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Highlander Tom Stoltman loses his World's Strongest Man title


By Will Clark

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Tom Stoltman's reign as World Strongest Man is over after he finished second in the final in the United States.

Tom Stoltman finished second.
Tom Stoltman finished second.

The Invergordon athlete, who was looking to win his third title, after winning in 2021 and 2022, had to settle for runners-up position in South Carolina in the United States.

Mitchell Hooper, from Canada, is the new World Strongest Man, as he claimed the accolade for the first time in his career.

Stoltman trailed Hooper by one point after day one of the competition on Saturday.

But he suffered a bad start on Sunday morning when he finished in joint third place in the max dumbell, earning only 6.5 points with only three repetitions.

Hooper managed four repetitions to tie with Evan Singleton and earn 9.5 points to give him a healthy advantage over Stoltman.

Hooper extended his lead when he won the bus pull, finishing in a time of 30.24 seconds while Stoltman finished in joint second position with Evan Singleton of the United States in 32.27 seconds.

Going into the final round of the Atlas Stones, Stoltman was 5.5 points behind. Despite winning the Atlas Stones, lifting all five in 33.26 to claim 10 points, Hooper finished second, also lifting all five in 36.96 to secure the title.

Luke Stoltman finished in eighth place in the 10-man final with 21.5 points.

World Strongest Man Final results

Mitchell Hooper (Canada) 53.5pts

Tom Stoltman (Scotland) 49pts

Oleksii Novikov (Ukraine) 43pts

Trey Mitchell (United States) 41.5pts

Evan Singleton (United States) 39.5pts

Pavlo Kordiyaka (Ukraine) 31.5pts

Brian Shaw (United States) 27.5pts

Luke Stoltman (Scotland) 21.5pts

Matthew Ragg (New Zealand) 18.5pts

Jaco Schoonwinkel (South Africa) 5.5pts (withdrew from competition after three rounds.)


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