
Rare photo of all nine Mr. Olympias onstage together, with the "Master Blaster" Joe Weider, taken at the 30th anniversary of Joe Weider's Mr. Olympia, Atlanta Civic Centre, Atlanta, Georgia, 1995
Editor's Note: All reports and photographs that appear in the following article are taken from archived copies of MUSCLE BUILDER/POWER only. The Editor will be researching other magazines e.g. MR.
Read Joe Weider's Editorial Announcement, from the April 1965 edition of Muscle Builder, on a new contest to be called the "MR. OLYMPIA"!
It started on September 18, 1965. The crowd at the Brooklyn Academy of Music waited at the edge of their seats, screaming in anticipation. They clapped their hands, stomped their feet and yelled as loud as their lungs would allow for the blond superstar from
ider's greatest creation. This was the night of the first-ever Mr. Olympia contest.
Larry Scott was the bodybuilding superstar of his day, but by 1963 there were no more worlds to conquer. Scott had already won the Mr. America, Mr. World and Mr. Universe titles; there was little left for him to prove.
Besides proving anything, Scott already
had a houseful of trophies and plaques and felt that it was time to move on from bodybuilding and make some money.
Joe Weider recognized the need to keep Larry Scott in bodybuilding and the necessity to force the sport to grow. He created the Mr. Olympia
contest to keep all the great Mr. Universe champions active in the sport and to give them the opportunity to earn mo
ney from competing. Joe could see that for the sport to succeed in the future, the champions would have to be able to make a living from competing in the sport just like other professional athletes.
Larry Scott indeed won the first Mr. Olympia contest that hot September night in 1965 and repeated as Mr. Olympia again in 1966. He then announced his retirement and the 1967 crown was up for grabs.
In the picture are the first three finalist from 1965 to 21980.
In 1967, Sergio Oliva (commonly known as "The Myth") won the third Mr. Olympia contest in overpowering fashion. People wondered how much better Sergio could get. But better he was! In fact, he was so much better that he won the 1968 Mr.
Nevertheless, the greatest challenge to Sergio was
waiting in the wings, and 1969 commenced the greatest rivalry in the history of bodybuilding. Oliva was challenged by a young Austrian named Arnold Schwarzenegger. In a close battle, Sergio came out on top in 1969. He was now Mr. Olympia three years in a row, but
Both men trained hard for the following y
ear and in September of 1970,
test was held in
In 1972, the
In 1973, the contest moved back to
Standing 6'5" and weighing 270 pounds
, Lou was the largest competitor that
The Mr. Olympia contest moved to
In 1976, the contest moved to
n five years. It was not an easy victory, for he won by only an eyelash over Frank Zane. After the contest, Columbu announced his retirement while Zane immediately started training for the next year.
The next year, 1977, turned o
ut to be the year of Zane. Frank Zane had promoted himself that way for the 12 months leading up to the contest. He came to
Almost like an instant replay, the 1978 show was again held in
roved that the Mr. Olympia winner did not necessarily have to be big, as what wins is quality.
In 1979, Zane made it three in a row. Could he g
o on forever? Would he challenge
In 1980, the contest was held in
he contestants meeting, they thought he was there because he was an IFBB promoter and official. It dawned on them that he was there to compete when his name was called, and he selected a competitor number.
In 1981,
In 1982,
previous years. After winning, Dickerson announced his retirement while onstage.
The contest returned to
nd newcomer Lee Haney from the
In 1984, the event moved back to New York City's Felt Forum, where it had the highest attendance for the finals (5,000), the highest attendance for prejudging (4,200) and the largest amount of total prize money ($100,000) for any Olympia up to that time. It also featured the la
rgest Mr. Olympia winner, Lee Haney. Haney won weighing 247 pounds at a height of 5'11". He was big, he was massive and he was cut. Also, he was unbeatable.
In 1985, the show was held in
rt Beckles and Rich Gaspari. It was now two and counting for Lee. Many people felt that the Lee Haney onstage in the 1986 rendition in
In 1987, the Mr. Olympia contest moved to
rs above all the others. He had now won four in a row, and
In 1988,
on easily making it five straight times. For the third year in a row, Rich Gaspari placed second.
The next year brought the Mr. Olympia to
ughest defense, as he had to fight off the challenges of Lee Labrada and Vince Taylor. For the first time, people doubted Haney's dominance and many people said that he was lucky to win. But win he did, and in doing so tied
In 1990, 4,400 people packed
Arie Crown Theatre. Prize money hit $200,000 for the first time ever as Haney tried to make it seven in a row. If 1989 was tough for Haney, 1990 was the year he almost lost. After two rounds, he was behind by two points, but rallied in the posing round and posedown to beat Lee Labrada and Shawn Ray. Haney now had seven consecutive Mr. Olympia titles.
In 1992, the Mr. Olympia contest moved to
Haney had decided to retire after a record-setting eight consecutive victories. The contest was close after the first round between the U.S. National Champion of 1991, Kevin Levrone, and the '91 Mr. Olympia runner-up, Dorian Yates. But after the first round, Yates started pulling away and won in convincing fashion.
ned, but did a new era begin?
Nothing could stop the amazing Yates in 1993 as he rocked the scales at a record 257 pounds in
However, the Brit endured a horrendous year in 1994. In early March, he severely damaged his left rotator cuff, and then, later in the month, he tore his left quad. He battled his way through, but with the
If doubts were raised about Yates's reign, he didn't hear, or heed them. He returned to
.
In 1996, after a three-year tenure, the
bout his invincibility began to surface.
In 1997, the Mr. Olympia road show arrived in
est. Total prize money was $285,000, first place was worth $110,000, and bodybuilders were recognized as professional athletes in the truest sense of the word. The Mr. Olympia contest, which only Joe Weider had the imagination to create, was firmly established as bodybuilding's show of shows.
Dorian Yates was now going for six
at his best condition to date and pushed Dorian hard. In the end, Dorian took the title for the sixth time, but there were some that felt
What most people did not know was that Dorian suffered a torn triceps in training a few months before the show. Being the tough champion that he is, he said nothing and competed. After the contest, he had surgery to repair the muscle tear, but it will prevent him from competing in 1998.
In 1998, the
Editor's Note - Courtesy of Peter McGough, Editor-in-Chief, FLEX
His senses were reeling, battling to com
e to terms with the scene unfolding around him. He stood next to precontest favorite Flex Wheeler at the top of the ramp erected at The Theater at
rman Wayne DeMilia make the second-place announcement at the 1998 Mr. Olympia contest. The man not called would go down in history as the best bodybuilder in the world, the successor to Dorian Yates (retired), Lee Haney, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sergio Oliva, et al.
Hushing the crowd, DeMilia purred into the microphone: "In second place ...", DeMilia, who makes the Marquis de Sade seem like Mary Poppins on Valium, then cruelly paused a full 10 seconds before bar
king, "... Flex Wheeler!"
The crowd erupted into celebration as the man who was supposed to be the last one standing went the other way, crashing face down to the ground in shock. Could it be that a guy who finished "dead last" in his first Olympia back in 1992, who placed ninth at the 1997 rendition, who had to constantly remind people that he was not the bodybuilder called Ron Coleman, had just entered the ranks of bodybuilding immortality? It could, and the biggest baddest cop in
r. Olympia in the contest's 33-year existence.
Editor's Note: - Courtesy of Peter McGough, Editor-in-Chief, FLEX
Like Siegfried and Roy, like abs and thighs, Las Vegas and the Mr. Olympia belong together: Both celebrate excess for the sheer excessive sake of it; both foster a larger-than-life philosophy decre
eing that its standout attractions keep getting bigger and bigger and bigger; both revel in illusion and promote the fantasy that "life-changing gains can be yours", which in truth only a gifted few can attain. So it really was only a matter of time before Joe Weider made the inspired decision to bring his bodybuilding flagship to the gambling capital of the world.
Staging the Mr. Olympia contest in
o, and there has never been a greater night for bodybuilding than what occurred there on October 23, 1999. A sold-out 5,000 capacity crowd at the hotel's Event Center witnessed a thrilling extravaganza that culminated in Ronnie Coleman outmuscling 15 others on the road to Ma
ndalay and his second consecutive Olympia crown, with the only apparent dissenter to the decision being a hyped-up Flex Wheeler.
Editor's Note: - Courtesy of Jim Schmaltz, Senior Editor, FLEX
How do bring down Ronnie Coleman? Tell him he's won the Mr. Olympia.
Now for the eighth time in a row, the world's greatest body collapsed like a heaving shuddering rag doll after learning he had won the Mr. O title, thus becoming the biggest structure to implode on the Las Vegas Strip since the demolition of the El Rancho resort a few weeks earlier.
Ronnie has already in tie with Lee Haney , winning Mr.O for 8 times. He is still on the way and expect to break the world record by winning it for 9 times.
Among Coleman's competitors, it was a night of repressed rage and quiet smoldering - a gathering of frowning Paul Bunyans who looked as if their favorite ox had just died. If the Mr. O lineup were a rock group, they'd be called the Moody Blues.
Now comes another great name in addition. Thats Jay Cutler.
Mr.Olympia 3 times.
Setting down the history and making Ronnie disappointed, Jay Cutler makes it for the first time in 2006. He had been on the race since years and finally he got his fruit for which he had been trying to since so long. After upsetting Ronnie in 2006, Cutler retained the pride on to 2007 Mr.Olympia as well. On 2008 Mr.Olympia he had to face the music from Dexter Jackson , where he was beaten by him to clinch the Title. But his never say die attitude made him win it all in 2009 again to regain his Olympia Title back to become three times Mr.Olympia.
Big Moment after a long came when a big name finally added to Mr.Olympia history. Its none other than Mr.Olympia 2008 - Dexter Jackson.
Dexter has also been in the race since long. With a great muscularity strong enough calculative structure, Dexter upsets the two times Mr.Olympia on September 2008 to become the winner of his first Mr. Olympia. He was the guy deserving and finally he achieved the triumph.
Jay Cutler is Back as Mr.Olympia 2009. Bravo Big Jay.
Mr Olympia 2009 Top 6 Placings - The funniest bloopers are right here
Source :- IFBB.
Mr. Olympia Winners
| 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 1980 1979 1978 1977 1976 1975 1974 1973 1972 1971 1970 1969 1968 1967 1966 1965 | Jay Cutler Dexter Jackson Jay Cutler Jay Cutler Ronnie Coleman Ronnie Coleman Ronnie Coleman Ronnie Coleman Ronnie Coleman Ronnie Coleman Ronnie Coleman Ronnie Coleman Dorian Yates Dorian Yates Dorian Yates Dorian Yates Dorian Yates Dorian Yates Lee Haney Lee Haney Lee Haney Lee Haney Lee Haney Lee Haney Lee Haney Lee Haney Samir Bannout Chris Dickerson Franco Columbu Arnold Schwarzenegger Frank Zane Frank Zane Frank Zane Franco Columbu Arnold Schwarzenegger Arnold Schwarzenegger Arnold Schwarzenegger Arnold Schwarzenegger Arnold Schwarzenegger Arnold Schwarzenegger Sergio Oliva Sergio Oliva Sergio Oliva Larry Scott Larry Scott | Las Vegas, NV Las Vegas, NV Las Vegas, NV Las Vegas, NV Las Vegas, NV Las Vegas, NV Las Vegas, NV Las Vegas, NV Las Vegas, NV Las Vegas, NV Las Vegas, NV New York, NY Los Angeles, CA Chicago, IL Atlanta, GA Atlanta, GA Atlanta, GA Helsinki, Finland Orlando, FL Chicago, IL Rimini, Italy Los Angeles, CA Gothenburg, Sweden Columbus, OH Brussels, Belgium New York, NY Munich, Germany London, England Columbus, OH Sydney, Australia Columbus, OH Columbus, OH Columbus, OH Columbus, OH Pretoria, South Africa New York, NY New York, NY Essen, Germany Paris France New York, NY New York, NY New York, NY New York, NY New York, NY New York, NY |



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