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Grant Anderson (Highland games)

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Grant Anderson
Born
Occupation(s)Highland Games competitor, Strongman, Olympic Weightlifting, Town planner
Height6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Competition record
weightlifting
Representing  Scotland
Commonwealth Games
Bronze medal – third place 1970 - Super Heavyweight - Combined[1]
Highland Games
Representing  Scotland
World Highland Games Championships
Champion World Highland Games Championships 1980
Champion World Highland Games Championships 1982
USA Highland Games Championships - Santa Rosa
Champion 1979
Champion 1981
Champion 1982
Champion 1983
Champion 1984

Grant Anderson is a former weightlifter and Highland Games competitor from Scotland. He won a bronze medal at the Commonwealth Games in 1970[1] in the heavyweight class of the weightlifting but was more prominent as a Highland Games competitor, in which capacity he won the inaugural World Highland Games Championships in 1980 in Los Angeles.

Biography

Born in Dundee,[2] Anderson was well educated and trained to become a town planner. As an amateur athlete he excelled in field athletics and strength-based sports and specialised in weightlifting. As a weightlifter he competed in the 1970 Commonwealth Games in the superheavyweight class, the first time that class had been introduced to the games, and won the bronze medal. He then began to compete as a Highland Games specialist against his namesake, but no relation, Bill Anderson.[2] In 1979 he competed in the first ever Britain's Strongest Man, won by Geoff Capes, nominally as a well-known name on the Highland Games circuit than for his prowess as a weightlifter. The following year, in 1980, he won the inaugural World Highland Games Championships and came third in that event in 1981. In 1982 he won it a second time in Prestonpans, Scotland, underlying his status. In 1983 he broke Bill Anderson's fourteen-year-old record in the 22 lb hammer throw with a distance of 123 feet 8.5 inches (37.706 m).[3]

References

  1. ^ a b COMMONWEALTH GAMES MEDALLISTS - WEIGHTLIFTING at www.gbrathletics.com
  2. ^ a b Emily Ann Donaldson, The Scottish Highland Games in America, p19, Pelican Publishing, 1986, ISBN 1-56554-560-5, ISBN 978-1-56554-560-1
  3. ^ Emily Ann Donaldson, The Scottish Highland Games in America, p78, Pelican Publishing, 1986, ISBN 1-56554-560-5, ISBN 978-1-56554-560-1