That's understandable. His goal was top 10 this year. He placed next to last.So it looks like Regan isn't working with the HD crew anymore.
Good question. He went to Oxygen Gym a few years ago and was close to 300lbs. but stepped back from that for health reasons. He never confirmed this, but some of the more reliable bodybuilding sources were saying he had a genetic heart issue that made him back off.So what's the plan? Abuse insulin in the hopes of adding 30 lb so he can stand next to Ramy?
He's already mainstream and doing all if the above. 1.6 million followers on IG, 270K subscribers on YouTube with 36 million views, sell diet and training ebooks, has his own apparel line, and multiple sponsors. He makes plenty of money and in one if his latest videos speaking to Flex Lewis they were talking about how he doesn't need any money from bodybuilding, not competing for money but he just wants to improve and win.Good question. He went to Oxygen Gym a few years ago and was close to 300lbs. but stepped back from that for health reasons. He never confirmed this, but some of the more reliable bodybuilding sources were saying he had a genetic heart issue that made him back off.
I think his best move would be trying to get as mainstream as possible in the fitness world like Chris Bumstead. I see similarities in that he's a young guy, handsome, and has the muscle and aesthetics 99.9999% of guys can only dream of. Put out training and diet books, start a pay site, stuff like that - I'm sure he'd do very well. I'm a fan of Grimes but he's been competing as a pro for years now and really hasn't stepped his placings up a level at the major shows.
That HD crew sucks. He with a real trainer nowSo it looks like Regan isn't working with the HD crew anymore.
Why the question mark? LolSo what's the plan? Abuse insulin in the hopes of adding 30 lb so he can stand next to Ramy?
Good question, I'm guessing: nothing. I think it will take the US government taking major legal action before anything will even begin to change. I see the deaths continuing to pile up until there is major legal action either against the IFBB and maybe promoters/coaches. And I don't think the changes they make in response to this will improve anything either, things like conditioning and diuretic use are just the tip of the iceberg. Bodybuilding is going to continue to grow, the technology/methodology for body modification is going to continue to grow, and the lack of value for human life is going to remain low or go even lower. The only thing that could bring real change would be the legalization of enhancement combined with medical supervision, limitations, and testing protocols. I would say that is a LONG way off.My question is , with a the talk about the "dangers" associated with bodybuilding now in light of the recent deaths.
Are they going to implement any changes??
If so what will they be.??