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Mr. America (contest)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mr. America
Bert Goodrich (1939 winner, left) with Alan Stephan (1946 winner)
SportBodybuilding
Awarded forPhysical fitness, trained muscular structure
History
First award1939
First winnerBert Goodrich
Most wins
2 times
Most recentRobert Thompson Jr. (2023)
Websitewww.mramerica.com

The Mr. America contest is a bodybuilding competition started by the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU). It was first held on July 4, 1939, and the winner was named "America's Best Built Man". In 1940 this was changed to what is now known as the Mr. America contest. In the mid-1940s, Joe and Ben Weider started the IFBB as an alternative to the AAU. They held their opposing contest, the IFBB Mr. America, in 1949 and then from 1959 through 1977.[1] Rights to the Mr. America name have been sold several times after AAU discontinued holding the contests in 1999.

History

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The AAU voted to discontinue holding bodybuilding competitions in 1999.[2]

In 2004, the World Bodybuilding & Fitness Association (WBFA) announced they had acquired the rights to the Mr. America name and would resume running contests under that banner.

In 2006 Bob Bonham acquired the rights and from 2011 through 2013 held the Mr America contest under the sanction of the INBF (International Natural Bodybuilding Federation), which is the amateur division of the WNBF (World Natural Bodybuilding Federation). The contests were drug tested under strict WADA (World Anti Doping Agency) guidelines using U.S. Olympic laboratory testing.

In 2015, rights to Mr. America were acquired by Bruce Ebel, and the contest's annual event cycle resumed via MRA Promotions. Qualifying events in spring were sponsored by the National Gym Association (NGA), Nspire Sports League (NSL), and Ultimate Fitness Events (UFE).[3] The Mr. America Expo and contest was to have been held in Baltimore in October 2017.[4]

The contest resumed in 2020 (with no specific organization affiliation), promoted by Marc Tauriello of Mr America LLC. The Mr. America Sports Festival & Expo is held in October in Atlantic City, New Jersey,[5][better source needed] and broadcast on the CBS Sports Network.[6]

Winners

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Bodybuilding

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Amateur Athletic Union / International Natural Bodybuilding Federation

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Year Federation Mr. America Ms. America Masters Bodybuilding Classic Bodybuilding Men’s Bodybuilding A Men's Bodybuilding B Venue
1938 Amateur Athletic Union Bert Goodrich
1939 Roland Essmaker
1940 John Grimek
1941
1942 Frank Leight
1943 Jules Bacon
1944 Steve Stanko
1945 Clarence Ross
1946 Alan Stephan
1947 Steve Reeves
1948 George Eiferman
1949 Jack Delinger
1950 John Farbotnik
1951 Roy Hilligenn
1952 Jim Park
1953 Bill Pearl
1954 Dick DuBois
1955 Steve Klisanin
1956 Ray Schaefer
1957 Ron Lacy
1958 Tom Sansone
1959 Harry Johnson
1960 Lloyd Lerille
1961 Raymond Routledge
1962 Joe Abbenda
1963 Vern Weaver
1964 Val Vasilieff
1965 Jerry Daniels
1966 Bob Gajda
1967 Dennis Tinerino
1968 Jim Haislop
1969 Boyer Coe
1970 Chris Dickerson
1971 Casey Viator
1972 Steve Michalik
1973 Jim Morris
1974 Ron Thompson
1975 Dale Adrian
1976 Kalman Szkalak
1977 Dave Johns
1978 Tony Pearson
1979 Ray Mentzer
1980 Gary Leonard Carla Dunlap
1981 Tim Belknap Laura Combes
1982 Rufus Howard Tina Plakinger (medium & overall)

Chris Wood (Tall)


Rebecca Thomas (medium-tall)


Gloria Romo (short)

1983 Jeff King Kerrie Keenan (medium & overall)

Cheryl Harris (Tall)


Becky Thomas (medium-tall)


Diane Langone (short)

1984 Joe Meeko Jill O'Connor (medium & overall)

Dawn Goldstab (Tall)


Cynthia Albrecht (medium-tall)


Joone Hopfenspirger (short)

1985 Michael Antorino Joone Hopfenspirger (short & overall)

Christine Engle (Tall)


Debra Poston (medium-tall)


Cathey Palyo (medium)

1986 Glenn Knerr Connie McCloskey (short & overall)

Teresa Nordaby (Tall)


Cathy Butler (medium)

1987 Richard Barretta Teresa Nordaby (medium-Tall & overall)

Gretta Mikalac (Tall)


Cathy Butler (medium)


Linda Lawrynkiewicz (short)

1988 William Norberg Cathy Butler (short & overall)

Anita Briggs (Tall)


Antoinette Winn (medium-tall)


Theresa Locicero (medium)

1989 Matt DuFresne Mary Adams
1990 Peter Miller Linda Slayton (short & overall)

Anita Briggs (Tall)


Tammy Kamienski (medium-tall)


Theresa Locicero (medium)

1991 Joe DeAngelis Theresa Locicero (medium & overall)

Jodie Adams (Tall)


Donna Marie Schultz (medium-tall)


Gayle Schroeder (short)

1992 Mike Scarcella Kathi Costello (medium & overall)

Betsy Briggs (Tall)


Linda Mignosa (medium-tall)


Laurie Fierstein (short)

1993 Billy Nothaft Karla Nelsen (tall & overall)

Christine Gillett (medium-tall)


Bonnie Chymeryc (medium)


Jeannie Davidson (short)

1994 Andrew Sivert Midge Shull (short & overall)

Betsy Briggs (Tall)

1995 Terence Hairston Betsy Briggs (heavyweight & overall)

Vicki Dunn (middleweight)


Victoria McKinney (lightweight)

1996 Doug Rieser Cynthia Barker (heavyweight & overall)

Sonyo T Bond (middleweight)


Johanna Carter (lightweight)

1997 Bill Davey Denise Richardson (heavyweight & overall)

Beth Eisenman (middleweight)


Mary Martino (lightweight)

1998 Harvey H. Campbell Denise Richardson (middleweight & overall)

Kimberly Rogers (heavyweight)


Ann Katz (Light-Heavyweight)


Denise Richardson (middleweight)


Mary Martino (lightweight)

1999 Tracey Dorsey Cathy Boulé (medium & overall)

Donna Shultz (Tall)


Melody Leese (short)

2011 International Natural Bodybuilding Federation Rawle Greene None (Overall)

Julie Sleight (heavyweight)


Cynthia Mustafa (lightweight)


Julie Sleight (Masters)

New York City, New York, United States of America
2012 Daniel White Secaucus, New Jersey, United States of America
2013 John Heart
2015 None Cleveland Thomas Rochester, New York, United States of America
2016 Shevon Cunningham Six Flags America, Woodmore, Maryland, United States of America
2020 Jay Brew Atlantic City, New Jersey, United States of America
2021 Corey Brown Joe Farese Jeremiah Kenney-Wright
2022 Meshack Ochieng Melody Farkas Matthew Otero Meshack Ochieng Prince Bada Lekan
2023 Robert Thompson Jr. Maria Popa Desario Smith TBD
2024 TBD

International Federation of BodyBuilding and Fitness

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Year Mr. America Venue
1949 Alan Stephan
1959 Chuck Sipes
1960 Gene Shuey
1961 Gaétan D'Amours
1962 Larry Scott
1963 Reg Lewis
1964 Harold Poole
1965 Dave Draper
1966 Chester Yorton
1967 Don Howorth
1968 Frank Zane
1969 John Decola
1970 Mike Katz
1971 Ken Waller
1972 Ed Corney
1973 Lou Ferrigno
1974 Bob Birdsong
1975 Robby Robinson
1976 Mike Mentzer
1977 Danny Padilla

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Mr. America History". mramerica.com. Archived from the original on June 14, 2017. Retrieved May 22, 2017.
  2. ^ Fair, John D. (2015). Mr. America : The Tragic History of a Bodybuilding Icon (1st ed.). Austin Texas: University of Texas Press. pp. 348–368. ISBN 978-0-292-76082-0.
  3. ^ "Mr. America Qualifying Events". MRA Promotions. Archived from the original on October 30, 2018. Retrieved May 22, 2017.
  4. ^ "Mr. America Info and Registration". mramerica.com. Archived from the original on June 2, 2017. Retrieved May 22, 2017.
  5. ^ Tauriello, Marc (March 31, 2020). "Mr. America". Facebook. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  6. ^ Letorney, Austin (October 6, 2021). "Mr. America 2021 Event Preview: How To Watch & Key Details". Generation Iron. Retrieved October 18, 2022.

Further reading

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  • Fair, John D. Mr. America: The Tragic History of a Bodybuilding Icon (2015) Excerpt
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