German sprint cyclist Robert Förstemann might just have the biggest, strongest legs in the strength game.
The biggest, strongest legs in the world may not belong to a bodybuilder — not if German cyclist Robert Förstemann and his almost-five-hundred-pound Bulgarian split squats have anything to say about it.
He’s also somewhat internet-famous for his absolutely gargantuan legs, which not only power Förstemann to victory on the track but can haul most people’s max deadlift for reps on one leg. Take a look:
The video above was posted on Aug. 28, 2024. Förstemann hit 220 kilograms, or 485 pounds, for 2 reps per leg — scroll a bit deeper into his feed and you’ll see plenty of high-rep sets between 160 and 220 kilos, plus a mountain of evidence explaining why Förstemann is known as “Quadzilla.”
Förstemann may be the best poster boy the Bulgarian split squat has ever had, but he’s not the first athlete to reap the many benefits of this single-leg exercise. In addition to building piles of leg muscle, Bulgarians help power up your training in many practical ways:
Step one: Load 485 pounds onto your barbell. Step two, unrack it (easier said than done). Step three, stand on one leg and…
Okay, okay. You probably don’t have the quads to train the Bulgarian split squats the same way as Förstemann, but that doesn’t mean we can’t learn a thing or two from the German powerhouse:
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