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PAiN
03-15-2014, 02:39 PM
Larry Scott dies at 75; Champion bodybuilder


Larry Scott, nicknamed 'The Legend,' was Mr. America, Mr. Universe and the world's first Mr. Olympia.

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Larry Scott and wife Rachel in 1980. The legendary bodybuilder, who retired in 1966 after winning his second Mr. Olympia title, saying he wanted to go out on top, has died in Utah at age 75. (Lynn Johnson / Salt Lake Tribune / December 31, 1969)






Larry Scott wasn't exactly a 98-pound weakling — he weighed in at 120 — but his life changed forever after he ran across a stack of bodybuilding magazines in an Idaho city dump.

The scrawny 16-year-old started working out in private, doing lifts with a tractor axle.

Within 10 years, he was Mr. Idaho, Mr. California, Mr. Pacific Coast, Mr. America and Mr. Universe.

In 1965, he became the world's first Mr. Olympia, a title designed by promoter and publisher Joe Weider as bodybuilding's indisputably supreme honor.

The outcome "was more or less decided the first time the judges got a look at Larry Scott's biceps," Weider later wrote in his Muscle & Fitness magazine.

"Those mountainous, cannonball-like peaks were different from anything the sport had ever seen."

Scott, who was nicknamed "The Legend" and was on Weider's list of "the 20 greatest physiques the world has ever known," died Saturday in Salt Lake City from complications of Alzheimer's disease, his family said. He was 75.

In a Twitter message, former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who also had a place on Weider's "20 greatest" list, called Scott "a great man who inspired millions."

When he was 28 in 1966, Scott snagged his second Mr. Olympia title and stunned the bodybuilding world by announcing his retirement. Like boxer Rocky Marciano, one of his heroes, he said he wanted to go out on top.

But years later, he also said he had been haunted for some time by doubts about the lure of celebrity and his quest for physical perfection.
After the 1962 Mr. America competition, he stared mercilessly into a hotel room mirror.

"I saw an athlete who'd achieved outward perfection: tanned, muscular, seemingly confident and charming — and he was spiritually dead," he told writer Rod Labbe in an interview for Iron Man magazine.

"My dreams — what I'd once thought so important — meant nothing," Scott said. "But what could I do? I was Mr. America and had to set a good example."
Ultimately, Scott said, he found solace in his family's Mormon beliefs. After his bodybuilding career, he owned gyms and a Utah business selling bodybuilding equipment, training programs and nutritional supplements.

Born in Blackfoot, Idaho, on Oct. 12, 1938, Larry Dee Scott took courses in sports officiating at Idaho State University but was unenthusiastic. Spotting a matchbook ad for an electrical engineering course at a Los Angeles trade school, he talked his parents into letting him go.

California "was simply the place to be," he told Iron Man. "They had great gyms there, and I wanted to bring my development to the next level."
In 1964, Scott made his only foray into movies in "Muscle Beach Party," starring Annette Funicello and Frankie Avalon. He was Rock, one of the muscle men coached by Jack Fanny, a gym owner played by Don Rickles.

In real life, Scott worked out with celebrated trainer Vince Gironda at his North Hollywood gym. He drank a gallon of milk daily, ate lots of eggs and took protein supplements. At full strength, he had "pectorals that looked like hindquarters on a thoroughbred," according to the Salt Lake Tribune.

Scott, who wrote a 1992 memoir called "Loaded Guns," developed biceps 20 inches around — half again as big as the average man's. He did so many "preacher curls" — a biceps-building exercise on a slanted bench that looks like a pulpit — that they also became known as Scott curls.
One of Scott's first competitions was for Mr. Idaho in 1959. He was one of eight men competing on a movie theater stage.

"In those days bodybuilding contests were far from the norm," he said. "No red-blooded American male would be caught dead wearing oil and a pair of skimpy underpants and posing."

Just six years later, the scene at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, site of the first Mr. Olympia competition, was strikingly different, according to an account by bodybuilder Dave Draper.

Backstage, he wrote, the men "greedily and anxiously pumped up, panted, ghost-posed, sweated, applied oil, sipped water, encouraged, feared and rooted for each other and longed to be somewhere else."

"I oiled his back, he oiled mine," Draper, a former Mr. America and Mr. Universe, wrote of Scott. "I said he looked great, he assured me likewise.... A bond is established, lions in a cage, horses before the starting gun, haunted marionettes, their strings slack before manipulation."

The winners were announced, Draper wrote, to a "rolling thunder never before expressed in this tarnished and fading opera house … an awesome rumble that stopped the heart."

Scott too could rhapsodize about his sport.

"Bodybuilding is like hearing a symphony," he told the Salt Lake Tribune in 1979. "The more you hear, the more you know, the more you enjoy. To see and appreciate a beautiful male body at its peak takes education."

Scott's survivors include Rachel, his wife since 1966; daughter Susan; sons Erin and Nathan; and seven grandchildren. Two sons died in the 1990s — Derek in a 1992 motorcycle accident and Michael the following year.

rmkicks
03-15-2014, 02:43 PM
RIP to The Legend!!

enrod
03-15-2014, 02:46 PM
A true legend, back when aesthetics were number one. RIP Larry Scott

Rooroo
03-15-2014, 02:53 PM
Wow !! Pioneer / Legend rip brother

PAiN
03-15-2014, 08:22 PM
More from FLEX!


The First Mr Olympia Passes Away




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By Flex Staff

The bodybuilding world is mourning the loss of Larry Scott, the first-ever winner of the Mr. Olympia competition, who held the prestegious titles in 1965 and 1966. Larry was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in 2010 and passed away from complations at the age of 75 years old, on March 8, 2014.

But let's remember this legend, born on October 12, 1938 in Idaho, for his incedible accomplishments and the bar of excellence that he set for the bodybuilding world. What better way to honor his memory, than to begin his tale in the words of Joe Weider.

"I’m reminded of the one that started it all, way back in 1965. Until that time, it was difficult for any bodybuilder to make the claim that he was the best in his sport. We held the Mr. America, the Mr.World and the Mr. Universe contests, with the winner of each making an assertion for his own superiority, but it was never an open-and-shut case.

Thus was the situation in 1964. Larry Scott was the reigning Mr. Universe and was proclaimed by many to be the top bodybuilder in the world. Harold Poole had won the Mr. America contest earlier that year, and he had his own sizable legion of supporters. Within the sport, debates raged as to which of these great champions was truly the king of the hill.

Then one day Larry and I were eating at the Matador restaurant, and he was looking somewhat melancholy. When I asked him what was wrong, he replied that he felt like his bodybuilding career was already over. He had won the Mr. America and the Mr. Universe titles and, the way he saw it, there were no more competitive mountains left to climb.

Right then and there, I realized what I had to do. It was time not only to resolve an age-old dispute, but also to give champions like Larry Scott a chance to reach for a single ultimate honor in our sport.

But what to call this new contest? I wanted it to have a name as majestic as the men who would compete in it. Many great names had already been taken. As luck would have it, inspiration came from the unlikeliest of places. In addition to our dinner, Larry and I were enjoying a beer. The name of the beer? Olympia. And so was born bodybuilding’s ultimate contest. (As Peter McGough once reminded me, if we had been drinking Pike Pale Ale, Larry would have been the first Mr. Pike Pale Ale.)" - Joe Weider

The story continues in the words of Dick Tyler, "At that first Mr. Olympia, Joe Weider was the biggest fan. He wanted to sit out there and be with the audience to feel what it was like. We had to weave our way through the throng; people were sitting in the aisles. In the second balcony, people had noisemakers and clackers, and guys were posing against each other with their shirts off.

It was a very, very dramatic moment. It was probably the pinnacle of any show that I’ve ever seen. We’re sitting there in the audience, Joe and I, and the place is going wild. Everybody was waiting for Larry Scott, and Larry was the last one to be called. [Harold Poole and Earl Maynard went on before him.] Emcee Bud Parker goes up to the microphone, “. . . and now from Studio C . . .” He didn’t get any further than “Studio C” when the place erupted. The people started surging toward the stage! I’ve never seen anything like it.

It was bedlam. The screaming seemed like it went on for three, four or five minutes, but there was nothing onstage. Nothing! Joe then started hitting me. “Oh, my gawd ; oh, my gawd!” I said, “Yes, Joe, I know.” “My gawd, this is going to be fabulous!” “But Joe, he’s not even there!” “I know, Dick. Isn’t he fabulous?”

Finally, you see way in the background, in the shadows, just a little movement. Oh, Scott milked it. People were saying, “Go on! They’re waiting!” No, no, no . . . he was waiting. Finally, he starts to move one step at a time, very, very slowly.

You see this figure getting closer and closer. Then he stands up there in the light and looks around — as I remember, he was chewing gum. He hasn’t even posed yet and was perfectly relaxed. Scott started to smile and nod, as if he was the pope! Like it was some Easter service, he lifted his arm and slowly moved it from one side to the other in sort of a blessing gesture. The crowd went wild! Then he went through his posing routine, and it was unbelievable.

That was one of the greatest nights in bodybuilding history." - Dick Tyler

Rest is peace, Larry Scott, your legend lives on. - FLEX

Larry Scott's Legendary Stats

Nickname: The Legend

Born: October 12, 1938 (age 75) in Blackfoot, Idaho, U.S.

Height: 5 ft 7 in (1.70 m)

Weight: 205 lb (93 kg)

Pro-debut: 1959 Mr. Idaho, 1959

Best win: IFBB Mr. Olympia 1965-1966, two consecutive times,

Predecessor: None

Successor Sergio: Oliva

Retired: 1980

bigsam
03-15-2014, 11:09 PM
Sad to hear. RIP fellow brother.