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DON GARFIELD YOUNGBLOOD
Nickname: The Beast
Born: April 7, 1954
Birthplace: Bakersfield,
California, USA
Location: Alma,
Arkansas, USA
Height: 5'9"
Competition Weight: 245 lbs
Off Season Weight: 295 lbs
Official Website: donypoungblood.com
COMPETITIVE RECORD
1994 ARK State Masters
Champion
1995 ARK State Overall
Champion
1995 NPC Masters National
Champion
2001 Masters Mr. Olympia
(2nd place)
2002 Masters Mr. Olympia
Champion
2002 Mr. Olympia (25th place)
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MASTERS Mr. OLYMPIA 2002 -
Held
in Lynchburg, Virginia with the 2002 Jan Tana Classic
August 16, 2002 (Prejudging)
August 17, 2002 (Evening Show)
Jan
Tana sponsored the Masters Mr. Olympia, a professional
competition for IFBB athletes, for the fourth time in 2002.
The entire slate of events -- including two pro women's shows
(fitness and bodybuilding) and a NPC national qualifier -- was
held at E. C. Glass High School in Lynchburg. While not
as posh as the Roanoke Civic Center was in 2000, the Glass
auditorium was spacious and comfortable. Jan Tana wanted
to bring world-class bodybuilding to the regional level by
holding it in central Virginia. At the evening show on
Saturday night, she noted competitors had come from 27
countries: "Pretty incredible for Lynchburg,
Virginia," she said. She dedicated the show to all
competitors in the 15 years she has held pro shows. The
competition theme this year was "Go Hollywood," and
part of the program felt like Academy Awards night, with
paparazzi and an Arnold lookalike in onstage skits. It
was fun. This
year's pro masters show had a bumper crop of competitors, 11
more than last year's did. A number were in great shape. As a result, several men who placed higher the last few years
got bumped down to a lower ranking. The top men in this
competition enhance their careers with a strong showing, so
most competitors arrive to do some damage. Twelve flew
in from outside North America, but only one of them placed in
the top six. Twenty-seven appeared in the prejudging (Juan
Márquez dropped out due to injury before the evening show, so
26 were in the finals).
PREJUDGING
On Friday evening, IFBB judging began on time at 7:00 p.m.
Panel judges included IFBB Vice-President Wayne Demilia, lead
judge Jim Rockell, John Kemper (NPC Masters Nationals winner
in '87), and Rich Gaspari. The masters men sat in the
audience for the pro women's prejudging, which went briskly. Supportive men in the audience shouted directions to the women
in the lineups onstage (occasionally shouting at length in a
foreign language, trying to drown out others in the audience).
Callouts revealed the judges' preferences, and a somewhat
tense atmosphere prevailed. The IFBB pro women's
prejudging wound up at 8:27 p.m.
The masters men came out at that point, climbing onto risers
and spreading across the stage. The lead judge
apologized for not getting the foreign names right, and didn't
even try to pronounce them correctly. Just after the
last group walked on, Chris Duffy ran out in a rush, obviously
having arrived late, and was told to remove his glasses and
watch. Quarter-turn symmetry callouts began at that
point, in 22 rounds as follows:
1) Hawk, Taylor, Duffy
2) Hawk, Taylor, Paulsen
3) Youngblood, Taylor, Paulsen
4) Paulsen, Youngblood, Taylor
5) Hawk, Youngblood, Taylor
6) Duffy, Baccianini, Hnatyschak
7) T'Hooft, Graneheim, Simmons
8) Hawk, Hnatyschak, Graneheim
9) Duffy, Paulsen, Youngblood
10) Palumbo, Hnatyschak, Graneheim
11) Baccianini, Graneheim, Palumbo
12) Paulsen, Taylor, Youngblood
13) Kemp, Apperson, T'Hooft
14) Simmons, Kemp, T'Hooft
15) Krivanek, Delczeg, Giurgi
16) Simmons, Giurgi, Krivanek
17) Davis, Pedone, Márquez
18) Visockis, Samimy, Bullman
19) Conrad, T'Hooft, Palumbo
20) Brown, Frydrych, Barreto-Leoesma
21) Cironte, Brown, Barreto-Leoesma
22) Samimy, Graneheim, Bullman
As
the callouts proceeded, there was kibbitzing among some
competitors on the risers. An IFBB official toweled off
those who were sweating excessively. A few high-fived
others for getting called out, and others looked unhappy not
to be called out till the later rounds (such as Giurgi, who
wasn't called out till the 15th).
The earlier you're
called out, the more serious the judges are about you.
The men in the callouts are often repositioned, as the judges
ask competitors to shift from the side to the middle for
further comparisons. Round one ended at 9:00 p.m
The
compulsory round followed, with three each onstage in random
order. A set series of standard poses, from the front,
side, and back, make up the second round. The lead judge
thanked the competitors by first name as they filed offstage.
The compulsories only took 15 minutes.
For
the third round, all competitors came back to the onstage
risers again. This round was the second callouts, and
indicated the judges' developing view of the men relative to
one another. Here are the 18 rounds of second callouts:
1)
Taylor, Youngblood, Paulsen
2) Paulsen, Duffy, Hawk
3) Hawk, T'Hooft, Hnatyschak
4) Baccianini, Palumbo, Graneheim
5) Conrad, T'Hooft, Simmons
6) Hawk, Hnatyschak, Kemp
7) Palumbo, T'Hooft, Kemp
8) Krivanek, Delczeg, Giurgi
9) Apperson, Giurgi, Krivanek
10) Simmons, Kemp, Krivanek
11) Frydrych, Apperson, Conrad
12) Davis, Pedone, Bullman
13) Brown, Barreto-Leoesma, Samimy
14) Visockis, Cironte, Giurgi
15) Márquez, Bullman, Davis
16) Youngblood, Paulsen
17) Taylor, Youngblood
18) Taylor, Paulsen
EVENING SHOW
The
evening show was scheduled for 7:00 p.m. Saturday night, and
began just 15 minutes late. Bodybuilder comedian Rob
Wilkins did his usual polished job of MC'ing the show. He said just enough to put a spin on things, waiting for
delays or sound-system breakdowns to hit the audience with his
best material. He puts every other contest announcer I've
heard to shame.
Among
the female bodybuilders, I have to mention Betty Pariso,
who parodied the stage antics of pro men like Mike Matarazzo
and King Kamali; her routine was a scream, bringing down the
house. The
masters men's show began at 10 p.m. ach competitor gave
an individual posing routine meant to display his condition in
the best possible light. Good legs were at a premium in
this show; several men would have been a threat if their lower
bodies had matched their torsos and arms.
Aivars
Visockis (Latvia) was back for the third year in a row.
He posed strongly, with dramatic music and sweeping arm
movements. In the tougher lineup this year, he fell from
10th to 22nd.
Lee
Apperson (US) came next. He had excellent cuts and
posed well, showing nice lines (ratio of shoulders to waist). Apperson's tallness made him look lean next to shorter men.
He needed better triceps. In his fourth try in this show, he
took 14th
Guido
Conrad (Germany) followed. With imposing size, he
posed dramatically in a forceful routine. The cross
striations on his upper pecs were amazing, as were his arms. He had a V-shaped tattoo between his traps just below the back
of his neck. In his second try in this show, he came in
12th -- too low, I thought.
Chris
Duffy (US), competing for the first time since 1993,
offered a conservative routine. He displayed excellent
size, strong abs and legs, good lines, and made it to the top
six. The large tattoos on his arms were mostly covered by body
makeup.
Leon
Brown (US), at age 55, goes back to the early '70s in
national competition. He had good pecs and V-back but
little else. He came in last (at 26th), but gave it his
best try.
David
Hawk (US) shocked some people when he showed up in top
condition after a ten-year layoff. He was huge
everywhere except for hamstrings, and the crowd loved his
old-fashioned routine, a throwback to an '80s NPC show.
He had it and knew it, easily clinching the top six.
Vince
Taylor (US) didn't do a Terminator pantomime this time.
Rather, he gave the screaming audience the slow, sinuous
routine he won the NPC Nationals with in '88. He had
immense shoulders, arms, and traps, projecting confidence that
he would win (his routine ended with finger gestures of
"one" and "five" to indicate he expected
his sixth consecutive win).
Flavio
Baccianini (Italy), at a height of 4'11", looks like
a full-sized man shrunk down by a ray gun. His stage
presence is always charismatic. In the evening show he
began with a slow routine, but it revved up with the same
"I'm not your boy toy" strip routine he used in
2000. Taking second in '99 and '00, he fell to seventh
this year.
Anders
Graneheim (Sweden), new to this competition, was a
revelation -- one of the best bodybuilders I've seen in some
time. A dynamic poser, he displays impressive arms, abs
and quads -- with razor-sharp cuts. The judges gave him
tenth; I would have said higher.
Steve
Davis (US) did this show in '97 and '99, and this year he
looked like a very well-built granddad. With a V-back
and a nice manner, he poses well and has a rather odd walk,
perhaps because he has so much muscle at a short height.
He tied for 20th.
Vlastimil
Krivanek (Czech Republic) was another European competitor
new to the American stage. He had a fantastic routine
and excellent size, a terrific back lat spread, big legs and
possibly the best abs onstage. The audience went for him
but the judges did not, giving him 15th -- lower than I would
have.
John
Hnatyschak (US) was the first of two policemen who played
that up in his stage routine. At 5'6", he was huge
looking and in great shape, making the most of what he brought
to the show. He had stage presence and projected well.
His arms were his best body part, and his lines were excellent. He was deservedly in the top six.
Joe
Palumbo (US), a policeman on the NYPD Swat Team, was the
newest pro onstage, having won the NPC Masters Nationals last
year. He had solid cuts and an impressive torso, but
could use more size. His routine was a bit long.
He took ninth.
Pascal
T'Hooft (France), new to American competition, got noticed
in callouts (seven total). He had superb cuts, with
excellent size, great lines, strong abs, arms, V-back, the
works. He posed dramatically to "Cathar Rhythm"
from Era's first album, nodding to the cheers he got from the
audience. Ranked eighth, he shows tremendous promise in
this showr.
Jim
Pedone (Australia) made up in his routine what he lacked
in size. He pantomimed being hunted down by a helicopter,
running around the stage to avoid it. He got 18th.
Sean
Bullman (Ireland) was another man new to American
competition. He had shoulders and abs, some style and
pacing, and could have used better cuts. He kept winking
at the audience during his routine. He took 19th.
Geir
Borgan Paulsen (Norway) was a monster. New to this
show, he had huge size, great quads, back, traps, abs, arms,
lines -- did I miss anything? He projected his size well
in the evening show, but little else; he looked better in the
prejudging. With a better routine and legs comparable to
his upper body, he could win this show. He was easily in
the top three.
Don
Youngblood (US) came in with a second-place win last year,
and he was "Back for Blood" (as the T-shirts of his
entourage announced). Looking like a cross between a
biker and a minotaur, he hit the stage with a jaw-dropping
routine that had the audience shrieking nonstop. With
the best back in the show, Youngblood did front and back lat
spreads every chance he got, fisting the air at the end of his
routine.
A
long-time competitor in this show, Honore Cironte (Canary
Islands) has an exotic look. Though his legs suffer, he
has a nice back and upper pecs. His routine wasn't as
smooth as it was a couple years ago, but he was posing to
another competitor's music the sound engineer cued by mistake
-- so it wasn't his fault. He placed 24th overall, and
was the over-60 winner.
Juan
Barreto-Leoesma (Spain) had nice lines, traps and V-back.
He also had a bulging navel (possibly a hernia) that
disfigures his abs. He gave it all he had, and ended up
23rd.
Stan
Frydrych (Poland, now in US) towered over other
competitors onstage (except Paulsen). He had outstanding
arms, abs and shoulders, but needs better legs to balance his
torso. His posing was so busy he's like a walking
multimedia extravaganza, and the crowd ate it up. This
was his fourth try in this show. He tied for 20th, and
was thrilled to be the over-50 winner.
John
Simmons (US), in his first try at this show, had nice
symmetry and solid size in his lats, pecs, arms and abs.
He projected himself well, with a balanced, compact build.
With more size he'd be a threat. He took 11th, which I
thought was generous.
I
like Emeric Delczeg (Romania) better every time I see
him. Competing in the last six Masters Mr. Olympias, he
has a superlative self-display enhanced by etched abs and an
excellent torso. He had the most integrated routine on
view in the evening show, and his 17th place was too low for
my taste.
Nicolae
Giurgi (Hungary) made a long trip from Europe for nothing.
Ranking sixth in this show in 2000, he returned with a huge
back and arms, excellent abs and calves (one of the few who
had them), thrilling posing, great cuts -- and got 16th!
What a shame.
Charles
Kemp (US, originally from Bahamas) looked better in the
evening show than in prejudging, when he was still holding
water. He was one of the bigger men in the show, with
wide shoulders and chest, solid quads and arms, and a flashy
routine the crowd got into. He had a great single bi,
and ended with five crab shots (most musculars) in a row.
He got 13th.
Behnam
Samimy (Canada), new to this show, also started with a
helicopter routine. He has a good look with nice abs and
cuts, and can do the splits. His legs are not up to his
torso. He got 25th.
The
top six masters men were called back onto stage after the
women received their awards, and the over-50 and over-60 men's
awards were presented (Cironte kissed his check, prompting
Wilkins to quip, "Besa el dinero"). The top
six men did quarter turns for last comparisons, and in this
lineup Hnatyschak looked small. He tied with Duffy for
fifth place. Hawk took fourth, Paulsen third. When
Taylor took second, the roof came off the Glass auditorium.
Don Youngblood's win was an upset, and signaled a new era in
competitive men's bodybuilding. It's about time.
Mike
Emery (source: bodybuildingreviews.net)
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