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The
Strongest Man in the Philippines
EDDIE TORRES

Achievements/Awards
Asian
Powerlifting Champioships:
1993 - 1 Gold, 2 Bronze
1994 - 1 Silver
1995 - 1 Silver, 1 Bronze
1996 - 1 Gold, 1 Silver, 1 Bronze
1997 - 1 Gold, 2 Silvers, 1 Bronze
1998 - 1 Gold, 1 Bronze
1999 - 1 Gold
2000 - 1 Gold, 2 Silvers
Asian
Record:
317.5 kg Deadlift (110 kg class)
Philippine
Records:
315 kg Squat, 317.5 kg Deadlift, 780 kg Total (100 kg
class)
325 kg Squat, 325 kg Deadlift, 820 kg Total (110 kg
class)
820 kg total is the highest All-Time total in the Philippines
in any weight class. Acknowledged as "The Strongest
Man in the Philippines."
Personal
Best Bench Press: 170 kg (National Open 2000)
It
has been a long while since I saw a competition in Powerlifting.
It was ages ago. When I first saw Eddie Torres in the
PAP meeting this guy is very imposing. I was thinking
of who will be the first feature for the Powerlifting
page of Ironpinoy. So after picking my brains I decided,
OK, lets go with him.
Talking
about brains and brawns, Eddie is a Chemical Engineer
from UP and works as an Account Manager at DOW Chemicals.
Currently he is the Auditor of the Powerlifting Asscoaition
of the Philippines. As I saw Eddie he looks like a happy-go-lucky
guy and I was not mistaken since he still read and collects
comic books. And to complement his strength his idol
is Superman. But I cannot really connect the Flash into
the equation. Aside from powerlifting his time is spent
with his kids, family and yes, the barkada.
Currently
he co-owns Zest Power Gym in Quezon City. Zest Power
Gym has been a consistent National Open Team Champion
for 11 consecutive years from 1990-2000. As I saw it
Zest has been the premiere gym for Powerlifting in the
Philippines.
His
diet is a hefty 6-7 meals per day. Enough for the strongest
man in the Philippines. Now, how about training? I really
dont know. According to Eddie you have to go to Zest
to see it for yourselves. Eddie has no specific reason
why he entered powerlifting but he always wanted to
develop strength and compete with the pros. For Eddie
powerlifting is the best way to gain overall strength.
To wrap it up, an advice to the uninitiated, on-training
and professional powerlifters, stay away from drugs,
persevere and compete!
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