by hugo velasquez » Sun Jun 22, 2008 9:44 am
Costa Rica will be hosting the 2008 Pan-American and North American Bench Press Championship in September. And it will be held in the “Instituto Tecnologico de Costa Rica” in the city of Cartago. You can visit their web page is
www.itcr.ac.cr to know about the site for the venue.
I’m an M.D., and as far as I know warm weather does not cause seizures unless the patient fails to take the proper medication or does not follow medical instructions. It is always the proper thing to do, that if you have a medical condition to check with you physician before you travel anywhere including within the US.
I have been doing powerlifting for the past 35 years, and I remember when I started the gyms didn’t have any AC … and we are talking about Houston, TX. I also went to UH, where I trained and played football, and we didn’t have AC. I also trained in some hardcore powerlifting gyms in Houston, and guess what …. no AC. In many competitions that I went, in Southern US back in the ´80s and ´90s, there was no AC (Ruston, LA; New Orleans, LA; Dallas, TX, Galveston, TX, Houston TX, Austin, TX) - Maybe, nowadays athletes are different … accustomed to being pampered and used to a more “comfortable and easygoing” competitions sites
I have travelled all over the world and competed in the many countries. And almost all of them don’t have AC. Unless, it’s in the Scandinavians (Norway, Sweden, Denmark or Finland), where the weather is so cold, that they need heater instead.
Powerlifting is a beautiful sport, and it’s just beginning in Central America and the Caribbean’s as you can in the NAPF web page. In our case, Costa Rica Powerlifting was founded barely four years ago after all the painstaking bureaucracy paperwork. We are proud of our results, on a national and international level, and we have done it with no government support. But we are not alone, same thing is happening with all the countries in the region, and all their athletes are going thru the same process of training and competing like that when I went thru when I was in the US back in the ´80s and ´90s, and it was called Raw Powerlifting … no BP shirts, no squat suits, no wraps … just you and your guts, and Mr. Robert Keller can vouch for that. And with NO GOVERNMENT SUPPORT, and nobody expects any in the future.
The NAPF is doing an excellent work in developing the sport in the region and bringing new members to the organization. It will take time for most countries, to be at the “new” American Powerlifting standards, since all sport facilities don’t have AC or Heater for that matter. Just a reminder, the powerlifting organizations in these countries are non-profit organizations according to their constitutions, and they don’t have the budget to do a powerlifting meet in a 5 star hotel. Instead of complaining, I congratulate the Aruba Powerlifting Federation for a very well organized championship knowing all the trouble they have gone thru.
The Pan-American and North American Bench Press Championship, for all those concerned, will be done in a non-AC site … since Cartago is the mountains, at 1300mts altitude and has a 75 degree weather all yearlong. All those who wishes to come, are more than welcome and we try to make your stay as pleasant as possible.
Costa Rica will be hosting the 2008 Pan-American and North American Bench Press Championship in September. And it will be held in the “Instituto Tecnologico de Costa Rica” in the city of Cartago. You can visit their web page is http://www.itcr.ac.cr to know about the site for the venue.
I’m an M.D., and as far as I know warm weather does not cause seizures unless the patient fails to take the proper medication or does not follow medical instructions. It is always the proper thing to do, that if you have a medical condition to check with you physician before you travel anywhere including within the US.
I have been doing powerlifting for the past 35 years, and I remember when I started the gyms didn’t have any AC … and we are talking about Houston, TX. I also went to UH, where I trained and played football, and we didn’t have AC. I also trained in some hardcore powerlifting gyms in Houston, and guess what …. no AC. In many competitions that I went, in Southern US back in the ´80s and ´90s, there was no AC (Ruston, LA; New Orleans, LA; Dallas, TX, Galveston, TX, Houston TX, Austin, TX) - Maybe, nowadays athletes are different … accustomed to being pampered and used to a more “comfortable and easygoing” competitions sites
I have travelled all over the world and competed in the many countries. And almost all of them don’t have AC. Unless, it’s in the Scandinavians (Norway, Sweden, Denmark or Finland), where the weather is so cold, that they need heater instead.
Powerlifting is a beautiful sport, and it’s just beginning in Central America and the Caribbean’s as you can in the NAPF web page. In our case, Costa Rica Powerlifting was founded barely four years ago after all the painstaking bureaucracy paperwork. We are proud of our results, on a national and international level, and we have done it with no government support. But we are not alone, same thing is happening with all the countries in the region, and all their athletes are going thru the same process of training and competing like that when I went thru when I was in the US back in the ´80s and ´90s, and it was called Raw Powerlifting … no BP shirts, no squat suits, no wraps … just you and your guts, and Mr. Robert Keller can vouch for that. And with NO GOVERNMENT SUPPORT, and nobody expects any in the future.
The NAPF is doing an excellent work in developing the sport in the region and bringing new members to the organization. It will take time for most countries, to be at the “new” American Powerlifting standards, since all sport facilities don’t have AC or Heater for that matter. Just a reminder, the powerlifting organizations in these countries are non-profit organizations according to their constitutions, and they don’t have the budget to do a powerlifting meet in a 5 star hotel. Instead of complaining, I congratulate the Aruba Powerlifting Federation for a very well organized championship knowing all the trouble they have gone thru.
The Pan-American and North American Bench Press Championship, for all those concerned, will be done in a non-AC site … since Cartago is the mountains, at 1300mts altitude and has a 75 degree weather all yearlong. All those who wishes to come, are more than welcome and we try to make your stay as pleasant as possible.