Category Archives: USAWA Daily News

Century Club Updated

The Record sheets will be updated when the quarterlies are ready. This will include the OTSMs in Colorado and Missouri as well as the One Ton Challenge and Two Fisted Challenge. All these records are added in. The Century Club lists are updated! Welcome and Congratulations to Jessica Hopps and Wade Marchand – they are now in the Century Club. There were some big movers on the women’s side. Lisa Gore added 65 new records as she moved into a new age class. She moves up to #2 all time among female lifters. On the men’s side Jeff Wenzel added 48 new standards to move up to 13th all-time. Sanjiv Gupta moved up 16 places with a big quarter and Frank Ciavattone moves into 4th all time. Since the Untied States is turning 250 this year, the record lists have a new feature. All those with more than 250 records are bolded and belong to the new USAWA250 Club level. On the women’s side – the top three are bolded. On the men’s side, it’s the top 15. Also, I have a new team record table. For those who may have been a member of more than one team, there is the top 10 individual team record holders table now. Enjoy! If there is any stat or table that you as a lifter would like to see, let me know.

2025 Two-Fisted Challenge II – Results and Record Day

The 2nd Two Fisted Challenge, held 27 – 28 September, featured a lot of big lifts, new champions, new contestants, and a lot of skinned fingers! This year we had entries from three gyms across the USAWA. On the Women’s side, Janet Thompson entered the fray and won the title for 2025. Mary McConnaughey finished third in her first year, and lifted the most in raw weight. Lisa Gore finished second while lifting about 25% more than last year. Only Allison Lupo had a larger improvement – up 50% from a year ago.

On the men’s side, Jeff Wenzel ran away from the field tallying nearly a ton after putting up over a ton in the One Ton Meet. Not only that, but he improved about 35% over last year. Abe Smith was the runner-up in raw weight, while Tony Lupo and Riley Wenzel battled for third place. The former lifted more in raw totals but the latter took third after Lynch and Age were considered. Riley was quite impressive in his first entry into this meet, breaking or establishing 11 records in 14 events. Abe and Tony were both up about 15% over last year as well. Three entered from high Country Vigour in 2025, and this year Jarrod Fobes got to compete injury free. He was strong enough to place 5th overall in raw weight, and not much separated him from 3rd. Sanjiv Gupta returned to the mix, and Elijah Conley got a few lifts in for his first competition, hitting age-weight records in all four events attempted. Sanjiv hit age-weight marks in 12 of 14 lifts which was 2nd on the men’s side. Only Logan Wenzel did better establishing all 14 age-weight records and finishing 5th overall at only age 10. We were also glad to have Jerome Licini enter the mix from Habecker’s Gym in Lebanon Valle, PA. He made a good strong entrance into the field, and given this is his rookie year, expect to see big gains next year.

Jeff Wenzel, Sanjiv Gupta, and Lisa Gore put up some strong numbers in their record day lifts. Check it out in the results posted here.

How I found my lifting home

by Jerome Licini

Growing up as a skinny geek, I had knocked around with lifting ever since my dad bought me a weight set in high school, but I didn’t start lifting seriously until a near-catastrophic accident at age 59. When I did, I started out just lifting at home to try to get bigger and stronger. Eventually I tried a powerlifting gym. I really liked the gym owner and the vibes there, and the introductory personal training weeks showed me that despite a prior knee surgery, I could eventually do full-depth squats, but I’d have a long way to go. The other members were very nice and there would be in-gym competitions, but I am very motivated by PRs at home, and I didn’t think I would ever be able to really be competitive in the big three lifts. After deciding against that and as I became happier about my size, I did consider bodybuilding, but I would have had to start training muscle groups that I never did, and dieting was never easy for me, so it would be a monumental challenge to get on stage.

Eventually, I stumbled across the USAWA, probably through a podcast that mentioned all-round weightlifting. As I looked into it, I couldn’t imagine that I hadn’t run across it in four decades of on-and-off working out and reading muscle media. I immediately felt that it would be perfect for me. The fact that it kept records on more than 200 lifts felt very freeing, and when multiplied by the number of age and bodyweight classes, there were plenty of available national records just waiting to be grabbed.

I joined in January 2025 and started looking into the practicalities. I reached out to gym owners who then put me in contact with other members. EVERYONE was extremely friendly, supportive, and encouraging, despite my difficult travel and family constraints. I learned more about the USAWA and people’s lifting careers, and I became even more convinced to get involved. When I found out that the lifter who lived closest to me was an official, I realized that if I became an official too, we could judge each other’s lifts, so I did my written and video tests before ever lifting in person.

Finally the stars aligned, and I was able to get to Denny’s gym on a Record Day in May. The support and camaraderie from the other lifters there was amazing. With their lifting tips and encouragement, it was easy to beat my home PRs, and it served as my third practice judging so I became a certified official. I started participating remotely in meets, officiated occasionally when possible. At each step along the way, I have found this to be an organization filled with extremely supportive members and club owners through every email, phone call, and in-person visit!

I’m a huge believer that the USAWA is a great federation, especially for older lifters who are motivated by PRs. The concept of relative newbies being able to earn national records is extremely empowering. I’ve started talking with a neighbor who works out to see if he might be interested, and I plan to go back to the powerlifting gym to see if it might click with any of the members there. 

I find that I am more motivated to keep working out consistently because I always have an upcoming meet to look forward to. I love the variety of the scheduled lifts because it gets me to work on more than my favorites, for example, I’ve restarted my rotator cuff rehab exercises to improve my overhead lifts. Finally, my doctor is happy that I am losing weight to improve my A1c, but my real motivation is that I want to improve my Lynch factor for meet standings. Overall, I am very happy to have finally found a community after lifting by myself for almost five decades.

Lift Programming

I would like to share the programming style I used for USAWA meets.

With the number of meets and lifts in the USAWA, programming efficiency is key not to over train while still competing competitively in several lifts.

The simple strategy I used was;

Combine the “main” weight of one lift to be the “warmup” weight of another.

For example, if you are training for a split jerk, push press the lighter warmup weights. While you are doing warmup weights for push press, strict press them.

Obviously if your form needs work, you need the reps but if your skill and strength are adequate, squeeze in an extra lift or two.

My deadlift strategy for the longest time is to use thumbless until grip starts to fail, then double over, and finally alternate grip.  It allowed me to train 3 styles of deadlift without one impacting another.  Train for 3 types of lift without any programming changes off the bat.

Once the weights are programmed, the goal is to hit the prescribed reps for each deadlift type but if the grip starts to fail, the barbell is floored, and the next grip is taken to finish out the reps and the workout carries on.

When training for meets, specific changes are made. This could be adding a lift or replacing a lift plus equipment changes e.g. Fulton deadlifts. Also singles for the meet lift will be added.

If finger deadlifts are on the horizon, they would be added first, becoming the warmup to the thumbless deadlift.

If there’s a Peoples deadlift, the no thumb deadlift may be removed to save strength and to start at a higher poundage. The Peoples deadlift would continue after the alternate grip deadlift.

If you are going for a thumbless record, this is going to be pushed  followed by a few extra singles before the full grip deadlift. You’ll then perform the rest of the deadlifts in the series to “keep the wheel greased” but you won’t push them.

I used my PR’s from 2020 for the example below. Using the 531 method by Jim Wendler, I took 90% of these PR’s to calculate an individual workout for each.

So instead of 3 workouts with 3 separate warm-ups, they will be combined into one workout;

The greyed out poundage is made redundant by the previous lift. You’ll need to decide where one lift ends, and another begins based on the poundages. Since “no thumbs” ends at 305, the closest weight to that (and lower) will be ignored, thus “double over” will start on its last set of 335. Then “mixed grip” will finish its last two sets. If you feel you need more work on x lift, just repeat the last lift weight with the new lift. E.g. after “no thumbs” 305×5, do “double over” 305×5, then 335×5.

Meet manipulation example 1

Say the next meet has a no thumb one arm deadlift, since they are the lightest, they are placed at the start and will replace part of the “no thumbs” warmup. Since both hands will be trained, I drop the reps to 3 and do each arm per set. Also since these are “no thumb” you may want to only do a few sets of “double over, no thumb” and jump early to “double over” as to not stress the thumbless grip.

Meet manipulation example 2

Maybe there’s a meet with the “peoples deadlift” and a Postal the following week with “double overhand”. Since “Peoples” is a heavy lift, you may want to strip down the sets, so “no thumbs” is reduce to a couple of warmup sets to still get some training in, then the lift is switched to “double overhand” for the rest of the warmup and main lift. Some singles are added to train strength before a set of “mixed grip” as a filler to warm up for the “peoples deadlift”.

While these all use the same bar, there is no reason dumbbell lifts like one hand/two hand, Fulton, Inch etc can be used early as well as a Fulton barbell lifts.

The same process can be used as a dumbbell workout, regular > to fulton > to inch.

There are many USAWA lifts that can be “cheated” into another lift’s progression. Even just combining two that fit well will make a difference.

Hope this was helpful to anyone struggling to program many lifts into their routine.

2025 IAWA Andy Goddard Memorial Postal Results

The final results with records noted are available for the 2025 IAWA Andy Goddard Memorial World Postal. Thanks to Chris Bass and Paul Barette for preparing these. The USAWA fared quite well thanks to the four clubs that participated. The four were Iron Throne, High Country Vigour, Frank’s Barbell Club, and Clark’s Gym. All in all the USAWA had by my count 25 new world records, three teams (Clark’s 1, Clark’s 2, and Franks Barbell Club) were part of the top 10 teams, and Frank’s Barbell Club and Clark’s Gym finished 5th and 2nd, respectively. The USAWA also claimed four of the 10 best lifters by age class (Dan Jones 40+, Jeff Wenzel 50+, Tony Lupo 55+, and Dave Deforest 65+) as well as eight (Jeff Wenzel, Dave DeForest, Riley Wenzel, Travis Luther, Tony Lupo, Dan Jones, Wade Marchand, and Kim VanWagner) of the top 20 individual lifters! Well done USAWA!

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