Max Sick

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Maxick
Born(1882-06-28)June 28, 1882
DiedOctober 5, 1961(1961-10-05) (aged 79)
Occupation(s)Strongman, bodybuilder, gymnast

Max Sick (28 June 1882 – 10 May 1961) was a German

gymnast who performed as Maxick. With Monte Saldo, he developed the Maxalding system of bodybuilding
through muscle control.

Early life

Born in

dropsy
. His illnesses affected him so severely that he only learned to walk at the age of six. Aged 10 he made his own weights and created his own regime of physical exercise and fitness. However, his parents opposed his weightlifting and destroyed his homemade weights.

Determined to develop his body despite this setback, Sick began a series of muscle control exercises. In 1896, at the age of 14 he had made such strides in his physical development that he was invited to join the local athletics club. For a while he served in the army.[1] Sick trained as a mechanic at a local engineering works but at the age of 23 he left that employment and decided on a career that could better use his physical attributes, moving to Munich where he joined a gymnasium and where he quickly found work as an artist's model. He was just under 163 cm (5′4″) tall and weighed around 67 kg (147 lb).[2]

Strongman

Maxick c.1910

Sick began to appear in German music halls, and as part of his stage routine he would make his various groups of muscles twitch in time to music. Reputedly, he also would take a man 20 kg (40 lb) heavier than himself and lift him into the air sixteen times with one hand, while holding a mug of beer in the other hand without spilling it. His tremendous physique made him a very popular performer.[1]

After Tromp Van Diggelen, the South African physical culturalist and founder of the British Amateur Weightlifter's Association (BAWLA), saw Sick's stage act he went to London where he persuaded Eugen Sandow to invite Sick to appear in England. Accordingly, on October 26, 1909, Sick arrived in London, where he quickly became a serious contender for the world professional middleweight weightlifting title. However, Thomas Inch, the then middleweight champion, was quickly putting on weight and did not think he would meet the middleweight limit by the time of the match.[1] By early 1910 Inch had been recategorized as a heavyweight and so relinquished his middleweight title to Edward Aston, and a competition was quickly arranged between Aston and Sick. Maxick, as he was now known, made his British lifting debut on 19 January 1910, displaying a much-admired double bodyweight continental clean and jerk.[3]

The match against Edward Aston took place at the Granville Music Hall in

Holborn Empire on the afternoon of 14 December 1910 was indecisive as the competition had to be abandoned to allow an evening theatrical performance to take place on the stage.[3]

Although Maxick stated that he had developed his very incredible physique and strength with the aid of muscle control, he was also an expert

weightlifter. He was capable of a clean and jerk with twice his bodyweight. He was also an accomplished gymnast and hand balancer. Maxick later became business partners with strongmen Monte Saldo and William Bankier. He wrote many books on muscle control and the muscle control courses he developed with Monte Saldo were still being sold into the 1970s under the name of Maxalding.[2]
In 1913, he visited Tromp van Diggelen in South Africa where he gave demonstrations of his skills.

On the outbreak of World War I, Maxick was voluntarily interned in England as an enemy alien. He did not want to return to his native land and enlist, as he refused to serve under "Prussian bullies". On being released at the end of the war, he traveled the world, eventually returning to his homeland only to leave again when the Nazis came to power in 1933. He then left to explore Central and South America, finally settling in Buenos Aires.

Final years

Maxick died aged nearly 80 in Buenos Aires in 1961, where he ran a gym and health studio. On the day he died he had been wrist wrestling with a friend and then rode his bicycle home. He was later found dead lying apparently relaxed on his back, arms outstretched and a carefully folded farewell note under his right heel, on which he had written, “My heart is beating rather slow, I feel extremely cold, I think it will be over soon. Remember the infinite is our freedom manifested through our consciousness”.[2][3]

Publications

References

  1. ^ a b c d Tyrrell, Ron 'Marvelous Max - 'The Story of Max Sick' - The Iron Master - The Voice of the Iron Game: Physical Culture Journal - No. 29, April 2000
  2. ^ a b c Max Sick on the United States All-Round Weightlifting Association website
  3. ^ a b c Biography on maxalding.co.uk

External links