Mark Henry: Two-time Olympian
By GREG OLIVER -- SLAM! Wrestling
Going into the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, Mark Henry was considered one of
the favourites in weightlifting. He held three world records in power
lifting, and everyone liked the 6-foot-3, 24-year-old, 420-pounder from
tiny Silsbee, Texas.
After all, Henry had been to the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, where he
finished 10th in the superheavyweight class. He could only continue to
go up, people said.
But Henry was a power lifter, which is different than the weightlifting
events at the Olympics -- the clean and jerk (in which the barbell is
lifted from the floor to the shoulders, then overhead) and the snatch
(where the barbell is lifting from the floor overhead in one motion).
Weightlifting is considered more sophisticated, involving more agility,
timing, flexibility and technique than power lifting, which relies on
brute strength.
Henry's experiences at the Georgia World Congress Centre in Atlanta
weren't all that memorable. He finished 14th, lifting 831 pounds in
total: 386 in the snatch and 445 in his only attempt at the
clean-and-jerk. Russia's Andrey Chemerkin won gold, lifting a
world-record 573 in the clean-and-jerk and tying the world record with a
total of 1,008.
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SLAM! Sports covers The Games
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SLAM! WRESTLING'S OLYMPIAN STORIES
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Earl McCready, 1928
Mad Dog Vachon, 1948
Danny Hodge, 1952, 1956
Dale Lewis, 1956, 1960
Bob Roop, 1968
Chris Taylor, 1972
Bad News Allen, 1976
Brad Rheingans, 1976
Mark Henry, 1992, 1996
Kurt Angle, 1996
The other Olympians
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After his last lift Henry grimaced, reached for his back, and limped
down the steps. A short time later, he withdrew because of injury.
"I'm a little disappointed," he told Knight-Ridder at the time, "but
more disappointed for my team. They voted me team captain, and I felt
like I had extra to do, but it just didn't happen.
"I actually dreamed of winning a medal, but I would have settled for
doing the best I've ever done. Instead, I did the best I could do."
After The Games, he signed on with the World Wrestling Federation for
what he called at the time a "10-year, multimillion-dollar contract",
talking about how he watched
Andre the Giant and Hulk Hogan over the
years. Henry trained for pro wrestling in the WWF's Stamford gym and
with
Leo Burke out in Calgary.
He crowed at the time that his contract with the WWF had a clause that
allowed him time off to train and compete in power lifting, and in
interviews into 1997, he still professed a belief that he would compete
in the 2000 Olympic Games in Sydney.
"I've signed to wrestle for the 1998-99 then I'll go back to lifting,"
he told the Calgary Herald in October 1997. "In '92, I exceed my
expectations. In '96, I didn't. I'll be there in 2000. Injuries are the
only thing that can stop me."
Instead, Henry became a fairly solid mid-card WWFer, never quite finding
his niche until the 'Sexual Chocolate' persona allowed him to show his
tender, funny side.
Weight gain has troubled Henry as of late, and he is apparently on
're-assignment' in the Ohio Valley Wrestling promotion run by Jim
Cornette.
As his skills in the ring continue to improve, there's no doubt he'll be
back in the WWF rings. But a shot at the Olympic rings again seems
highly unlikely.
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