Author Archives: Beth Skwarecki

2025 USAWA NATIONALS (Albany, KY)

NOTE CHANGE IN LOCATION – DALE HOLLOW IS UNABLE TO HOST US AS PLANNED. THE COMPETITION VENUE AND HOTEL HAVE BOTH BEEN CHANGED. (Updated 4/4/2025)

SATURDAY, JULY 19, 2025

LOCATION: BUFFVILLE COLOSSEUM

2608 North Highway 127 Business

Albany, KY 42602

WEIGH-INS:  SATURDAY, JULY 19TH @ 8 AM – 9:30 AM ,

NATIONALS LIFTING: 10:00 AM (CENTRAL STANDARD TIME)

THE LIFTS: 

  • HACKENSCHMIDT FLOOR PRESS
  • DINNIE LIFT
  • SAXON DEADLIFT
  • DUMBBELLL TO SHOULDER 

ENTRY DEADLINE – JULY 1, 2025 – Late entries will not be accepted. (NOTE CHANGE IN DEADLINE, NOW 7/1 NOT 7/5)

ENTRY FEE:  60 dollars and you must register online at the link provided: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/usawa-nationals-2025-tickets-946795770637

CONTACT INFORMATION:clintpoore@hotmail.com or by phone at 606-688-2600.

USAWA MEMBERSHIP REQUIRED: Memberships are required for all participants prior to the meet. Please go to USAWA.COM to purchase your memberships prior to the meet. 

AWARDS: Best Lifter Awards to the overall male & female champion, Masters Best Lifter for male & female & medals for all lifters. Each lifter will receive a USAWA NATIONALS t-shirt. You must give your t-shirt size on the online entry form

SCHEDULE:

FRIDAY – SKD (SOUTHERN KENTUCKY DISTILLERY) tour & Kentucky Bourbon tasting at 2 pm

FRIDAY – USAWA National Meeting at 5 pm at South Kentucky Distillery. 

SATURDAY – 2025 USAWA NATIONALS at Buffville Colosseum

HOTEL – BAYMONT INN  phone #(606) 387-7238. You must call the Baymont Inn to receive the group rate. You will not receive the group rate if you book online by a third party.

Group code is USAWA

The Baymont Inn has a block of 20 rooms for the USAWA for 139 dollars plus tax per night, more rooms can be added if necessary.

You must call to the Baymont Inn to make a reservation with the group code. This is peak season for Lake Cumberland and Dale Hollow Lake and the rooms will be held until June 8th. After June 8, the group code will no longer be available. Due to being the peak season for travelers, each reservation must be for two nights, Friday & Saturday night. This is a destination location for travelers and you must book before the deadline of June 8th. If you wait to the last minute you may not get a room.

LOCAL TOUR: We are scheduling a Bourbon tasting tour at SKD (Southern Kentucky Distillery) on Friday. If you are interested in going on a tour of the local Bourbon Distillery and doing some Kentucky Bourbon tasting, please let me know. 

2024 National Championship Meet Results

The 2024 USAWA National Championship was held in Columbia, Missouri last week. Bill Clark, who hosted the meet, writes:

THE CHAMPIONS REIGN –  BETH AND ABE RETAIN TITLES

There was little doubt after the initial event that Beth Skwarecki and Abe Smith would retain their national titles – and so it was – with 18 lifters on hand – the same as the meet drew in 2023.

Clark’s Gym, the meet sponsor for the second year in a row and the fifth time dating back to 1995, 1997 and 2001, won the team title by sweeping the first six places on the men’s side and two of the top four women.

Randy Smith, who came from Upper Michigan, was the men’s runner-up, followed by a pair of newcomers to the Nationals – Philip Marlin in third and Jeff Wenzel in fourth.

Lisa Gore, a gym member for less than two months, took third behind Beth and Stacy Todd. Allison Lupo was a close fourth.

The four Todd kids – two girls and two boys from the homes of Eric and Chris Todd – put on a great demonstration of both skill and strength and showed the flexibility and feel for the game that predicted a bright future – maybe in the Olympic Lift game as well as the odd lifts.

One of the negatives of the championship weekend was the failure of Kevin Fulton to free himself from weather-related farm problems to make it to the meet that was to honor him as a founding leader in the USAWA – the guy for whom the Fulton Bar was named.

Two of the old-timers who have been around for more than three decades were on hand. John Carter finished sixth overall and Denny Habecker, from Lebanon, Pa., was in seventh place. Habecker was the oldest lifter in the meet at 81. He brought along a guest – Steve Gardner, the long-time leader of the IAWA-UK – the British version of the USAWA.

Results are in the attached document.

USAWA Teeth Lifting

by Sanjiv Gupta

Classic Advertisement (from USAWA website)

The teeth lift is a USAWA Special Equipment Lift which originated from old-time performing strongmen.  Per a USAWA website article, Warren Lincoln Travis performed a 350 pound teeth lift with his hands behind his neck.

The current record list shows 15 USAWA athletes with records on the books.   Mary McConnaughey leads the women with a 130-pound lift in 2005, followed by RJ with a 54-pound lift in 2017.  The somewhat more crowded men’s field has Steve Schmidt in the lead with a 390-pound lift in 2005, followed by Eric Todd with a 300-pound lift in 2023.  The other 11 athletes in the books have records between 13 and 203 pounds dating back to 1999.  Art Montini has the most records in the book with 8 records (all 100 pounds or more) set in the 70-90 year old age classes.

Art Montini with his Teeth Bit (from USAWA website)

The last time it was contested in a meet was the 2022 Dino Gym Challenge, where among the 4 athletes participating only one had a successful teeth lift, Dean Ross at 39 pounds.

The teeth lift is essentially a neck exercise, but you still have to be hold onto the weight with your teeth.  Similar to a deadlift, your grip may fail before your posterior chain can no longer lift the weight.

The teeth bit is a very personal device.  Not because of the design or the shape of athlete’s choppers, but more because it is difficult to sanitize and kind of familiar to share un-sanitized.  Most of the designs I have seen are made from leather.  Leather is pliable enough to bite your teeth into, but also sturdy enough to hold 300 pounds.

I fabricated one based on the classic dog-bone template, folding the leather back on itself, gluing the two halves together to secure a D-ring and adding some additional leather and rivets for more security.  I did not use any specific medical grade of food safe glue.  I just used whatever Tandy Leather had on hand that I could borrow.  This seemed to be the traditional design.  If I made another one, I would not include the riveted section.  On one teeth lift, the bit slipped in my mouth and put a lot of pressure on my front tooth.  It would have been better to have the bit just freely escape my mouth.

The author’s teeth bit

I have heard horror stories about people having so much pressure on their teeth that they felt the roots of their teeth shifting or worse.  Alternatively, the USAWA website claims that Art Montini’s 107-pound lift in 2013 at 85 years of age was successful even though he has false teeth.  Personally, I am not the picture of dental health.  I have had wisdom teeth removed, teeth removed for braces and three teeth removed and replaced with two implants due to gum disease.  That said my oral surgeon could not endorse teeth lifting but did claim my implants were stronger than my natural teeth.

Whether or not you want to set records in the teeth lift, this might be worth playing with just to appreciate the grit it would take to lift over 100 pounds.  Here is a youtube video where I used a washcloth as a teeth bit and loaded it to 25 pounds.  I feel like the washcloth I was using could hold over 100 pounds, but I have no intention of finding out.

1 26 27 28 29