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Fourteen-year-old powerlifter draws praise, concern

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Administrator. Graeme
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Fourteen-year-old powerlifter draws praise, concern



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Jake Schellenschlager, age 14. (Getty Images)
Meet Jake Schellenschlager. He's 14 years old. And he can deadlift more than two times his body weight.
A profile in The Washington Post spotlights Schellenschlager and the challenges inherent in his chosen sport. He's one of thousands of young powerlifters across the United States who are able to lift enormous weights far heavier than their own frame. (Powerlifters are not the same thing as bodybuilders, who focus more on appearance than on lifting for its own sake.)
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Jake Schellenschlager. (Getty Images)

Schellenschlager weighs only about 119 pounds, but can deadlift 300. He's been lifting for the past two years under a coach's supervision. The Post notes that children can begin competing in powerlifting competitions at 14, but that some children begin lifting at age 8 for fun. The question for someone so young, of course, is whether lifting at such a young age can have detrimental effects later in life. "Powerlifting and Olympic weightlifting sports are different because they usually are involving maximum lifts — the squat, bench press and the dead lift," Paul Stricker, a youth sports medicine specialist at the Scripps Health Clinic in San Diego, told the Post. "There is high risk to heavy maximal lifts or explosive lifts during their rapid growth phrase. That is our biggest caution. We just don’t recommend they do maximal lifts or explosive lifts until they have finished the majority of their growth spurt."
“He doesn’t feel he can be defeated," says his trainer, Mike Sarni. "It is that inner strength that tells him, ‘I can do this.’ Usually, you only get that in older, more mature people.”
Here's video of Jake lifting last summer:
So, your thoughts. Is 14 too young for this activity, or is it no more damaging than any of a half-dozen other sports kids could be playing?


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ueV5uHAw88A


taken from http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/the-t...werlifter-draws-praise-concern-221849550.html
 
Is it risky?
I don't really know, or care much.
If he's generally having fun being a kid, then all is good I suppose.
 
Shouldn't have gotten a squat call or a rack call.

In general, no, its no more risky than other sports. In specific, that squat isn't great.
 
I don't think it's a great idea personally.

His squat looked poor and too heavy for him IMO.

I think at that age stick to body weight training, and may be some light high rep weights.

Obviously not what he would want to hear, at the end of the day it's his body.
 
its fine i think personally.
though his squat does look incredibly shit...

with correct form its fine.
 
Just ask any adult now who played top level sport, that competed at 14, how wise this decision is.
 
Just ask any adult now who played top level sport, that competed at 14, how wise this decision is.

I used to play baseball and was told not to throw curveballs until I was grown.

I threw curveballs anyway and now it hurts to throw hard.

Dunno if it relates to powerlifting though.
 
Surely some responsibility for the squat (technique) itself needs to fall with his coach.
 
everyone to their own, but I would be devastated if my daughter was doing powerlifting at age of 14.
 
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