Geoff Capes
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Birth name | Geoffrey Lewis Capes | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Born | Holbeach, Lincolnshire, England | 23 August 1949|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Died | 23 October 2024 Lincoln, England | (aged 75)|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Years active | 1970–1989 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Height | 197 cm (6 ft 5+1⁄2 in) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Weight | 170 kg (375 lb) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sport | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Country | Great Britain and England | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Geoffrey Lewis Capes JP (23 August 1949 – 23 October 2024) was a British shot putter, strongman, and Highland Games competitor. He was famous in the UK in the 1980s for his sporting prowess and appearances on television in shows such as Superstars and the World's Strongest Man.
Capes represented England and Great Britain in field athletics, specialising in the shot put, an event in which he was twice Commonwealth champion, twice European indoor champion, and competed at three Olympic Games. As of October 2024, he still holds the British record for the shot put from 1980 when he putted it 21.68 metres (71 ft 2 in).[1]
As a strongman, he won World's Strongest Man twice,[2][3] and World Muscle Power Classic twice,[3] along with numerous other titles including Europe's Strongest Man and Britain's Strongest Man.[3]
As a Highland Games competitor, he was six times world champion,[4] first winning the title in Lagos in 1981,[5] and held world records in numerous events.[3]
Following retirement from competitive sport, he continued to be involved in strength athletics as a referee, event promoter, and coach. He also ran a sportswear retail shop,[3] and became renowned as a world-class breeder of birds. Capes stood 197 cm (6 ft 5+1⁄2 in) and weighed 170 kg (375 lb) in his prime.
Early life
[edit]Capes was born on 23 August 1949 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, the seventh of nine children.[3] He was the seventh child of Eileen Capes, though the eldest of her three children by her third husband Bill Capes. Of his older siblings, the elder two were Braithwaites and the middle four Cannons.[6] He grew up in the town and went to the local secondary school, George Farmer. He became a member of Holbeach Athletic Club where he was coached by Stuart Storey.
Capes was a gifted sportsman, and represented Lincolnshire at basketball, football and cross-country. In addition he was a decent sprinter, running 23.7 s for the 200 m.[3][7] Growing up on the Lincolnshire fens he had an early fascination with the natural world and cared for injured birds and animals from when he was a young boy.[8] After school he worked as a coalman and an agricultural labourer, being able to load twenty tons of potatoes in twenty minutes. Following in the footsteps of his grandfather, uncle and older brothers, he joined Cambridgeshire Constabulary in 1970, and remained in the police for ten years; his departure from the police came when he decided to compete in the 1980 Moscow Olympics, despite the British Government's calls for a boycott, and was thereby forced to resign his position.[9]
Athletics
[edit]Capes was a shot putter and represented his country over a span of 11 years, winning two Commonwealth Games and two Indoor European Championship titles. His first major competition was the 1970 Commonwealth Games in Edinburgh, where he finished fourth. In the next two games in 1974 and 1978 he took the gold medal. In this period he also became the European Indoor Champion in both 1974 and 1976.[3] His first Olympic experience was in 1972 when he competed in Munich.[10] The 21-year-old Capes did not make it past the qualifying round, but improved on this considerably four years later. Having thrown a personal best of 21.55 metres (70 ft 8 in)[11] on 28 May 1976 at Gateshead, he went into the 1976 Montreal Olympics as one of the favourites for the gold medal. He came second in his qualifying group but sixth overall in the final, the winner being Udo Beyer of East Germany.[12] 1980 was the year Capes threw the longest distance of his career, 21.68 metres (71 ft 2 in) in Cwmbran on 18 May 1980[11] being a new Commonwealth and British record. He went into the Olympics as the athlete with the best distance that year and once again a favourite for the title. However, he eventually placed fifth, the winner being Vladimir Kiselyov whose Olympic record of 21.35 metres (70 ft 1 in)[13] was well short of what Capes had achieved prior to the Games. Capes said his performance at the 1980 Moscow Olympics had left him "numbed with disappointment".[7]
Capes is the most capped British male athlete of all time, receiving 67 International caps and earning 35 wins, not including a further 35 caps for England. He is a winner of 17 national titles, including being seven times a winner of the AAA championship and three times UK champion.[10] In 1983 he was voted Britain's best-ever field athlete.[3] Capes' 1980 British record still stands. In 2003 Carl Myerscough threw 21.92 metres (71 ft 11 in) but the distance was not ratified.[14]
Strongman
[edit]As a strongman, Capes became a household name in Britain and many parts of the world.[15] He was particularly known for his incredible hand and arm strength, easily tearing London telephone directories in half and bending rolled steel bars measuring over 1 inch in diameter, and three feet in length. Capes turned fully professional in 1980, the Olympics in Moscow being his last event as an amateur athlete. He had already begun to make a name as a strongman having won the inaugural Britain's Strongest Man in 1979. In that competition he beat Bill Anderson, the World Highland Games champion into second place. Bill went on to the 1979 World's Strongest Man, the first Briton to compete in this tournament, whilst Capes concentrated on his athletic career.
In 1980 the Olympics dominated the year and Capes did not compete in Britain's Strongest Man, but he did compete later in the Europe's Strongest Man competition and won that. This ensured his invitation to the 1980 World's Strongest Man and on his first entry he came third behind the by then more experienced Bill Kazmaier and Lars Hedlund. In 1981 he returned and improved to second place, again behind Kazmaier, and in 1982 he came fourth.
1983 World's Strongest Man was the first held outside the United States and in Christchurch, New Zealand he held off the challenge of a world class field including the young Jón Páll Sigmarsson, Canadian world powerlifting champion, Tom Magee, and the European powerlifting champion, Siem Wulfse to take his first World's Strongest Man title. Capes won the truck pull and weight over bar and came second in farmer's walk, bale hoist and sack load events. The duel between Sigmarsson and Capes heralded the beginning of a great rivalry. The following year in Mora, Sweden, Sigmarsson, eleven years Capes' junior, took the title proclaiming "The King has lost his crown!".[16] Capes retorted "I'll be back" with a third place finish.[16] He won the sled push and came second in caber toss, rock press and floor press that year.
Capes came to 1985 World's Strongest Man determined to regain his title from Sigmarsson. The competition was held in Cascais, Portugal and Capes managed to win the truck pull, medley, arm over arm pull and swingletree. Despite a horrible last place finish in the crucifix hold, Capes managed to collect enough points to secure his second World's Strongest Man title, holding off Sigmarsson and Cees de Vreugd. Capes' did not forget to celebrate after the end of the final event, the loading race saying "The King has not lost his crown!".[16] Their rivalry thrived and Sigmarsson won once again in 1986 with Capes coming second.
Aside from the World's Strongest Man, Capes also won Europe's Strongest Man three times: in London (1980), Amsterdam (1982) and Marken (1984). He regained his Britain's Strongest Man title in 1981 and again in 1983. Capes also won the World Muscle Power Classic championship in 1987, and was ascribed two World Muscle Power championships by the creator of the event, David Webster, although other sources suggest the 1987 victory was the only one. In 1987 his win in the World Muscle Power was accompanied by a win in the World Strongman Challenge and he is one of only three athletes to have won all three titles. There was no World's Strongest Man that year, but an event was held designed specifically to put the three most successful strongmen against one another.
1987 Pure Strength featured Bill Kazmaier, Jón Páll Sigmarsson and Geoff Capes[17] and was held at Huntly Castle in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. Capes entered despite having been in hospital the previous weekend with strained trapeziums. Strong performances in the first few rounds belied his condition but he eventually pulled out during the log-lift and ended the contest in third place. Capes, the oldest of the three, was close to strongman retirement at this stage and the next year, at the 1988 World Muscle Power Classic he finished second, and it proved to be his last major outing as a strongman.[17]
Highland Games
[edit]Capes competed at many Highland Games gatherings in Scotland and across the world and became a hugely popular and respected figure. He won the World Heavy Events title in Lagos in 1981, in a year when there were two world championships, the second won in Melbourne by Bill Anderson.[3][4][5] He went on to win again in 1983 in Carmunnock[5] and the next four consecutive titles, making him the most successful competitor ever in terms of titles. He set world records in many disciplines, including the 56 lb Weight over bar and brick lifting. As a Highland competitor he was dubbed Geoff Dubh Laidir, translated as Black Strong Geoff.[5] He held the record for shot put at Cowal Highland Gathering − Scotland's only international heavy athletics competition − since 1980 at 18.50 metres (60 ft 8 in).[18]
Personal records
[edit]During competitions and also according to Capes himself[19]
- Shot put – 7.3 kg (16 lb) for 21.68 metres (71 ft 2 in) (1980) (British Record)
- Stone put – 10 kg (22 lb) for 16.26 metres (53 ft 4 in) (1982 Scottish Highland Games Association) (World Record)
- Braemar Stone throw – 9 kg (20 lb) for 17.37 metres (57 ft 0 in) (1981 World Highland Games) (World Record)
- Weight throw – 12.5 kg (28 lb) over 27.74 metres (91 ft 0 in) (1983 Drumtochty Highland Games)
- Weight over bar – 25.5 kg (56 lb) over 5.23 metres (17 ft 2 in) (1981 World Highland Games) (Former World Record)
- → Capes held this record for the first time when he cleared 5.20 metres (17 ft 1 in) at 1981 World's Strongest Man
- Caber toss – 45 kg (99 lb) for 11.16 metres (36 ft 7 in) (1987 Viking Power Challenge) (Former World Record)
- Scottish hammer throw – 10 kg (22 lb) for 32.94 metres (108 ft 1 in)
- Discus throw – 2 kg (4 lb) for 58.34 metres (191 ft 5 in) (1973)
- Bar bending – 11⁄16 inch (17.5 mm) diameter 4 ft 6 in long Cast iron bar bent to U-shape in 11 seconds (around the neck position) (1982 World's Strongest Man) (World Record)
- Brick lift – 26 British bricks held between arms (1993 Colchester branch trade night) (World Record)
- Deadlift (from 18 inches) – 453.5 kg (1,000 lb) during training
- Oxcart deadlift – 475 kg (1,047 lb) (1985 World's Strongest Man)
- Squat – 380 kg (838 lb) in 80s marathon squat suit, during training
- Log press – 145 kg (320 lb) (1982 World's Strongest Man)
- Log bench press – 220 kg (485 lb) (1984 World's Strongest Man)
- Bench press – 300 kg (661 lb) equipped, during training
- Refrigerator race – 193 kg (425 lb) for 100 ft in 10.72 seconds (1980 World's Strongest Man) (World Record)
- Arm over arm deficit boat pull – 235 kg (518 lb) for 12 metres in 19.90 seconds (1985 World's Strongest Man) (World Record)
Sport after retirement
[edit]Capes went on to coach many rising stars in both athletics and strength athletics. Adrian Smith later took fifth spot at the World's Strongest Man under the combined coaching of Capes and Bill Pittuck. Capes also helped promote the Daily Star funded UK Strongest Man tournaments until the turn of the millennium.
Life outside sport
[edit]Outside his sporting career Capes was for a long time a policeman and prior to that was a member of the Air Training Corps. Prior to his athletic retirement he had been awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Medal in 1977, for services to the community.[8] He went on to run a sportswear retail shop in Holbeach, before moving to Spalding where in 1998 he became a Justice of the Peace.[7] At the height of his fame in 1985, the game Geoff Capes Strongman was released on the Amstrad CPC, the ZX Spectrum and the Commodore 64, featuring a truck pulling and tug-of-war, allowing control of each muscle group.[20] He also appeared in a memorable TV commercial for the Volkswagen Polo Mk2 in which he picked the car up and rolled it over with his bare hands. His profile also led to numerous appearances on British television, one such example being in the Tyne Tees Television programme Supergran in the episode "Supergran Grounded".[21] He appeared on Blue Peter where he lost a challenge from Welsh strongman/showman George Davies (Strang the Strong, Georgie Muscles). In 1987, Capes was a timekeeper on the charity television special The Grand Knockout Tournament.
Capes appeared on the fourth series of Shooting Stars, alongside Patsy Kensit, where he threw a bomb at Johnny Vegas and in 2007 he became the face of Cadbury's Wispa relaunch, appearing on billboards and magazine advertisements. As of spring 2010, he was in the advert for the Great British Food Fight, which appeared on Channel 4, as well as being in an advert for Churchill insurance.
Aside from sport and television appearances, Capes was famed for breeding budgerigars and had success (a former world champion[7]) on the show bench with his Recessive Pieds. In 2008 he assumed the role of president of the Budgerigar Society, along with Mick Widdowson who is also a budgie breeder and friend. He frequently appeared in the pages of Cage & Aviary Birds. He took up the hobby when a policeman, having chatted for an hour to a man he had to arrest for non-payment of a fine.[22]
Personal life and death
[edit]Capes lived in Stoke Rochford, near Grantham.[23] His daughter Emma was English Schools' shot put champion and Youth Olympics bronze medallist. His son Lewis played American football for the London Monarchs. He had four grandchildren.[7] He was appointed a Justice of the Peace on the Spalding bench in 1998. His autobiography Big Shot was published by Hutchinson in 1981.[6]
Capes died in hospital in Lincoln on 23 October 2024, at the age of 75.[22][24][25][26]
Competition record
[edit]International competitions
[edit]National championships
[edit]- British National Championships (AAA)[28]
- 1st: 1972, 1973, 1975–1979
- 2nd: 1971, 1974, 1980
- 3rd: 1970
- UK Championships[29]
- 1st in shot put: 1977–1979
- 3rd in discus: 1978
Highland Games
[edit]- Winner 1981 to 1987
Strongman contests
[edit]- 1st: 1983, 1985
- 2nd: 1981, 1986
- 3rd: 1980, 1984
- 4th: 1982
- Winner: 1987
- Winner: 1987
- 1st: 1980, 1982, 1984
- 2nd: 1983
- 1st: 1985
- 2nd: 1987, 1988
- 1st: 1987–1989
- 2nd: 1986
- 1st 1979, 1981, 1983
- 1st: 1986, 1987
- 1st: 1986
References
[edit]- ^ Wilson, Jeremy (23 October 2024). "Geoff Capes, legendary British strongman and shot putter, dies aged 75". The Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 23 October 2024.
- ^ Paley, Tony (23 October 2024). "Geoff Capes, Britain's greatest shot putter and two-time World's Strongest Man, dies aged 75". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 23 October 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j David Webster, Sons of Samson Volume 2 Profiles, page 78 (Ironmind Enterprises), ISBN 0-926888-06-4
- ^ a b c 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.
- ^ a b c d Emily Ann Donaldson, The Scottish Highland Games in America, p19, Pelican Publishing, 1986, ISBN 1-56554-560-5, ISBN 978-1-56554-560-1
- ^ a b Capes, Geoff; Wilson, Neil (April 1981). Big Shot. Hutchinson. ISBN 978-0091-4497-04.
- ^ a b c d e Geoff Capes: Back to give Britain a shot at the title, The Independent, Sunday, 24 June 2007/Archived 6 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b "Profile on official site". Archived from the original on 8 August 2010. Retrieved 16 October 2010.
- ^ Domeneghetti, Roger (4 May 2023). Everybody Wants To Rule The World: Britain, Sport & The 1980s. Yellow Jersey Press. pp. 286–287. ISBN 9781787290594.
- ^ a b Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Geoff Capes". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 7 September 2011.
- ^ a b "UK All-Time Lists: Men − Throws". www.gbrathletics.com.
- ^ "Athletics at the 1976 Montréal Summer Games". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Archived from the original on 14 August 2009.
- ^ "Search Results". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Archived from the original on 7 May 2020.
- ^ "Records". www.thepowerof10.info.
- ^ "Geoff Capes". Strongman Archives. 17 June 1988. Retrieved 15 July 2023.
- ^ a b c Webster, page 129
- ^ a b Webster, pages 170–175
- ^ "Heavy Athletics Cowal Record Holders". Cowal Gathering. Retrieved 23 October 2024.
- ^ "Interview with Geoff Capes , Former World's Strongest Man. – Strongman". Archived from the original on 20 April 2014.
- ^ "Geoff Capes Strongman for Amstrad CPC (1985) – MobyGames". MobyGames.
- ^ "Supergran Grounded", aired 24 February 1985, ITV dir. Tony Ksh
- ^ a b sport, Guardian (23 October 2024). "Geoff Capes, Britain's greatest shot putter and World's Strongest Man winner, dies aged 75". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 23 October 2024.
- ^ "Geoff Capes a True Lincolnshire Man". Lincolnshire Magazine. 17 January 2010.
- ^ "Geoff Capes, former World's Strongest Man winner and shot putter, dies". Sky News. 23 October 2024.
- ^ "Geoff Capes: World's strongest man and British shot put record holder Capes dies aged 75". BBC Sport. 23 October 2024.
- ^ Rosenwald, Michael S. (6 November 2024). "Geoff Capes, World's Strongest Man and Champion Bird Breeder, Dies at 75". The New York Times. Retrieved 6 November 2024.
- ^ Disorderly conduct
- ^ "AAA Championships (Men)". www.gbrathletics.com.
- ^ "UK Championships". www.gbrathletics.com.
External links
[edit]- The Geoff Capes Foundation
- Geoffrey Capes at Olympics.com
- Geoff Capes at World Athletics
- Geoff Capes at IMDb
- "Interview". Archived from the original on 18 October 2011. Retrieved 13 October 2017.
- BBC article in 2001
- Speaking on Radio 4's Today programme about budgerigars
- Sunday Times article 27 December 2009
- 1949 births
- 2024 deaths
- 20th-century British autobiographers
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1970 British Commonwealth Games
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1972 Summer Olympics
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1974 British Commonwealth Games
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1976 Summer Olympics
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1978 Commonwealth Games
- Athletes (track and field) at the 1980 Summer Olympics
- British male shot putters
- British police officers
- Commonwealth Games gold medallists for England
- Commonwealth Games medallists in athletics
- English autobiographers
- English male shot putters
- English justices of the peace
- English strength athletes
- European Athletics Championships medalists
- Medallists at the 1974 British Commonwealth Games
- Medallists at the 1978 Commonwealth Games
- Olympic athletes for Great Britain
- People from Holbeach
- People from Stoke Rochford
- 20th-century English sportsmen