Luke Stoltman Wins 2021 Europe’s Strongest Man

By Presser
September 5, 2021
3 min read

Here are the complete results from the 2021 Europe’s Strongest Man competition.

The 2021 Europe’s Strongest Man competition took place on Sept. 4 with some of the elite powerlifters in the world vying for the title. Leeds, England was the location of the event and it saw Luke Stoltman take home the championship.

Luke’s brother, Tom Stoltman, was one of the favorites to win the competition but was forced to bow out at the last minute. Stoltman tested positive for COVID-19 and was forced to stay in Scotland. The title was able to stay in the family with Luke emerging as the victor.

Stoltman is now qualified for the 2022 World’s Strongest Man competition. Oleksii Novikov, who won the 2020 WSM, finished second while Graham Hicks placed third. Novikov was already qualified for the 2022 WSM and Stoltman and Hicks earned theirs by finishing in the top three of the event.

The Europe’s Strongest Man consisted of five events — max log lift, shield carry, axle deadlift, car walk, and castle stones. Below are the full results from the competition.

2021 Europe’s Strongest Man Results

  • First Place – Luke Stoltman (GBR) — 40.5 points
  • Second Place – Oleksii Novikov (UKR) — 39 points
  • Third Place – Graham Hicks (GBR) — 30.5 points
  • Fourth Place – Rauno Heinla (EST) — 30 points
  • Fifth Place – Marius Lalas (LTU) — 28 points (T-5)
  • Sixth Place – Pa O’Dwyer (IRL) — 28 points (T-5)
  • Seventh Place – Ervin Toots (EST) — 20 points
  • Eighth Place – Gavin Bilton (GBR) — 12 points
  • Ninth Place – Johnny Hanson (SWE) — 11 points
  • Tenth Place – Adam Bishop (GBR) — 1 point

Max Log Lift

  • First Place – Luke Stoltman — 195 kilograms (429.9 pounds)
  • Second Place – Graham Hicks — 195 kilograms (429.9 pounds)
  • Third Place – Oleksii Novikov — 180 kilograms (396.8 pounds)

Shield Carry

  • First Place – Marius Lalas — 54.2 meters
  • Second Place – Luke Stoltman — 42.2 meters
  • Third Place – Ervin Toots — 37.7 meters
  • Fourth Place – Rauno Heinla — 37.05 meters
  • Fifth Place – Pa O’Dwyer — 34.85 meters
  • Sixth Place – Gavin Bolton — 32.1 meters
  • Seventh Place – Oleksii Novikov — 27.85 meters
  • Eighth Place – Graham Hicks — 27.4 meters
  • Ninth Place – Johnny Hanson — 22.3 meters
  • Tenth Place – Adam Bishop — 7.45 meters

Axle Deadlift

  • First Place – Rauno Heinla — 9 reps
  • Second Place – Graham Hicks — 8 reps
  • Third Place – Marius Lalas — 6 reps
  • Fourth Place – Oleksii Novikov — 6 reps
  • Fifth Place – Pa O’Dwyer — 6 reps
  • Sixth Place – Gavin Bilton — 5 reps
  • Seventh Place – Luke Stoltman — 3 reps
  • Eighth Place – Ervin Toots — 2 reps
  • Ninth Place – Johnny Hansson — 0 reps

Car Walk

  • First Place – Oleksii Novikov – 11.19 seconds
  • Second Place – Luke Stoltman – 13.59 seconds
  • Third Place – Pa O’Dwyer – 16.07 seconds
  • Fourth Place – Marius Lalas – 16.79 seconds
  • Fifth Place – Johnny Hansson – 20.6 seconds
  • Sixth Place – Rauno Heinla – 22.84 seconds
  • Seventh Place – Ervin Toots – 24.91 seconds
  • Eighth Place – Graham Hicks – 25.76 seconds
  • Ninth Place – Gavin Bilton – 7.73 meters

Castle Stones

  • First Place – Oleksii Novikov — 6 in 18.74 seconds
  • Second Place – Luke Stoltman — 5 in 20.58 seconds
  • Third Place – Rauno Heinla — 5 in 21.2 seconds
  • Fourth Place – Pa O’Dwyer — 5 in 22.23 seconds
  • Fifth Place – Graham Hicks — 5 in 22.42 seconds
  • Sixth Place – Ervin Toots — 5 in 23.5 seconds
  • Seventh Place – Marius Lalas — 5 in 24.76 seconds
  • Eighth Place – Johnny Hansson — 5 in 48.01 seconds

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Greg Patuto

Greg has covered the four major sports for six years and has been featured on sites such as Sports Illustrated, Fox Sports, SB Nation, NJ.com, and FanSided. Now, he is transitioning into the world of bodybuilding and strength sports.


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