TERRE HAUTE — Writing about the 1950s bodybuilding accomplishments of Don Lazzell earlier this week made me think about some of the nice, hard-working people I’ve run into at Terre Haute gyms over the past 30 years.
Some work out just for fun, while others are stone-cold serious.
Below are a few examples of the latter and what they’ve accomplished in recent months:
• Tommy Jeffers — On Nov. 17, the former Indiana State baseball catcher placed first overall in the Men’s Open Division after placing first in the medium height class at the Organization of Competitive Bodybuilders (OCB) Midwest States championships in DeKalb, Ill.
The 5-foot-11 Jeffers weighed in at 190 pounds after dieting off 60 pounds in the previous 71/2 months.
“The last couple months were very strenuous,” admitted Jeffers, who prepares taxes for a living. “Your body thinks it’s starving … but it was definitely worth it.”
Thanks to this victory, which included drug testing by polygraph and urinalysis, the 27-year-old Jeffers received his pro card from the International Fitness & Physique Association (IFPA). He plans to train harder than ever in 2008 so he can be ready for his first IFPA competition in 2009.
Two months earlier at Indianapolis, Jeffers won the Mr. Natural Indiana overall title after placing first in the medium class.
He also mentioned that he’s featured in a training video on the bodybuilding.com Web site.
Not to be outdone in family achievements, younger brother Troy Jeffers — another former Terre Haute South High School baseball standout — parachuted onto the field with an Indiana University flag before the Insight Bowl football game Dec. 31 at Tempe, Ariz.
Troy had permission to do so. He’s a cadet with the U.S. Air Force Academy.
• Julia Stamper — On Nov. 18, Stamper placed sixth out of more than 20 competitors in the women’s heavyweight division of the National Physique Committee (NPC) national bodybuilding championships at Dallas.
“It was my best condition ever,” said Stamper, a Terre Haute juvenile detective. “I was at 3-percent bodyfat and I weighed in at 147 pounds.”
Stamper described the NPC nationals as the top amateur show in the nation.
A few months earlier, Stamper placed third in the women’s heavyweight division of the NPC USA championships at Las Vegas.
Now that she’s 35, Stamper said she’s planning to enter the NPC masters nationals this year.
• Rick Hoole, Jim McCarty and Justus Owens — All three of these muscleheads — I use that term as a compliment — graduated from Terre Haute North High School in 1978 before transforming themselves into three of the strongest men in Terre Haute gyms in the 1980s.
They eventually went their separate ways, but now they’ve reunited as businessmen selling unique weight-training equipment invented by Hoole.
In December 2006, Hoole, who lives in New Smyrna Beach, Fla., came up with the idea for Deadzone Ramps, Deadzone Mats and the Pit Shark, which can be viewed on the loadthebar.com Web site. Hoole said a patent is pending on these products.
“They’re perfect for high schools because of the safety built in,” explained the 47-year-old Hoole, who has fared well in powerlifting and bodybuilding over the years. “They’re also good for college weightrooms and fitness centers.”
Hoole said the products have been demonstrated at trade shows in Orlando, Fla., and Nashville, Tenn., and sales are going well.
Longtime powerlifting legends McCarty, who lives in Daytona Beach, Fla., and Owens, who lives in Los Angeles, thought enough of Hoole’s products that they became part of his sales team last summer.
“They save time and they’re safe,” McCarty said of the Deadzone Mats. “I’ve been lifting for 34 years and they’re the best mats I’ve ever used.”
McCarty said anyone interested in these products can e-mail him at jim.mccarty@yahoo.com or call him at (386) 576-3283.
Ready to watch the Indianapolis Colts start another playoff run to the Super Bowl, David Hughes can be reached by phone at 1-800-783-8742, Option 4, or at (812) 231-4224; by e-mail at david.hughes@tribstar.com; or by fax at (812) 231-4321.
Hughes News & Views
Hughes News & Views: Former ISU athlete Jeffers among those taking working out to new level
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Terre Haute runner sets up race to help Boston
Having competed in the Boston Marathon once before in 2003, 35-year-old Majel Wells of Terre Haute thought she should give it another try in 2013.
“My goal was just to finish and enjoy Boston,” she reflected this week. “I had an injury [runner’s knee] beforehand, so I wasn’t too worried about beating my time from 2003 [4 hours, 10.20 seconds].
“But nobody cares about what your time is at Boston anyway.”
From what I’ve heard over the years, she’s right. Unless you’re a super-serious runner, the Boston Marathon has been more about taking in the atmosphere and having fun than placing in the top 50, although Wells was pleased that she beat her previous time by finishing in 3:55.19 on April 15.
Obviously, her race time wasn’t the most vivid memory that Wells took away from her 2013 Boston experience. -
Former South players to play in Saylor benefit game
I had my first phone conversation with Mike Saylor since mid-February on Thursday and he sounded good.
The former Terre Haute South High School boys basketball coach, who’s been battling cancer this year, has been traveling back and forth to the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston for chemotherapy treatments. -
Recent South swimmers Roach, Bray heading to DI nationals
I’m sure most of you with office jobs can relate.
When work gets busy, sometimes it’s easy to skim over our emails. After all, how many times do we need to read the same nonsense from alleged Nigerians wanting to make us rich if we’ll send them several thousand dollars first?
So after having three consecutive days off, that almost happened to me when I returned to work Tuesday. Then I realized that the message from Jeff Thompson, Terre Haute South High School’s boys and girls swimming coach, contained significant news. -
NCAA Division III basketball tournament returns to Rose-Hulman
The last time Rose-Hulman served as host for the NCAA Division III men’s basketball tournament, its game was played inside an old World War II airplane hangar.
You “old-timers” should know the building I’m talking about and the matchup wasn’t really that long ago — March 6, 1997, to be exact. -
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Written by award-winning Kyle Keiderling of Henderson, Nev., and released in hardcover format in mid-December, the 480-page “Trophies and Tears” documents the rich tradition of the University of Evansville men’s basketball program through recent interviews and research of old yearbooks and newspaper/scrapbook clippings.
The book contains many cheery moments — behind-the-scenes details of all five NCAA College Division (now known as Division II) championships won in the 1950s, 1960s and early 1970s by the Purple Aces and their legendary coach Arad McCutchan — although some of those moments don’t seem so cheery from an Indiana State perspective when the Sycamores found themselves on the losing end of scores. -
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Bryan Egli and Joe Puthoff, both Rose-Hulman basketball starters I covered in the late 1990s, took their degrees from the prestigious engineering institute and found successful careers in the Indianapolis area.
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Almost 10 years ago, February 2002 to be exact, the New England Patriots upset the high-powered St. Louis Rams to win Super Bowl XXXVI in New Orleans, the Winter Olympics entertained spectators in Salt Lake City and Terre Haute South High School’s girls basketball team started its tournament run toward a Class 4A state title.
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“We’re all very hungry for a victory,” he said after practice Thursday. “We all want to taste victory really, really bad.” -
Valley semipro football team reaches championship of IFL
The West Central Wildcats’ semipro football team from Terre Haute has been written about before in this column space over the last two years.
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When I heard the NFL lockout finally ended this week, I looked for someone affiliated with the Indianapolis Colts to get a reaction.
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Amateur boxing card set for outdoors at Show-Me's
We all know what Show-Me’s sports bar is famous for around Terre Haute, right?
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Terre Haute runner sets up race to help Boston




