Ken Waller, YMCA Mr. America…His Story & Training
By Franklin Page
Iron Man June-July 1968
In writing about a new physique star with enthusiasm it is
always a temptation to lay on the superlatives heavily; great, sensational, the
lot. I am faced with that temptation now but I cannot help but feel the
superlatives here would not be misplaced.
A new physique marvel has recently entered AAU competition who
gives every indication of forging a new and higher development standard than we
have yet seen. He is Ken Waller, recent winner of the National YMCA physique
title in Chicago. This is the second contest he has ever entered; the first was
the Mr. Kentucky contest in 1966 which he also won. Between these two
appearances Ken had neither competed nor even seen a contest, so it is evident
he is just beginning his climb. But what a beginning! In spite of his
inexperience and resultant poor posing, and the fact that he has not yet
reached his full development, the impact that Ken made in Chicago was tremendous.
He has, in my opinion, every qualification to become perhaps our most spectacular
muscle man. Let’s take a look at these qualifications in their formative stages
and meet a man who will certainly be one of our greatest strength athletes.
To begin with, Ken is a very big man. He is 6 feet tall and
weighs, at the moment, a rather light 218. His size begins with a very large
bone structure, evidenced by wrists a bit over 8 ½ inches and substantially
proportioned hands and feet. On this base he has remarkable depth and density
of muscle, which although he has already achieved great muscle size, will soon
give him a physique of unsurpassed quality. At the moment one cannot say his
physique is yet perfected or fully developed in every detail, but I can say he
is one of the most muscular men I ever saw. What will he be like a year from
now? Today every muscle is clearly defined, in spite of their size, with each
fiber and striation completely revealed. Ken has very fair skin, thin and
translucent, so that it lies very lightly over the muscles and tendons. It is
almost as though every muscle is laid bare and this body characteristic alone
is sufficient to make his display dazzling. Imagine this coupled with his
tremendous size and obvious strength and you have the picture of a really
extraordinary athlete.
Ken has trained with weights for 6 years. He began with the intention
of gaining weight and speed for college football. It is only in the past year
that he has trained for bodybuilding. I first saw him at the 1966 Kentucky
contest, when he was good but had nothing in any way comparable to his present
development. All this has come within the past few months of concentrated
effort. During the past Christmas vacation Ken went to California and sought
advice from Zabo Koszewski, picking up points on training and diet. This seemed
to turn the trick and get him really started along the road that it was
obvious, even in 1966, that he should take. Now the dedication and drive are
firmly rooted and growing.
Ken is a graduate of Western Kentucky University at Bowling
Green. It was his ambition to make all-conference in football, accomplished as
a Junior. He was also team captain. In the college days Ken worked out an
average of 3 days a week for 1 ½ hours, doing nothing bug strength exercises:
presses, squats, cheat curls, bench presses. During this time he developed
tremendous strength which is now paying off in the rigorous training he now
follows, enabling him to handle heavy poundages, to push his muscles hard. For
example, on the day we took the training shots Ken put 235 lbs. on the bar on
the floor. He cleaned and pressed it easily, then slowly lowered it behind his
neck for the squat, all with no apparent effort.
At present Ken is training 5 times a week for 3 hours each session. His split schedule is as follows:
Schedule I
Bench Press, 8 sets, heavy, as many reps as possible.
Super set for chest: DB inclines, DB flies, DB pullovers
Roman chair sit-ups, 500 reps
Front chins, 5 sets, 10 reps
Back chins, 5 sets, 10 reps
·
Super set for arms: No. 1, triceps press-down,
lat machine; concentration curl, reverse curl, DR triceps extension
·
Super set for arms: No. 2 – Seated DB curl,
French curl, Reverse curl, E-Z bar, Decline French curl.
·
Both the above super sets, 2 sets of each, 10
reps
Schedule II
Seated press behind neck, 4 sets, 8 reps
Super set for shoulders: DB press, 4 sets. Upright rows, 4
sets
Super set for back: Hyperextensions, 4 sets. Bent over rows
4 sets
3/4 squat, heavy, 5 sets
Super set for legs: ½ squat, heavy, 5 sets. Good morning
exercise, 4 sets. Calf raises, 4 sets.
Roman chair sit-ups, 500 reps
Go through 1 set of each arm exercises.
In his diet Ken relies mainly on meat, fish, eggs and salad.
He drinks milk in the form of milk shakes. He eats a substantial breakfast and includes
in it whatever he wants, even occasionally wheat cakes. He is sparing with food
supplements, using only Vitamin B12, calcium and wheat germ. Like all
bodybuilders he gets a minimum of 8 hours of sleep each night.
In the National YMCA contest Ken won the overall title, plus
most muscular, best arms and best abdominals. The strenuous concentration on
arms in his recent workouts has clearly paid off in a hurry, but the abs have
had concentrated treatment only for the past month or so.
Ken is now 25 years old. He has an 18 inch neck, 50 inch
chest, 33 inch waist, 19 ½ inch arms, 26 ½ inch thighs, 17 ½ inch calves. With
those 8 ½ inch wrists and wide hips (42 inches) it is evident that his muscle
size will increase markedly as his training steps up.
Physically, Ken’s outstanding characteristic is a tremendous
massing of muscle in every body part. Especially notable are his great arms,
tying in to the most massive deltoids I have ever seen on any man. The muscles
of his neck, traps, and entire back separate into furrows and mounds of tremendous
depths and rounded formations. He is now doing hyperextensions (a relatively
recent addition to his schedule) to further emphasize the lower reaches of the
erectus muscles, but already there is a thick development of these muscles all
the way down to their insertion at the hip. They need to be brought out still
more, however, to match the development of his upper back. His arms are spectacular
– no other word for it - with true
baseball biceps and fully defined and massive triceps. The forearms are very
good but need a bit more work to balance the gigantic upper arms. As in every other
part of his body, each muscle is fully separated from its insertions out into
the body of the muscle. His further training will greatly enlarge his chest and
pecs and continue molding his already remarkable midsection. For a big man, his
abs are outstanding but there will soon be deeper separation and form in that
area. In time his legs will improve their already fine shape and muscularity,
necessary only because of the great size of his upper body. Predictions of
significant future gains in every area are safe because Ken’s body is quickly
responsive to every effort he expends.
Well-educated, immaculate in appearance, courteous and
soft-spoken, Ken is an outstanding man. He is a science teacher in a suburban
Louisville high school and is quite serious in his attitude. Everything points
to a very bright future for Ken Waller as one of the most powerful and best
developed young men we have had the good fortune to have in many years.
IMO Waller deserved more publicity than he received. Maybe he did not go out of his way to seek it. Who knows? In the early 1970s, Waller was on the verge of winning the AAU Mr. America crown. In fact, in 1972, if I remember correctly, he was the odds-on favorite to win the title. However, he was aced out of competing at all thanks to last minute political maneuvering by Art Jones (with the AAU rules governing amateurism) who needed Casey Viator to win to build the image of Nautilus.
ReplyDeleteIt's impressive to see just how big he was (at this point in time) with relatively little bodybuilding training. Throughout the article it was a lot of "he's still just figuring this all out." He definitely got the heel treatment in Pumping Iron which I think is what most people remember him by, which is unfortunate.
Delete"...wrists a bit over 8 ½ inches..."
ReplyDeleteDangggg!...as one of the outliers on the opposite end of the genetic distribution curve from Waller, with my ANKLES less than 8", wrists 6 5/8", and less-than-average length insertions on all my muscle groups except my average-length lats on my 5'8" height, I'm always amazed at the bone dimensions of some of the top-tier physiques.
Waller in his prime compares favorably to the alleged bone structures of the first fifteen AAU Mr. America winners:
https://musclememory.com/articles/MrAsizes.html
OOpppsss...I meant to word, "less-than-average-length muscle bellies"
DeleteFor whatever it's worth to anyone, here's a link to a series of links of interviews with a senior-age Waller:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-CqT13GrWIQ&list=PLIbv7Fdgjyd7o7gaQLlBBTZYAz73jx1Xg&index=1