• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Breaking Muscle

Breaking Muscle

Breaking Muscle

  • Fitness
  • Workouts
    • Best Shoulder Workouts
    • Best Chest Workouts
    • Best Leg Workouts
    • Best Leg Exercises
    • Best Biceps Exercises
    • Best Kettlebell Exercises
    • Best Back Workouts
    • Best HIIT Workouts
    • Best Triceps Exercises
    • Best Arm Workouts
  • Reviews
    • Supplements
      • Best Pre-Workout
      • Best BCAAs
      • Best Testosterone Boosters
      • Best Bodybuilding Supplements
      • Best Creatine
      • Best Supplements for Weight Loss
      • Best Multivitamins
      • Best Collagen Supplement
      • Best Probiotic
      • Best Non-Stim Pre-Workout
      • Best Greens Powder
      • Best Magnesium Supplements
    • Protein
      • Best Protein Powder
      • Best Whey Protein
      • Best Protein Powders for Muscle Gain
      • Best Tasting Protein Powder
      • Best Vegan Protein
      • Best Mass Gainer
      • Best Protein Shakes
      • Best Organic Protein Powder
      • Best Pea Protein Powder
      • Best Protein Bars
    • Strength Equipment
      • Best Home Gym Equipment
      • Best Squat Racks
      • Best Barbells
      • Best Weightlifting Belts
      • Best Weight Benches
      • Best Functional Trainers
      • Best Dumbbells
      • Best Adjustable Dumbbells
      • Best Kettlebells
      • Best Resistance Bands
      • Best Trap Bars
    • Cardio Equipment
      • Best Cardio Machines
      • Best Rowing Machines
      • Best Treadmills
      • Best Weighted Vests
      • Concept2 RowErg Review
      • Hydrow Wave Review
      • Best Jump Ropes
  • News
  • Exercise Guides
    • Legs
      • Back Squat
      • Bulgarian Split Squat
      • Goblet Squat
      • Zercher Squat
      • Standing Calf Raise
      • Hack Squat
    • Chest
      • Bench Press
      • Dumbbell Bench Press
      • Close-Grip Bench Press
      • Incline Bench Press
    • Shoulders
      • Overhead Dumbbell Press
      • Lateral Raise
    • Arms
      • Chin-Up
      • Weighted Pull-Up
      • Triceps Pushdown
    • Back
      • Deadlift
      • Trap Bar Deadlift
      • Lat Pulldown
      • Inverted Row
      • Bent-Over Barbell Row
      • Single-Arm Dumbbell Row
      • Pendlay Row
Fitness

The Value of Competition: What Weightlifters Know That the Hippies Didn’t

At times during my active weightlifting career I was asked why I competed. What could I possibly get out of it? I got something people who are afraid to compete will never ever have in their lives.

Dresdin Archibald

Written by Dresdin Archibald Last updated on Nov 22, 2021

At various times during my active weightlifting career I was asked why I competed. What could I possibly get out of it? Months of hard work culminated by just six lifts in a competition, and no way to argue with the results on the scoreboard. The posers of the question were usually non-athletes. While these people may have enjoyed watching and avidly cheering those competing in professional sports, they did not imagine their own lives being enriched by such heady action. Why would this be so?

This was back in the 1960s and 1970s, when sports took a back seat to other things in the fast-changing culture of the times. It was the era of anti-Vietnam protest, sexual revolution, drugs, and psychedelic rock. These were things that the majority of the youth culture thought was more important, or at least more fun. The discipline of sport training was considered square and old fashioned, if not “fascist” or authoritarian in nature.

Majority thought notwithstanding, I always thought that shunning competition was mainly an excuse to avoid coming to terms with your own limitations. By competing you might have to face the fact that you are not as good as you thought you were, and that can be scary. This all was essentially a risk-avoidance gambit on these doubters’ parts. Competition was a dirty word with many then (as it often is today as well), associated with the wrong type of politics. My only response was, “How convenient -anice way to hide your chickening out.” In contrast, these questioners would apparently risk their health with drugs, but they would not risk their egos.

As mentioned, this anti-competition stance was common in the campus world then. But, strange as it may seem, I have also seen this in the weight sports where the denizens there could be expected to show more moxie. In my gym in the 1970s, we had a fellow who could bench 375lbs – a lot for us then. He was soft but had plenty of pec muscle underneath. He never did a squat that I know of, maybe no deadlifts either. There was a contest coming up, and he would have probably set a bench record, but he himself chose not to enter. He chose to pass up an easy record so as not to lose to someone with more balanced lifting. Upon closer examination, he appeared to have used his bench press specialization as a lazy sort of bodybuilding program, but without the need to watch his diet. He liked being big but had no regard for definition or leg training.

There was also a bodybuilder in our gym who could have easily won the associated physique competition at the lifting contest, even though he had never entered one in his life. He did send in his entry, as I recall, but mysteriously didn’t show up on contest day. He had some lame excuse, but the real reason was that he wasn’t sure he would win. He bailed on the chance to risk his reputation, which he imagined would be compromised with a defeat. There were two things he didn’t realize that were way more significant though. One was that he had also never won anything either. Two was that you lose more by not trying at all than by trying and losing.

As hockey great Wayne Gretzky has stated, “You don’t make every shot you take but you will miss 100% of the shots you don’t take.” And that’s just a new iteration of the old saw “nothing ventured, nothing gained.”

weightlifting, competition, value of competition, hippies, hippies and liftingTraining for lifting without entering competition seemed as silly to me as training for football or any other team sport and then not bothering to go to any team try-outs. In that I was no different from most other Olympic lifters. Only in competition can an Olympic lifter satisfy that urge to metaphorically step onto the Coliseum floor and do battle. Outside the elite levels of weightlifting, physiques are not that impressive that you can get an ego boost just by showing others the physical fruits of your labors. In bodybuilding and powerlifting it is possible to do this, but not usually in weightlifting. You have to step on that platform to impress anyone, even yourself.

Now, what about the risks? What if you train hard, enter, and lose? Well, it’s not a what if. It is a when, at least in your novice days and often beyond. There are a lot of good lifters out there, and most started before you did. You have to work your apprenticeship. It is not even like it is in professional boxing. There you work an apprenticeship as well, but your manager and trainer will usually line you up with opponents you can expect to beat. In weightlifting, coaches have no control over who else may enter a meet, so you have to expect that you may get blown away sometimes. In other competitions you may win easily if no one comes. You will not win every meet you enter, modern self-esteem instilling teaching methods to the contrary. This is true regardless of the sport. Hell, it’s true of life itself.

However, in the event that your opponent has posted a qualifying total a hundred kilos above yours it is not a time to roll up and die or even to quickly withdraw from the meet. No, barring a bomb-out or him suddenly having a heart attack and dying, you are not going to win that one. What you do then is to forget about that individual as an opponent, that day at least.

You then concentrate on the one opponent who will be more fearsome than anyone. You guessed it, that competitor is you. You do have a best competition total or your best gym lifts. The person who lifted those numbers is who you will be competing against this day. You and him (her) are two different people, because competition lifting is way different from gym lifting. In fact, you should see the lifter who did your gym PRs as your opponent, one who is not the same person as you – a different person. You are the lifter on the competition platform. And you must defeat that other lifter.

weightlifting, competition, value of competition, hippies, hippies and liftingWeightlifting always comes down to this. You only have one opponent, ever – and that is you and the fears you want to defeat. But you cannot really defeat this opponent lifting in your gym. You can only do it on the competition platform. You win on this day by setting a new personal record.

After the meet you go back to the gym to train for the next meet. You are now the lifter in the gym again. You must now change places and out-lift the one you were in the last meet. Keep doing this, keep out-lifting that other lifter and you will be that frustrating lifter who posts that qualifying total far above all others. Step by step, that is how a career is built. But you need to compete to make it all work.

Oh, and just in case you are wondering, what happened to all of those competition knockers of the 1960s? Well, they are all in their sixties now, wondering how they can get in better shape before the grim reaper claims them. All looking for something at least a little bit competitive to make it interesting.

Photos courtesy of Shutterstock.

Dresdin Archibald

About Dresdin Archibald

Dresdin Archibald is a 63-year-old accountant from Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. He started weight training in 1963 at age 14, moving over to the Olympic-lifts in 1966, and continues training to this day.

As an athlete, Dresdin competed in his prime at 90 kg and did best lifts of 115 press, 102.5 snatch and 142.5 C&J (all kilos). He competed in three Canadian National Championships and two Canada Games, and also completed a month-long training camp at the famed Athleten Club Mutterstadt in Germany in 1974. Also on that trip was Rob Macklem, who took his first lifting photos there. Dresdin did take a turn at the Masters, lifting in the 1992 Worlds plus a couple of Pan-Ams. In his early days, he also did a bit of powerlifting, marking his 46th birthday with a 300 kg squat.

Dresdin has been an International referee since 1970 and was promoted to No. 1 level in 1980. He is still very active, producing a Referee’s Manual every Olympiad, which gives a fuller explanation of the IWF Technical Rules. He has officiated at Senior and University Worlds, Pan Am Games and Championships, as well as the Commonwealth Games. He has also help organize several National and International level competitions and served as a team leader at the LA Olympics and several Junior and Senior World Championships. Dresdin also served on the Canadian Olympic Committee.

Dresdin has met many luminaries over his years of involvement in Olympic lifting, including Bob Hise II and III, Bill Starr, Oscar State, Tamas Ajan, Lyn Jones, Wally Holland, Clarence Johnson, Philippe St. Cyr, the Coffa Brothers, Maurice Allan, Jim Schmitz, Dieter Stamm, John Thrush and many others. Without those contacts, he would not be in the position to share any of his knowledge today.

View All Articles

Related Posts

Fergus Crawley 5K Run Tips Photo
Fergus Crawley Shares 5 Tips For Running a Better 5K
Actor Chris Hemsworth in gym performing dumbbell row
Chris Hemsworth Diagrams a Killer Upper Body Workout Fit For an Action Star
Hugh Jackman Deadpool 3 Workouts Spring:Winter 2023
Hugh Jackman Returns to Wolverine Condition in Workouts for “Deadpool 3”
Method Man Incline Dumbbell Presses December 2022
Check Out Rapper Method Man Cruising Through 120-Pound Incline Dumbbell Presses for 10 Reps

Primary Sidebar

Latest Articles

New Year’s Fitness Sales (2025)

XWERKS Motion BCAA Review (2025): A Registered Dietitian’s Honest Thoughts

Assault Fitness AssaultBike Pro X Review (2025): Assault’s Best Bike Yet?

13 Best Exercise Bikes for Home Gyms (2025)

Transparent Labs BCAA Glutamine Review (2025): The Key to Post-Workout Recovery?

Latest Reviews

Element 26 Hybrid Leather Weightlifting Belt

Element 26 Hybrid Leather Weightlifting Belt Review (2025)

Omre NMN + Resveratrol, Lifeforce Peak NMN, and partiQlar NMN on a red background

Best NMN Supplement: Fountain of Youth in a Bottle? (2025)

The Titan Series Adjustable Bench on a red background

Titan Series Adjustable Bench Review (2025)

A photo of the NordicTrack Select-a-Weight Dumbbells on a red background

NordicTrack Adjustable Dumbbell Review (2025): Are These Value Dumbbells Worth It?

woman lifting barbell

Be the smartest person in your gym

The Breaking Muscle newsletter is everything you need to know about strength in a 3 minute read.

I WANT IN!

Breaking Muscle is the fitness world’s preeminent destination for timely, high-quality information on exercise, fitness, health, and nutrition. Our audience encompasses the entire spectrum of the fitness community: consumers, aficionados, fitness professionals, and business owners. We seek to inform, educate and advocate for this community.

  • Reviews
  • Healthy Eating
  • Workouts
  • Fitness
  • News

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • RSS Feed

© 2025 · Breaking Muscle · Terms of Use · Privacy Policy · Affiliate Disclaimer · Accessibility · About