Powerlifting: Like a fine wine
- Share via
Steve Virgen
Art La Bare is 40 years old. And that’s a good thing.
In most sports, the Costa Mesa resident would be well past his playing
days. But in powerlifting he is in his prime.
La Bare, who is 5-foot-10, 267 pounds and can squat 878 pounds and
bench press 578, took second and won $5,000 at the World Powerlifting
Oranization’s World Championships in Orlando, Fla. Sunday.
“Powerlifting is a unique sport,” La Bare said. “It’s not neccessarily
an age thing. It takes a long time to build muscle. It takes a long time
to build up the tendons to make the lifts possible. Age seems to help you
in a certain way. I think it’s an advantage. I hope I can do this until
I’m 50.”
At the World Championships, La Bare settled for an 822-pound squat. He
actually pumped 878, but failed to officially qualify because lifters are
required to complete the lift twice.
La Bare benched 578 pounds, a personal best, and grabbed 744 in the
dead lift. He competed in the 275-pound weight class facing a field of
12, which dwindled as weight increased. The competition began at 2:30
p.m. and ended at 2:30 a.m.
“It was almost like the last guy standing wins,” La Bare said. “I
don’t think (the length of the competition) affected me as much as it did
other people. I’m used to working long hours. I’m a dry wall contractor.”
The second-place finish moved La Bare one step closer to qualifying
for the Arnold Classic, a powerlifting meet in Columbus, Ohio created by
Arnold Schwarzenegger. In November, he will face the top two from
Sunday’s World Championships. If he finishes in the top two there, he
will advance to the Arnold Classic, which has the top prize of $25,000.
Also, in June, La Bare took second in the Mountaineer Cup, a meet in
West Virginia where he won $2,000.
“There was no weight classes in that one,” La Bare said. “Whoever was
the strongest just took the money. You have guys who weighed over 300
pounds. When you go to the meets for money, usually it’s just the top
lifters that go.”
“Would I say I’m one of the best?” La Bare asked. “I’m definitely one
of the top 10 in the world in my weight class.”
Top 10 in the world wasn’t always the case. In 1997, La Bare tore his
right biceps while in his deadlift and lost his first-place lead in the
American Powerlifting Federation Nationals in Georgia.
“It was a very painful surgery,” La Bare’s wife, Jennifer said. “He
still has the scars from it. It took three doctors to hold down the
tendon so that they could reattach the muscle. But, that little youngster
was back in the gym within a week or two.”
La Bare seized the opportunity to overcome the injury. The results
came in 1999, when La Bare completed one of the more successful years of
his 12-year career. He won the World Powerlifting Federation
Championships and the Muscle Beach/Venice Push Pull Invitational. He also
won the bronze medal in the World Powerlifting Championships in Calgary.
Then in 2000, La Bare won the United State Powerlifting Federation
Powerlifting and Benchpress Championships.
He also maintained his championship status in the USPF Central
California meet. He was reigning champ from 1996 to 2000.
La Bare’s strength comes from his experience. Age is his biggest
muscle. For, with each passing day, La Bare builds more strength and
increases his passion for the sport.
“For me, to be the best is what drives me,” La Bare said. “When
there’s only one or two people better than you, you kind of get that
feeling that you’re the best. It’s just the challenge of being the best
at one particular thing. To see how far you can push it. To get at a
level that hardly anyone touches.”
La Bare, who is originally from Huntington Beach, usually works out in
his friend Manuel Sanchez’s garage in Fountain Valley. In November, La
Bare will compete in the WPO Finals in Miami.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.