Kevin Levrone

Kevin Levrone
 Bodybuilder 
Personal info
Nickname Maryland Muscle Machine
Born

July 16, 1964 (disputed); other sources cite 1965, 1966, or

1968
Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.
Height 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)[1]
Weight 240 lb (109 kg)[1]
Professional career
Pro-debut NPC Nationals, 1991
Best win IFBB Arnold Classic 1994/1996, IFBB Mr.Olympia runner-up 1992/1995/2000/2002,

Kevin Mark Levrone is an American IFBB professional bodybuilder, IFBB Hall of Famer, blogger and musician.

During his professional career, Levrone competed in 68 IFBB Professional contests. He has won 23 Pro Shows, holding the record of the most wins as an IFBB professional until Ronnie Coleman set the new record in 2004. Despite having been away from competition for well over a decade since he retired in 2003 Kevin officially announced in mid 2016 that he would return to once again compete at the professional level on stage at the Mr. Olympia contest. At age 51 Levrone made his professional bodybuilding return competing, as announced, at the 2016 Mr. Olympia.[2]

Early life

Born and raised in Baltimore, Maryland by an Italian-American father and an African American mother, he lost both parents to cancer at a young age.[3] Levrone was born on July 16, although the year is contested (1964, 1965, 1966 and 1968 have all been cited), one of six siblings. He first got into the gym when seeing his cousin come home from the military. After seeing the size and condition of his cousin, Kevin says that is what made him more serious about working out and bodybuilding in general.[4]

Training

Levrone began his professional IFBB career in 1991 after finishing first in the NPC Finals. After the 1992 Olympia in February 1993, Kevin completely tore his major and minor pectorals while bench pressing 600 pounds, and he needed surgery to reattach them. At that time everyone thought that Levrone's career was over. He had two surgeries, the first one lasted 8 hours. While he was healing from his first surgery he got an infection and he needed a second surgery.

Levrone has been in more than 13 Mr. Olympia competitions, including the 2016 Mr. Olympia by special invite. Despite placing a number of times, Kevin never took first place in a Mr. Olympia competition earning him the nickname, "The Uncrowned King of Mr. Olympia". Levrone has been applauded for his ability to train quickly for competitions, rather than training year-long. This fact is often attributed to the reason why he was able to come back for the 2016 Mr. Olympia competition. Despite not placing in the top 10 for the first time, Levrone got himself in competition-shape in only 5 months. After the 2016 Mr. Olympia competition it came out that he had trained despite injuries to his pectorals and knee.

After professional career

Levrone did not officially announce his retirement, he explained this as he never thought about retirement, he decided to do something different, find other challenges.[5] Since ending his competition career, Levrone enjoys playing other sports like tennis and golf. He has acted in several films and is also a musician. He released an online training platform in early 2016 naming it TeamLevrone.com. In 2015, he released a supplement line called, "Kevin Levrone Signature Series".[6]

In May 2016 after 13 years of not competing Kevin officially announced he will be coming out of retirement to compete in Mr. Olympia 2016 by special invite. [7]

Stats

Competitive history

  • 1991 Junior Nationals - NPC, HeavyWeight, 2nd
  • 1991 Nationals - NPC, HeavyWeight, 1st
  • 1991 Nationals - NPC, Overall Winner
  • 1992 Grand Prix Germany , 1st
  • 1992 Grand Prix England, 2nd
  • 1992 Chicago Pro Invitational, 3rd
  • 1992 Night of Champions, 1st
  • 1992 Mr. Olympia, 2nd
  • 1993 Grand Prix France, 5th
  • 1993 Grand Prix Finland, 2nd
  • 1993 Grand Prix Spain, 3rd
  • 1993 Grand Prix Germany, 1st
  • 1993 Mr. Olympia, 5th
  • 1993 Grand Prix England, 3nd
  • 1994 San Jose Pro Invitational, 1st
  • 1994 Grand Prix France (2), 1st
  • 1994 Grand Prix Italy, 1st
  • 1994 Arnold Classic, 1st
  • 1994 Mr. Olympia, 3rd
  • 1994 Grand Prix Spain, 2nd
  • 1994 Grand Prix Germany, 2nd
  • 1994 Grand Prix England, 2nd

  • 1995 Mr. Olympia, 2nd
  • 1995 Grand Prix Spain, 1st
  • 1995 Grand Prix Germany, 1st
  • 1995 Grand Prix England, 2nd
  • 1995 Grand Prix Russia, 1st
  • 1996 San Jose Pro Invitational, 1st
  • 1996 Arnold Classic, 1st
  • 1996 San Francisco Pro Invitational, 1st
  • 1996 Mr. Olympia, 3rd
  • 1996 Grand Prix Spain, 3rd
  • 1996 Grand Prix Germany, 4th
  • 1996 Grand Prix England, 4th
  • 1996 Grand Prix Czech Republic, 2nd
  • 1996 Grand Prix Switzerland, 3rd
  • 1996 Grand Prix Russia, 5th
  • 1997 Arnold Classic, 8th
  • 1997 Mr. Olympia, 4th
  • 1997 Grand Prix Hungary, 1st
  • 1997 Grand Prix Spain, 1st
  • 1997 Grand Prix Germany, 1st
  • 1997 Grand Prix England, 1st
  • 1997 Grand Prix Czech Republic, 1st
  • 1997 Grand Prix Finland, 1st
  • 1997 Grand Prix Russia, 2nd

References

  1. 1 2 Pro Profiles. "Kevin Levrone Pro Bodybuilding Profile". Bodybuilding.com. Bodybuilding.com, LLC. Retrieved August 5, 2016.
  2. "2016". Mr. Olympia. Retrieved 2016-10-26.
  3. "Kevin Levrone". IMDb. Retrieved 2016-06-28.
  4. "The Kevin Levrone Interview". Bodybuilding.com. 2004-11-26. Retrieved 2016-06-29.
  5. "The Kevin Levrone Interview". Bodybuilding.com. Retrieved 2016-10-23.
  6. "Kevin Levrone: revolutionary sports supplement brand created by me, Kevin Levrone". levrosupplements.com. Retrieved 2016-06-29.
  7. Chris Nicoll (videographer). "Kevin Levrone Is Back!". FLEX Online. Retrieved 2016-10-23.
  8. 1 2 3
  9. 1 2 3 "Kevin Levrone – Evolution of Bodybuilding". Evolutionofbodybuilding.net. Retrieved 2016-10-23.
  10. Greg Merritt. "Kevin Levrone's Training Philosophies". FLEX Online. Retrieved 2016-10-23.
  11. "Bodybuilder Kevin Levrone". Criticalbench.com. 1965-07-16. Retrieved 2016-10-23.
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