Showing posts with label Ashley Kaltwasser. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ashley Kaltwasser. Show all posts

Friday, 23 February 2018

10 Years at the Arnold Classic: 2014

FLEXLESS IN COLUMBUS

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I've stated my admiration for the women of the Figure and Fitness (and even, on occasion, the Bikini) divisions on this blog before, so this in no way reflects on them, but 2014 - for the female muscle fan at least - was a low point at the Arnolds. No Bodybuilding, and no Physique (which debuted in the pro event the following year). In other words, there was not one double biceps, or lat spread, or abs & thigh pose hit by a woman on the stage that year. Not one. Just three divisions, all involving the wearing of heels at some point. It may be "Bodybuilding" Jim Manion, but not as we know it.

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Ashley Kaltwasser (a former Arnold Amateur Bikini champ), followed up her 2013 Olympia win to take her first (of three consecutive) Bikini International titles. And in Fitness, Oksana Grishina began her own, even more impressive winning streak. Starting with this event in 2014 until her retirement at the Olympia last year, Oksana competed thirteen times and on every occasion took home the winner's cheque.

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In Figure though, it was more the end of an era. Candice Keene won for the third year in a row and for the last time. Unlike her Bikini and Fitness peers in 2014, she never dominated her division - she was never Ms Figure Olympia, for example. The year after this at the Arnolds, (this) Candice finished 3rd, and for the first time all three dominant forces in Figure today - (the other) Candice (Lewis-Carter), Latorya Watts and Cydney Gillon - would feature in the same line up for the first time.

MUSCLE!

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If it was beef you wanted, the only place to look at the 2014 Arnolds was among the Physique amateurs, where 48 competitors demonstrated just how healthy and varied this new division could be. They included former and future Bodybuilder Silvia Matta, a future NABBA Worlds Physique (ie. Bodybuilding) champ, Karolina Holubcova, who would return to IFBB Physique again later, and a number of younger women who had never competed in a different division, among them Katie Lee.

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Now this is "Bodybuilding"! There was even a disqualification! Naughty Suzy Kellner got kicked out. I don't know why, but it'd fit the theory if it was the old urine sample.

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If you didn't know any better - like if, for the last few years, you'd been asleep, or frozen and brought back to life or something - you could have been forgiven for thinking, as you gazed at the impressively muscular women on stage, that you'd wandered in while the Light and/or Middleweight FBBs were up. I don't think Physique "killed" Female Bodybuilding at all - but I do think it is fair to say these women saved events like the Arnold Classic from disappearing from the female muscle fan radar altogether.

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And - as with all good "Bodybuilding" shows - there was a judging controversy! The Short class and Overall winner Bruna Miyagui from Brazil was one of the least muscular women on the stage (although not without her charms), so the ever classy (and former Bodybuilder) Joan Liew had to settle for just the Tall class title.

BRITISH INTEREST?

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Lots! Kizzy Vaines was again our only pro and she made the top 10 again in the Fitness division, and for the first time there was a serious British amateur contingent.

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Left to right: Nikki Jenkins Robinsons was our most successful Bikini competitor - 6th, up to 160cm class. Nina Ross, who you may remember competed in Figure the previous year, was 8th, up to 166cm class; and Anita Bekus (up to 163cm) was 11th.

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In Figure, Yo Lazarov finished outside the placings in her up to 160cm class; Reem Al-Bareeq and Karolina Borkova (both up to 163cm) placed 13th and 8th respectively; and the impressive Eszter Petti was 4th in the up to 166cm class.

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Katalin Jasztrab went one better and finished 3rd in the over 169cm class - although technically she was still competing for Hungary then, Katalin's very much one of us now and - look at her! - we'll claim her whatever the paperwork says. Result of the day for the UK though came from the soon-to-be Figure pro Maria Scotland, who was both runner-up in her (Open) up to 166cm class and then our first ever Arnold Amateur champion when she won the up to 168cm Masters class (and was 3rd Overall).

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And finally, the future of British Physique looked bright with three women flying the flag in that division. Rosanna Harte was beaten only by the Overall winner in the Short class - and that was by no means a unanimous judging decision, and in the same class, "Marea Warde", better known to us now as Ria Ward, placed 15th.

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Hayley Brylewski was our sole competitor in the Tall class, and, as so often seems to be the case with Hayley in UKBFF contests at home and IFBB contests abroad, you are left wondering how such a stunning package was judged to be worthy of 13th place.

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Saturday, 4 October 2014

Olympia 2014 Review: The Winners

It wasn't just Iris Kyle who repeated her 2013 victory. I kind of wish I'd done a post with all five of the Olympia winners last year because if I had, I could have largely done a simple cut and paste job this time around! But although three of the winners across the five divisions were the same as last year, two women, neither of them American, were winning Olympia titles for the first time. Here they all are...


BIKINI: ASHLEY KALTWASSWER (USA)

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left to right: Yeshaira Robles (4th), India Paulino (6th), Janey Layug (2nd), Ashley Kaltwasser, Stacey Alexander (3rd), Amanda Latona (5th).

A former school and college athlete in her native Ohio, Ashley was inspired to compete by her former high school track coach, who had been a figure competitor. She is trained by Summer Montabone, who was herself a former fitness competitor.

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She's two for two at the Olympia, making the 25-year-old Ashley the first woman to take the Bikini Olympia title twice. This was her fifth competition of the year, and her fourth win - she finished 2nd in New York (to Yeshaira Robles).

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Ashley says: It totally makes my day when someone lets me know that I inspire them. It makes all of the hard work so worth while! I enjoy being an ambassador for the sport. 2x Bikini Olympia Champion... I like the sound of that!


FIGURE: NICOLE WILKINS (USA)

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left to right: Gennifer Strobo (6th), Ann Titone (4th), Candice Keene (2nd), Nicole Wilkins, Candice Lewis (3rd), Latorya Watts (5th).

An inspiration to FMS' favourite "Normal Person", Emily Chorley, it's our pleasure to feature Nicole here, the champ in a division that, quite honestly, I don't usually pay that much attention to. Given my surprise at the amount of muscle Nicole and many of her fellow competitors displayed on stage in Vegas, that may be about to change!

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This was Nicole's fourth Figure Olympia win, which is a record, but certainly not her first record by any means. Ever since her early years of competition, breaking records has been her business. She was the first woman ever to win titles in two divisions at the same pro qualifying event - Figure and Fitness champ at the 2007 Team Universe. She was the youngest ever winner of the Figure Olympia, aged 25 in 2009, and the first Figure competitor to win FIVE pro events in the same year (2011). She retained her Olympia titles in 2011 and 2013 (the first woman to retain the title twice, of course!), and now, aged 30, this former gymnast from Michigan is the first to win four.

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Nicole says: To be successful you have to be willing to do whatever it takes. You have to put your heart and soul into it and be willing to make sacrifices. You have to be dedicated and push yourself past your comfort level. Only until then, until you want it more than just "kinda", will you be amazed at what you can accomplish.


FITNESS: OKSANA GRISHINA (Russia)

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left to right: Fiona Harris (6th), Bethany Cisternino (4th), Regiane Da Silva (2nd), Oksana Grishina, Tanji Johnson (3rd), Myriam Capes (5th).

I've said it before and I'll say it again, what I know about the Fitness division I know because of Oksana Grishina. And now that serial Fitness Olympia winner Adela Garcia has retired, Oksana could be set to dominate for many years to come.

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As with the Figure division, this year's Olympia definitely gave me a new level of appreciation for the Fitness competitors. For some unknown reason it had never occurred to me before just how difficult it must be for them to perform their amazing routines while their bodies are so depleted. And no other competitor, it seems to me, can ever match Oksana's routines. This one was no exception, with Bodybuilding.com writer Cassie Smith suggesting that it was good enough to take her to victory after she'd been judged only 4th or 5th in the first, "physique", round.

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I reckon you'll like Oksana backstage before her routine on Flex Online.

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Oksana says: I still feel compelled to try to improve as an athlete... to do better, to be better. Competition is in my blood and I am a perfectionist. I love to compete against the best athletes in the world and I hope, through my performances and my hard work, to leave a lasting impression on the professional fitness world and be an inspiration for future fitness competitors.


PHYSIQUE: JULIANA MALACARNE (Brazil)

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left to right: Karina Nascimento (4th), Dana Linn Bailey (2nd), Juliana Malacarne, Tycie Coppett (3rd), Sabrina Taylor (5th).

Dana Linn Bailey and Juliana Malacarne standing side-by-side in stark comparison was the moment for which everyone had been waiting. It would be worth the price of admission, a genuine competitive race for a coveted title, is how Steve Wennerstrom described the aptly-named Women's Physique Showdown, and even a hardened old female bodybuilding fan like me has to admit that the best competition at the 2014 Olympia was provided by these two amazing women.

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And even the most ardent Dana Linn Bailey fan had to admit that La Malacarne had the beating of her this time. In a sport where so often the fans feel the judges got it wrong, no one has argued that Juliana wasn't worth her $15,000 first place.

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She spent her early 30s as a figure competitor with quote too much muscle unquote, rarely in the top 10, and often outside the top 15. How times have changed! As soon as the Physique division was created she started winning pro titles, and now, aged 40, she has become, I think I'm right in saying, the first ever Brazilian Olympia winner.

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Watch the denouement of Dana Linn and Juliana's battle here.

And, by the way, can anyone tell me why, when you have a top 6 in every other division, you only get a top 5 called out for the final posedown in Physique?


BODYBUILDING: IRIS KYLE (USA)

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left to right: Anne Freitas (6th), Alana Shipp (4th), Alina Popa (2nd), Iris Kyle, Debi Laszewski (3rd), Yaxeni Oriquen (5th).

Should Kyle decide to compete for another dozen years, Steve Wennerstrom wrote, after Iris won her first Ms O in 2004, the mind boggles at what she may accomplish. 

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Well, it turned out not to be a dozen years, but what Iris has accomplished did turn out to be mind-boggling. On top of her seven Ms International titles, this was her ninth Ms Olympia win in a row, and her tenth in total. And with the medal around her neck, before the ink had fully dried on the judges scorecards, Iris Kyle announced her retirement from competition on the stage she has dominated for over a decade.

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And sadly, this final act of a great champion (perhaps the greatest ever champion in not just female bodybuilding, but the whole of bodybuilding) may well be, if the reaction to the news among many so-called "fans" of the sport is anything to go by, the most popular thing she has ever done.

She deserves better. MUCH better. So we'll say no more about it right now, but later in the week FMS will be giving some (long overdue) BIG BIG love to Iris Kyle.

For now, we'll just say congratulations to Iris and to all the Olympia winners!