World Highland Games Championships

The World Highland Games Championships is a well-recognised event in both strength athletics and Highland Games. The championships were organised by David Webster, OBE of Scotland, who still conducts them. A roll of past competitors includes many of the World's greatest strength athletes with Olympic finalists, World Record Holders, Commonwealth Games medal winners, Guinness Book of Record entrants, physique champions, continental & national titleholders, World's Strongest Men and International legends in various sports.[1] The World Highland Games Championships consist of traditional events and are in this sense differentiated from many of the other international strength athletic competitions, including the Highlander World Championships.

World Highland Games Championships
2018
Tournament information
LocationVaries (last held in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada)
Established1980
FormatMulti-event competition
Current champion
United States John Van Beuren

History

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The World Highland Games Championships were first held in 1980 and were created as an attempt to identify who was truly the greatest Highland Games competitor. Many of the Highland Games competitions around the world have traditionally not been invitational, in the sense that novices can step up to compete, or at the more established events, the competitors were very much more selected from the nation in which the competition was held. The world's introduced a formalization of the requirements for entry and a truly international flavor.

Over the years competitors have been drawn from the disciplines of field athletics, including the shot put, discus and hammer throw, as well as strength athletes and dedicated Highland Games specialists. In the first three decades of the competition there have been thirteen champions, with four men each having won the title five times, Geoff Capes, Jim McGoldrick, Ryan Vierra and Matt Sandford, and one of those, Geoff Capes, having also won the 1981 World Highland Games Championships held in Lagos, which would make him six times world champion, although this is not listed on the official website.[2]

List of champions

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List information taken from this source.[3]

Year Champion Location
1980   Grant Anderson   Los Angeles, California, United States
1981   Geoff Capes   Lagos, Nigeria[2]
1981   Bill Anderson   Melbourne, Australia
1982   Grant Anderson   Prestonpans, Scotland
1983   Geoff Capes   Carmunnock, Scotland[2]
1984   Geoff Capes   Carmunnock, Scotland
1985   Geoff Capes   Carmunnock, Scotland
1986   Geoff Capes   Carmunnock, Scotland
1987   Geoff Capes   Clarkston, Scotland
1988   Jim McGoldrick   Aviemore, Scotland
1989   Jim McGoldrick   Aviemore, Scotland
1990   Jim McGoldrick   Glasgow, Scotland
1991   Jim McGoldrick   Callander, Scotland
1992   Jo Quigley   Callander, Scotland
1993   Jim McGoldrick   Callander, Scotland
1994   George Patience   Callander, Scotland
1995   Alistair Gunn   Kilmarnock, Scotland
1996   Ryan Vierra   Waipu, New Zealand
1997   Ryan Vierra   Fredericksburg, Virginia
1998   Ryan Vierra   Oulu, Finland
1999   Matt Sandford   Pleasanton, California
2000   Matt Sandford   Waipu, New Zealand
2001   Matt Sandford   Pleasanton, California
2002   Matt Sandford   Pleasanton, California
2003   Matt Sandford   Antigonish, Nova Scotia
2004   Bruce Aitken   Lincoln, New Hampshire, United States
2005   Ryan Vierra   Fergus, Canada
2006   Ryan Vierra   Pleasanton, California
2007   Gregor Edmunds   Inverness, Scotland
2008   Sean Betz   Bridgeport, West Virginia
2009   Aaron Neighbour[4]   Edinburgh, Scotland "Gathering of the Clans"
2010   Larry Brock   Victoria, Canada "30th Anniversary"
2011   Dan McKim   Lincoln, New Hampshire, United States
2012   Matt Vincent   Fergus, Canada
2013   Dan McKim   Lincoln, New Hampshire, United States
2014   Matt Vincent   Dunfermline, Scotland[5]
2015   Dan McKim   Bressuire, France[6]
2016   Scott Rider   Halkirk, Scotland[7]
2017   Dan McKim   Hank, Netherlands
2018   Chuck Kasson   Victoria, Canada
2019   Spencer Tyler   Lincoln, New Hampshire, United States[8]
2022   John van Beuren   Pleasanton, California, California, United States
2023   John van Beuren   Fergus, Canada

Championships by country

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Country Gold
  United States 21
  Australia 7
  England 7
  Scotland 7

Repeat champions

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Champion Times
  Geoff Capes 6[2]
  Jim McGoldrick 5
  Ryan Vierra 5
  Matt Sandford 5
  Dan McKim 4
  Grant Anderson 2
  Matt Vincent 2
  John van Beuren 2

References

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  1. ^ Roll of Honour
  2. ^ a b c d Although the IHGF state on their official website that Geoff Capes won the World Heavy Championship in 1983 in Lagos in their IHGF Champions page (here) the 1983 championship finals were held in Carmunnock, as stated in the Development section of IHGF's same website (here). The location of the 1983 championships being Carmunnock is corroborated by Emily Ann Donaldson in her book The Scottish Highland Games in America (Emily Ann Donaldson, The Scottish Highland Games in America, p19, Pelican Publishing, 1986, ISBN 1-56554-560-5, ISBN 978-1-56554-560-1). In Donaldson's book, it is mentioned that a World Championship was held in Lagos in 1981 and Capes won this. The book states that the World Heavy Events Championships was also held in 1981 in Melbourne. From this evidence, it would seem that there were two World Championships held in 1981, both sponsored by the IHF. Further corroborating the existence of the 1981 Lagos World Championships is the profile of Geoff Capes written by the founder of the IHF, David Webster, who states that Capes won his first world title in 1981 in Lagos. (David Webster, Sons of Samson Volume 2 Profiles, page 78 (Ironmind Enterprises), ISBN 0-926888-06-4). Further still, on his official website, Capes states that he was six times world champion.
  3. ^ "Table of final results (1978 - present)". Archived from the original on 2010-01-03.
  4. ^ The Gathering 2009 Official website
  5. ^ The 2014 World Highland Games Heavy Events Championships
  6. ^ "The IHGF Worlds in Bressuire: And the winner is...Dan McKIM - HIGHLAND GAMES BRESSUIRE, le blog français-anglais d'Alain Cadu". 15 June 2015.
  7. ^ "Dan McKim Wins IHGF World Highland Games Championships".
  8. ^ "Spencer Tyler Wins Webster Worlds".