affected area and listening to Enya makes you feel like you recover quickly, turn that bitch up to 11. It’s just a breath of fresh air to see someone at this level be realistic and honest with recovery (he’s a physio right? Did I just make that up?).

    • @trevtkd
      @trevtkd Месяц назад +3

      @@paodwyer__ also remember, placebo is a mentality thing. It’s not having any physiological effect, hence the effects of placebo being minimal and/or transient.

    • @brianvesta
      @brianvesta Месяц назад

      ​@@paodwyer__It can be a very expensive placebo.....🤑

    • @User-CCA
      @User-CCA Месяц назад +5

      ​@@trevtkdplacebo has physiological effects.

  • @michaelbooth2890
    @michaelbooth2890 Месяц назад +18

    The size of his quads when he was a runner is mad.

    • @undercoveraca
      @undercoveraca Месяц назад +2

      He has big quads but not excessive mass elsewhere. I think as a strongman he is stabilising loads through technique not extra mass and gets mobility and stamina advantages over others.

  • @anthonyzhang4918
    @anthonyzhang4918 Месяц назад +5

    Mitch does a great job of majoring in the majors. He also thinks about things logically and game plans extremely well. , I think his general athleticism, fitness, and ability to recover between events is a huge factor to his success. I think his methodology of not gaining weight pointlessly and maintaining the best health he can while doing strongman is huge.

  • @paulbudford
    @paulbudford 29 дней назад +2

    Every generation has a few individuals come along and question how people train. He is definitely one.
    Good points Pa.

  • @danielrichardson4868
    @danielrichardson4868 Месяц назад +6

    The best thing about Mitch is his perspective, its what gives him an edge i think, i love both Mitch and Tom, I wish them and their families all the best!

    • @boostedchicken001
      @boostedchicken001 Месяц назад

      Tom sucks only can win wsm because hooper was injured tom will never beat hooper if mitchnis not injured

    • @vojtechkorhon4159
      @vojtechkorhon4159 Месяц назад

      Then Mitch shouldn't get injured on something like that. It was his mistake​, don't cope about it. Mitch himself said that Tom's win was legit. @@boostedchicken001

  • @colejohnson2866
    @colejohnson2866 29 дней назад +2

    I love Mitchell Hooper. Not only is he a lifted athlete, he's also an extremely nice guy. I've met him twice, and it was. So pleasant and genuine every time

  • @lorddeathspit1124
    @lorddeathspit1124 Месяц назад +3

    Mitchell came out of nowhere and took over. It’s cool that he’s a really nice guy and explains how he did it. He’s not a secret keeper but besides being gifted he puts tons of time in how the body works mechanically so it makes him hard to bear.

  • @firebladeclements
    @firebladeclements 29 дней назад +3

    His aerobic training at a young age is a huge key to his success! As you stated, his recovery is highly unusual. Perhaps the new formula for strongman from a young age.

  • @PrinceSamurai45
    @PrinceSamurai45 29 дней назад +2

    That marathon running background means Hooper has a high level of built up cardio capacity and a base of slow twitch muscle fiber. That will aid in him recovering quickly between events.

  • @adamjones5931
    @adamjones5931 Месяц назад +53

    There's no denying that he's really fucking good at this strongman lark, but Big Loz has got to at least be partially responsible for Mitch's ongoing success. There's no denying his pedigree as a top Strongman coach, based on how many of his clients are consistently winning trophies.

    • @Xplora213
      @Xplora213 Месяц назад +5

      There are a few really really good coaches out there. Small group. But you can’t beat genetics.

    • @jaybruzas225
      @jaybruzas225 Месяц назад +11

      @adamjones5931 don't forget that Mitch was smart enough to choose Loz to be his coach.

    • @marcuswilliamson4167
      @marcuswilliamson4167 Месяц назад +5

      Not "At least partially". That means "Either partially, or completely". Loz is clearly a great coach it can't be right that he is the sole reason.

    • @IsaacMorgan98
      @IsaacMorgan98 Месяц назад +1

      Does that mean we should discredit Thor for his success cause he has a trainer?

    • @robertwilliams5618
      @robertwilliams5618 29 дней назад +1

      I mean wouldn't we all choose loz?​@@jaybruzas225

  • @RogueCylon
    @RogueCylon 29 дней назад +1

    Hooper does more functional fitness than previous strongmen. He’s smart on programming and preparation. So much respect for him, and that’s coming from a Stoltman fan.

  • @pseudopetrus
    @pseudopetrus Месяц назад +3

    My son was in an amateur strong man contest and Mitch was part of the organizing team, he is a very kind and supportive guy! By the way, I was very proud of my son, he finished something like 9th out of 12, but his dad was a long distance runner, yup I was long legged and skinny... not a strong man at all. My son is OK with an uphill battle, it is more about self improvement and doing what you love.

  • @davidroob4835
    @davidroob4835 27 дней назад +2

    Hooper is a great addition to the sport, a generational talent.

  • @JakeMaurer3598
    @JakeMaurer3598 29 дней назад +1

    People underestimate the sheer power of a truly insane athlete. Hooper as always been a top of the line talent in alot of sports he’s done. And just his overall athletic ability is honestly fucking nuts. So it’s not surprising at all that with PEDs and proper food and training that he’s right at the top.

  • @martj1313
    @martj1313 Месяц назад +6

    He is just a genetic freak and ridiculously good at finding techniques.

  • @jaket2274
    @jaket2274 29 дней назад +1

    Really would’ve loved to see Mitch and Brian both in their primes face off: two incredibly smart and gifted strongmen with backgrounds in physical fitness who are/were at the top of the sport

  • @reallymysterious4520
    @reallymysterious4520 Месяц назад +15

    Of course there's genetics but also he is much smarter than everyone else

    • @bdegrds
      @bdegrds 29 дней назад

      Lol no

    • @Kingzzxepic
      @Kingzzxepic 29 дней назад +3

      I think that is a bit overplayed and a bit disrespectful to the other guys.

    • @Demane69
      @Demane69 28 дней назад

      @@bdegrds The amount of disrespect for intelligence today is crazy. You'd be shocked at how big of an IQ spread there is between humans. He has a Masters I believe, and tried strongman for "the hell of it". He could have gone on to be a Doctor, and anything he wanted. Most strongman competitors have little to no options outside of the sport. Here's a tip: if you can't comprehend something, it's your own cognitive inabilities causing it.

  • @cammackk
    @cammackk Месяц назад +2

    I think the best way to describe Mitch is to imagine if you took a very high level CrossFit athlete and ballooned them up to 300lb plus.

  • @lissjospeter
    @lissjospeter Месяц назад +3

    He said himself he uses alot of peptides as well för recovery.
    And no.. gear alone wont make anyone World strongest man in 4 years.. but its definitely needed.
    I think its a combination of genes, background, mindset, gear, training, recovery.
    If you have all that you at least got a shot to come very far.

  • @1vootman
    @1vootman Месяц назад +4

    Mitch has got tons of explosive power specifically in his quads and posterior chain. Hes kind of like a good SHW Oly lifter who is also has great stamina. I dont thi k hes as strong as Thor, or Eddie, in that Thor pressed a 213kg log, and Mitch lacks the upper body strength to press, but he just drives it with his legs and locks out...job done. Theres no denying his DL strength and squat strength, but he hasnt squatted 460kg to depth like Thor either.

  • @halfnattyboomer354
    @halfnattyboomer354 29 дней назад

    His IQ for the game is high, problem solves events well, strategizes well and has great athleticism he squeezes every drop out of every muscle really well.

  • @dg-bd1hj
    @dg-bd1hj Месяц назад +2

    Mitch is a phenom. He has tore the strongman book up. He has just got the genetics and is so smart on events and recovery. He is half the size so people doubt it. I hope he drops every implement but in the kindest way as i am team stoltman. Mitch is just pure class what the man has done is on another level. Looked at his stats on the tractor first pull he was off the charts leg power like king kong. All in the legs and lungs this game. Have you herd about the big strongman his name is mitch hooper 😅😅 a row of 18 medals on his chest a big chest 😅😅

  • @user-22sas
    @user-22sas Месяц назад +4

    Mr O’Dwyer, Just came across this Video, Amazing & Humble assesment of Mr Hooper. Well done and You have a New Subscriber.

    • @paodwyer__
      @paodwyer__  Месяц назад

      Thanks and welcome 🙏🏼

  • @gibbsm
    @gibbsm Месяц назад +2

    When people talk about "Canadian Nice", they're talking about guys like Mitchell. He's a nice dude, and will speak his mind.

  • @jmodified
    @jmodified 28 дней назад

    We've seen studies showing that hot/cold reduces muscle gains, while active recovery and massage do not, and also that cold therapy increases healing time from joint injuries. It's not absolute proof but it's the best information we have. Of course hot/cold may be useful if you've really overdone it and are brutally sore, and cold may be useful for a short time for a severe sprain or something where initial swelling can do more damage.

  • @bkbrawla666
    @bkbrawla666 Месяц назад +13

    I just hope that people understand what the difference is between the strongest man and the best strength athlete. Mitchell Hooper is not the strongest man - he’s (arguably) the best strength athlete (right now). He’s the best strength athlete because of his blend of well-rounded ability, stamina, athleticism and technique - not because he’s the STRONGEST man capable of the most force. Am I forgetting anything here?

    • @jfro5867
      @jfro5867 Месяц назад +3

      Yea, completely overthinking it.

    • @bkbrawla666
      @bkbrawla666 Месяц назад

      @@jfro5867 Let's hear a counter argument!

    • @jfro5867
      @jfro5867 Месяц назад +1

      @@bkbrawla666 ‘Strongman’ is just a word, a term that everyone understands, describing all over strength. Probably goes back centuries to a time when farmers and craftsmen did their thing before mechanization. As far as competition goes, it means it’s open to everyone provided you are good enough and get through qualifiers to earn a place in the field. I think you are saying what about……say Julius Maddox bench specialist. Is he the strongest man? At bench probably yea. Then we have professional powerlifters, Olympic lifters, Olympic shot putters and so on. Where would they come in WSM? Nowhere probably. THE strongest man in the world does not exist, as one human being, but WSM (Shaw Classic, Arnold’s and this new one) are probably about as good as it gets to crown, the ‘Strongest man’ (on that day). Hooper is NOT the strongest man at every lift, throw, pull, push you could dream up. It’s impossible. Look at Mark Felix at 58 with the best grip. Explain that. You can’t, it’s just his genetics, a gift, whatever you want to call it. Everyone you name now could try to enter WSM and compete, but they don’t, for whatever reasons, good reasons probably so you can only play the field in front of you, and at this time Hooper is top of that pile. Same as Stoltman, maybe Thor and a few others. They are all in the mix, some come & go. I’m no Hooper fanboy either, he seems a really decent bloke and I enjoy watching all of them compete and want all of them to do well, why wouldn’t I? It’s good for the sport. I don’t really disagree with you but I think the best strength athlete is the same as worlds strongest man, it’s semantics, you say potato I say pot-ato.

    • @antoniehm87
      @antoniehm87 Месяц назад +2

      @@jfro5867hooper is definitely not the “strongest” man by a long shot. He’s just the best athlete with the best cardio and well rounded, that competes in strongman. He wins by consistently finishing 2nd in every event and racking up points. He don’t win many individual events and his pressing and deadlifting power is levels below peak Thor or Eddie. It’s actually not even close

    • @bkbrawla666
      @bkbrawla666 Месяц назад +1

      @@jfro5867 I see what you're saying. I'd also add that first and foremost, these strongman events are an entertainment product and a business. I'm a fan of raw power and pure force. I don't enjoy when "strongman" competitions are won because the winner is faster, has more stamina, is more athletic and has better technique and strategy. It doesn't sit right with me when I look at Mitchell Hooper and I think to myself "this guy is referred to as the strongest man on earth/the best strongman" -- especially knowing the reasons why he's winning these competitions. I get it, though. It's all about marketability, entertainment and what's the most fun to watch

  • @ChomageRider
    @ChomageRider Месяц назад +3

    This recovery point is interesting to me. I'm no expert by any means, but I do believe that the strength / recovery world is full of a lot of pseudo-scientific or at least over-hyped stuff. To each their own, but I do believe that his background in science helps him sift through all this stuff and pick out what really works.
    And I do believe that his general smarts are a huge part in his ability to adapt quickly and find the very best technique for anything. The squat at the SMOE this past weekend proves this again.

  • @crazy10bears
    @crazy10bears Месяц назад +23

    I think walking is naturally designed to heal the human body. It's great for most of your joints, back and your posture. The motion of walking also helps with digestion and i suspect might be good for your internal organs in general.

    • @reverendterminator
      @reverendterminator Месяц назад

      Sounds like very good advice, thank you siir

    • @LastFart
      @LastFart Месяц назад

      It actually does help with digestion. After a big meal , 10-40 minutes walk and I can go to sleep with no issues. Otherwise I’d get a heartburn

    • @Lee-ic2yn
      @Lee-ic2yn Месяц назад

      Mehhh I walk at least 2 hours a day it don't help me at L

    • @Outland9000
      @Outland9000 29 дней назад +3

      Also good for your mind.

  • @michaelselz3389
    @michaelselz3389 Месяц назад +2

    Best comment section responses I’ve seen in ages!❤

  • @ronanconnelly4466
    @ronanconnelly4466 29 дней назад +2

    mitch is a genetic freak and i love it, what a guy 💪

  • @davidminor6663
    @davidminor6663 Месяц назад +6

    I think the blood flow and wind developed by running marathons has a lot to do with it.

  • @syrup-man6704
    @syrup-man6704 29 дней назад

    Having developed all these other physical capabilities earlier in life definitely helped. Maybe it makes him less injury prone. He's also an expert in a field that's related to what he does, so he knows how to train. And on top of that, he's a biomechanical and genetic wonder.

  • @ivannasha5556
    @ivannasha5556 28 дней назад

    Walking is the most underrated form of exercise. Swimming probably better but people don't underrate it as much. Walking is simply magical for recovery, digestion and nutrient distribution. The best thing to do for weigh loss as well. If you have time and want to be at your best. Walk one to three hours per day cut up into one hour sessions.

  • @tklkw
    @tklkw Месяц назад +2

    He reminds me of 2019 licis, he's just good at everything. Lol. He knows what place he needs in each event to win overall. But he's kept the consistency going for several years now. So he's basically licis, but without the injuries that held licis back from repeating over and over again.

    • @trevtkd
      @trevtkd Месяц назад

      Poor licis. So physically strong but so mentally weak.

    • @nicholassmith7048
      @nicholassmith7048 Месяц назад

      ​@@trevtkdother way around; his body broke down but mentally he's super strong and has one of most positive attitudes and outlooks of anyone.

    • @trevtkd
      @trevtkd Месяц назад

      @@nicholassmith7048 nope. He had minor niggles that he refused to rehab properly. Got taken by some charlatans that only increased his kinesiophobia (fear of movement). You could see his mind getting further and further away from competing. He did have a couple of legit injuries but towards the very end it was all mental. Just because you come off as positive and happy doesn’t mean you’re mentally strong. Mental strength isn’t an umbrella term. You can be mentally strong in some aspects and weak in others.

  • @PontiacLS
    @PontiacLS Месяц назад +2

    As a Canadian he makes everybody very proud. If he wanted the deadlift record he would obtain the deadlift record.

    • @Cephaeus
      @Cephaeus Месяц назад

      I think he wouldn't. His strength is his competitiveness, doing the necessary work to win and his versatility, basically being constantly good at every event without really excelling at one specific event (except the overhead presses where he is currently the strongest I would say, WR and everything).

  • @magnusdanielsson2749
    @magnusdanielsson2749 Месяц назад +1

    Matt Wenning is a big believer in gpp training and does alot of ”cardio focused lifting”. Rucking on turn off treadmills and so on.
    Wenning states that him doing all that gpp training (both before and after a training session) is the reason hes been able to do all the heavy lifting.
    Active recovery helps with blood circulation wich in turn will help remove metabolites, give more oxygenation to the tissue and promote repair.
    A sauna or red light therapy will never do what just moving does. However they might be a nice addition to have.
    Cardio and gpp training will also promote more mithocondria wich will help in performance and recovery.
    Id imagine that being a marathon runner for a few years before going into strength is a very good way to approach things.

  • @maikharing4876
    @maikharing4876 29 дней назад

    This is so insane. I will probably never even hit a 200kg Deadlift, training for years now. And Mitch was getting these numbers in no time. Absolutely gifted 😮

  • @sebastiankaygun8317
    @sebastiankaygun8317 29 дней назад +1

    Thank you I didn't know all that about him! Very impressing!

  • @Mr-mopar
    @Mr-mopar 29 дней назад +1

    Mitch is very balanced. Not the best at any single event but is competing for the lead in most events..I think martins was like this until he started getting injured.

    • @justinw1765
      @justinw1765 28 дней назад

      Good, and accurate, observation imo.

  • @polarbear4612
    @polarbear4612 Месяц назад

    Everyone’s talking about the things he does in training and being athletic, but he’s really really strong. He’ll always be right there in dead lift and squat as well as explosive power like keg toss and circus dumbbell. He wins or comes in second in almost everything including straight power events.
    If he can keep away from injuries and keeps training he is going to keep on getting podiums and wins.

  • @antoniocenteno1483
    @antoniocenteno1483 Месяц назад +1

    I think Mitch overcomes many other strongma in the endurance field, he is not necessarily stronget than Thor, Hall or Big Z, but the way the man can carry with a failed attempt and then make it happen is a gift. Plus, still he is ridiculously strong and smart

  • @stevieboy366
    @stevieboy366 Месяц назад +1

    I would say that in addition to genetics and work ethic, he has a strong background in kinesiology/physical education which helps him build muscle (efficiently for specific events) and avoid injury. He also is smart and study's everything.

    • @paodwyer__
      @paodwyer__  Месяц назад +1

      Hmmm I dunno there’s plenty smart dudes out there that lift weights that can’t do 1% of what he’s capable of

  • @DrewThr91
    @DrewThr91 29 дней назад

    In my opinion; Mitchell Hooper has accomplished more in 2 years than most achieve in a full career and is already on his way to being in the conversation of GOAT. Who else has ever had a podium streak like him? Its utterly insane.

    • @carlh296
      @carlh296 29 дней назад +1

      Big Z had a podium streak far better than this, it was like 35 or something daft. Liz mentioned it in a video not that long ago. However, that included all the minor shows too. Strongman league stuff.

  • @xDeathBySpikesx
    @xDeathBySpikesx Месяц назад

    It's pretty crazy how he got to the top so fast and how consistent he is. And statically he keeps getting stronger so who knows how strong he gets if he keeps competing for years. It's like a combination of being strong enough statically to never be outside of the top 2-3 on the static events but then athletic and explosive enough to also win or be top 2-3 in the moving/loading events and then on top of that he rarely makes mistakes and seemingly never gets tired lol

  • @renedupont6116
    @renedupont6116 28 дней назад

    Winning Brian Shaw's group is crazy. Predicting it beforehand is even crazier.

  • @MTGBroker
    @MTGBroker Месяц назад +1

    Big Z was absolutely pushed to his limits with Shaw and Pudz. Z didn't win WSM for several years until he got to his prime. Imagine if Shaw or Z (one or the other) was not there? One of them would have 8 or 10 WSM trophies. Then take out the IFSA split... Z could've won 10 I bet.

  • @patplayswell6950
    @patplayswell6950 Месяц назад

    Your assessment of Hooper is accurate. I might add I find Hooper is very tactical in how he manages his pyhsical endurance. Also almost every comp. he has one event which he will not complete so as to save his energy for a tougher comp.. Suscribed.

  • @Bmxae
    @Bmxae 29 дней назад

    Hoppers been lifting and playing sports since he was a kid. He had strong barbell lifts in h8gh school. He's developed his strength over decades not a few years.

  • @dominiccroucher6677
    @dominiccroucher6677 29 дней назад

    Even as a marathon runner, Hooper's quads and shoulders were so well developed!

  • @TheOlsonOutfit
    @TheOlsonOutfit 29 дней назад

    I think the marathon training gave him the endurance and *mindset* to push himself further than most other guys.

  • @Anonymous-sb9rr
    @Anonymous-sb9rr Месяц назад +1

    I think walking makes sense, keep the blood flowing. More circulation, means more nutrients, faster removal of waste and thus possibly faster recovery.

    • @justinw1765
      @justinw1765 28 дней назад

      Back when I was lifting, in between sets and lifts, during rests, I would walk. And my rests varied from 2 to 3 minutes or so. Typically a session would take around an hour to an hour and a half, but a good half an hour or more of that was just walking. Then I would also walk/hike on off days, and sometimes walk/hike on workout days otherwise.
      Anyways, it seemed to help.

  • @msapolu1
    @msapolu1 Месяц назад

    Hooper re-writing the HISTORY books on how STROMGMAN is changing.

  • @VitorSantos-jm8tb
    @VitorSantos-jm8tb 29 дней назад

    The eye for the technical aspects is what sets him appart nowadays.
    A Healthy Licis would be around the same as he also looks for that "extra"

  • @DadGetsFit
    @DadGetsFit Месяц назад +2

    Mitch is such a genuine nice person. Wealth of helpful info and seems like a down to earth dude. Nice to see you actually talking about him. Hes only helping the sport

    • @justinw1765
      @justinw1765 28 дней назад

      Yeah, I'm really glad that nice, decent people like Mitch and Tom Aspinall have gotten into such dominant/high positions in their respective sports. It's about time. I was getting sick of the typical overly arrogant, selfish/self centered, overly macho type guys that usually were in those positions.
      Nothing wrong with being confident and valuing yourself, but you don't have to be an egotistical, bombastic arse about it, and both Mitch and Tom consistently prove that you don't have to be the latter to be the best.
      Good examples! (And note, neither are American, and I say that as an American).

  • @BMGrilla60
    @BMGrilla60 Месяц назад

    Thanks for sharing your insights. Nice to see a competing strongman’s views on things. Also nice to see you sticking up for people in your shorts.

  • @MrCloudjust
    @MrCloudjust 29 дней назад

    The only thing I think you missed is covering the fact that his recovery might be better since his heart and cardio is probably vastly stronger than all other strongmen because of his endurance running past!! I think this is one of the strongest factors why his recovery is so strong

    • @paodwyer__
      @paodwyer__  29 дней назад

      Yes I’d agree with that it’s also probably why he’s so good at yolk

  • @Micheldied
    @Micheldied 29 дней назад

    The guys who hate him are the "you just gotta lift bro stop overthinking" because of the way Mitch publicly approaches his training. But the hilarious part of it is that every top level strongmen is very meticulous with their training, they just aren't as loudspoken about it. The rest of them are just fanboys of other strongmen who can't bear to see them lose.

  • @rippenzong2455
    @rippenzong2455 29 дней назад

    yea you got a nerd with godly genetics and on top of that he seems so humble. hooper is easily one of my fave strongmen.

  • @odysseusnissan
    @odysseusnissan Месяц назад

    I love hearing Pa's take on Hooper. When Pa smiled and mentioned that Hooper could use a filter sometimes...it reminded me of when he got mad at Coach Greg that time. I can see having to calm my cockiness down at the pool table if Pa was having drinks in the room.

    • @paodwyer__
      @paodwyer__  Месяц назад +1

      I’m a happy drunk 😂

    • @odysseusnissan
      @odysseusnissan Месяц назад

      @@paodwyer__Nice! You seem like a fun drinking buddy. Have hope to have the honor of buying you a drink some day. Cheers!

  • @andrew98115wl
    @andrew98115wl Месяц назад +1

    I think he has trained intelligently from the beginning too.

  • @HucciManeHuman
    @HucciManeHuman 29 дней назад +1

    Steroids don’t do it, but it really does help!❤

  • @bdegrds
    @bdegrds 29 дней назад +1

    Mitch is extremely gifted and obviously an excellent strongman, but a 28 year old kid who has only been lifting for 5 years is not a wealth of knowledge. And in no way is he stronger than peak Big Z

  • @undercoveraca
    @undercoveraca Месяц назад

    They guy is an athlete and a sports scientist. He studies biomechanics and technique. He's getting better and stronger and he will change strongman by the end of his career, if others want to keep up.

    • @jamaanders1817
      @jamaanders1817 Месяц назад

      Underated comment. Simple but absolutely on the nose. Add in the fact Hoopers quads, the base of all lifts, are off the charts

  • @simonparker4701
    @simonparker4701 29 дней назад

    He's also very intelligent, CV fit and adaptable. He's really technical and understands bio-mechanics really well....!

  • @excat
    @excat 29 дней назад

    Here's the thing with Strongman, and Mitch proves this to a degree. There are most likely more genetically gifted people out there in the world we'll never know about than there are that we do know about. You have a marathon runner that is showing with education, drive and training he can come in and dominate the sport. I'm not saying he's not genetically gifted. There are a ton of people in this world that could care less about picking up heavy shit. Working in the oil field and on farms I've come across people with unimaginable strength. Talking real world men moving ungodly heavy shit that would make OSHA have heart attacks because that's what you've gotta do, day in and day out. Given the same education, drive, training and access to drugs, I have no doubt there are men in this world with potential to rival the men that have been at the top of the sport. It's one of the reasons I've never like the "I'm one of the strongest people on the planet" moniker. In the literal sense, there's no way of ever determining that on an equal playing field.

  • @BuJammy
    @BuJammy Месяц назад +2

    He is in the medical world, so he gets DA GUD STUFF.
    lol.

  • @Michael-ot6pl
    @Michael-ot6pl 29 дней назад

    He doesn't need physio because he is a physio!

  • @richardjones3826
    @richardjones3826 Месяц назад

    All his biomechanics are just perfect for strongman plus his mental attitude the right diet and OFC peds in the right quantity. Juhaptergee

  • @romanteni
    @romanteni Месяц назад +1

    He also has the best coach in the business it seems.

  • @jaycordner3890
    @jaycordner3890 29 дней назад

    Spot on in last comments.
    Genetic freak and once in a lifetime and generational talent

  • @bestopinion9257
    @bestopinion9257 27 дней назад

    Wen I started training I trained arms only, biceps and triceps. I had a big dumbell, I barely could lift it with both hands (biceps). In a few weeks I could do 9 reps with one hand. My arms grew from 35 to 40 cm. I was 16 year old. Always natural. Two meals a day.

  • @jfro5867
    @jfro5867 Месяц назад

    Enjoyed that. Love how you say 332, the Irish accent, born story tellers.

  • @petergripping1440
    @petergripping1440 3 дня назад

    Big Z battled Halfthor, Brian Shaw,Eddie Hall,Pudzenowskiandsoany more.
    The strongest fields in history.
    I agree Moose is a gifted Strongman...and Thor will test him next year

  • @allforclout2040
    @allforclout2040 23 дня назад

    Didn’t mention Brian shaw! Outrageous

  • @hulkthedane7542
    @hulkthedane7542 29 дней назад

    Whether you like him or not, Mitchell Hooper is an athletic phenomenon. One of those persons good at many different sports, and particularly strength sports. Be it due to genetics (which I think accounts for most of it), work ethics, method of training... all of the above, noone can take away his persistent performances. He comes to competitions and get within 3.rd
    place in almost all events, every time.
    With the current set of rules in the competitions happening all over the world, that is what it takes to win. He takes podium after podium after podium... Often as number 1. If people do not think that shows true strength, they will have to come up with a different format for competitions - a different set of rules.
    I think, that Mitch would do good under any set of rules, because he lifts heavy shit. Over and over again.
    In general, I would love to see at least one annual competition with max lifts only. No "most repetitions on a set weight". It would be brutally hard on the athletes. To once and for all get to know, who is the statically strongest.
    I imagine something like a 14 days long camp, where 16 - 20 athletes live. During their stay, each of them can plan their own order of events. All having to make a max lift in 5 - 8 different lifts. Noone knowing each others results during the competition. Deadlift, two hands overhead press, one hand overhead press, stone over bar, throw for height (or heaviest over 20 feet/6 m), 10 m yoke in one stride as heavy as possible.... Well rounded, but not a lot of speed or stamina.
    Whether points are given pr. event, like now, or the lifted weight total like in powerlifting or something else, I don't know.
    Some people seem to think, Mitchell would not do good at something like what I just described - that Thor, Tom, Bobby Thompson, Trey.. would beat him. I think, Mitchell would adapt and overcome and stand on the podium again.
    Just to clarify, I am not even the biggest Hooper fan. I prefer seeing Tom and Thor win, but I am a realist. I don't dislike Hooper, he is just not my favorite strongman - and still I see him have the capacity to become the GOAT if he decides to stay in the sport.
    Train hard, stay safe 👍👍.

  • @kcsniper1243
    @kcsniper1243 Месяц назад +12

    Hopper is the most well rounded strongman since prime Shaw, but I don't think anyone is as statically strong as Eddie or Thor in there primes

    • @jfro5867
      @jfro5867 Месяц назад +3

      Hopper just lifted 218kg! More than anyone else. Pa reckons the deadlift record is on if he wants it badly enough. Eddie had his WSM win that he did deserve but he scraped that victory really by the closest of margins, then bailed straight after and never competed again. Why? Because he knew it was a one off. Fair enough, but he’s traded on that legacy like no other. He still calls himself WSM but that was 7 years ago. Big Z, Shaw, Pudz are on a whole higher level (later generations of strongman). Tom could be in that top group IF he doesn’t go off the boil. Time will tell.

    • @thomasrosendahl2783
      @thomasrosendahl2783 Месяц назад +2

      Tom is 30 years old now, and he still bombs a lot of the events as we saw here with strongest man on earth and earlier this year with the Arnold Classic Ohio. All the Stoltman fans will hate me for telling the truth, that he is not as consistent as Mitch or Hafthor with winning multiple titles or breaking world records.

    • @alwayslearning3426
      @alwayslearning3426 29 дней назад

      Good thing it is not now or has ever been a static competition.

    • @carlh296
      @carlh296 29 дней назад +2

      @@jfro5867 Tom will never be in that group. He is unbelievably gifted and strong yes, but he mentally does not have what it takes to win many different titles. Look at his record, 30 international comps, only 4 wins. Leagues below those other guys.

    • @carlh296
      @carlh296 29 дней назад +1

      @@thomasrosendahl2783 SMOE Thor and Mitch are there with their coaches. Tom is there with the missus. Sadly he just does not have the same elite professional approach and attitude to winning. Its work, why the hell wasn't Dan there telling him to get a light stone in the bag before going guns blazing for the big boy. 2nd year on the trot too.

  • @stimpsonjcat26
    @stimpsonjcat26 3 дня назад

    Right now Hooper is not physically stronger than Thor. He is however very smart in strategy and well rounded. If Thor would get his technique down in pressing it would help him tremendously.

  • @JoMRidleybean
    @JoMRidleybean Месяц назад

    Very much looking forward to the battles between thor and mitch over the next 3 or 4 years. If they both stay healthy and strong, there could be some legendary shows between them

  • @smarterworkout
    @smarterworkout Месяц назад

    The reason why he is strong is he mentally turns off all inhibitors. Our bodies have built in protection mechanisms to prevent injury. The Golgi Tendon Organ helps prevent injuries. If you can mentally turn it off it can help you lift more. The other protection mechanism is our minds. Everyone, whether they admit it or not, is afraid of death when lifting an extreme amount of weight. If you can go into competition acknowledging you might die and your okay with it - it can greatly increase your strength. Just my hypothesis.

  • @carlh296
    @carlh296 29 дней назад

    Reckon this and your previous video are 2 of your best every. Nice one.

  • @bestopinion9257
    @bestopinion9257 27 дней назад

    His marathon background may have a role here, but it may be enough to not eat like a pig and look like one when anyone else in the field does exactly that. No wonder why he has more stamina.

  • @rokshi8253
    @rokshi8253 Месяц назад +54

    Having low testosterone is something we dont pay much attention to, but it is the reason why our motivation is low and progress is slow, I found great ways to improve my test levels in this book, it helped me out and now im on my journey to become a better man The book that Im talking about is "You are stronger than you think" from Borlest

    • @germanrud9904
      @germanrud9904 Месяц назад

      Test is majorly overrated, by naive teenagers, by dumb adult men.. Especially in the last few years by the sea of pseuds that have flooded the fitness industry with their hormone optimization 💩

    • @justinw1765
      @justinw1765 28 дней назад

      I'm now in my mid 40's. My test definitely seems to have gone down noticeably in the last 10 or so years. It sucks. So much of it seems to mimic chronic depression. Especially the apathy, lack of energy, and lack of motivation.
      I can't afford TRT and am somewhat hesitant to try it anyways (I don't want to shut down my testes). So I'm trying natural ways of boosting it. I think I need to focus most on just losing excess fat. I need to lose like 30 lbs of fat to be at a more optimal weight/body composition. I eat really healthy and am pretty disciplined, but don't have the energy for a lot of exercise (which would help even more).
      Once I lose some more fat, I've considered trying low and occasional doses of kisspeptin to try to raise it some more. I don't want to try it until I lose the fat though, because the testosterone produced could overly convert into estrogen. Anyways, the peptide route won't shut down my testes, and it won't overly raise it like TRT can and often does (most people on TRT, take too much, and go beyond what their natural levels would be even if they were optimally healthy/balanced).

    • @germanrud9904
      @germanrud9904 28 дней назад

      @@rokshi8253 test is highly overrated, especially in the past few years when hormone optimization became a fitness industry trend. There is so much more that determines your overall wellbeing, focus and energy than just your blood serum testosterone levels..

    • @pvbarbell1904
      @pvbarbell1904 27 дней назад

      @@justinw1765 Cut the carbs and eat meat, eggs and fat. T will go up. Forget the TRT

  • @kalzonenu
    @kalzonenu 24 дня назад

    considering his a former marathon runner doesnt he have excessivly much more cardio/stamina thus it helps him recover between events.

  • @smbrumbaugh
    @smbrumbaugh Месяц назад +1

    I don't think that the other recovery stuff is shit, but I personally feel like the benefits are over-hyped. But, I've also always felt like even if it's a placebo, if it makes someone feel better then go for it.

    • @paodwyer__
      @paodwyer__  Месяц назад +3

      Ya that’s true, my thing with it is even it’s I get 1% better from it it’s worth it

  • @glywnniswells9480
    @glywnniswells9480 Месяц назад

    Obviously natural but its the way he trains. He does cardio short and high ouput cardio. Running circulates blood and blood brings nutrients everywhere, nutrients heal and aid the body.He also doesnt over eat so he is not overwheight he is actually as light as he could possibly be for the weights he is lifting. He incorporates the best of every sport

  • @brandofowler
    @brandofowler 28 дней назад +1

    That gav bilton pic 😂😂😂

  • @charliewalker9443
    @charliewalker9443 29 дней назад

    Loved the video! Keep up the good work

  • @wadeeubanks8435
    @wadeeubanks8435 Месяц назад

    I think one thing that makes him so successful is his degree in sports science. Brian Shaw has a similar degree I believe, that plus his monster frame is what makes Brian the G.O.A.T. Mitch has enough frame to work with and that same level of athletic intelligence. It takes more than one brain to make a champion strongman body, but when the central brain is strong then the rest of it ties in together much better.

  • @forteka81
    @forteka81 Месяц назад

    Ever…well said. Work and dedication can’t be bottled and administered.