15 Crazy Records No One Can Beat
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 Published On Jun 30, 2021

15 Crazy Records No One Can Beat

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15 Crazy Records No One Can Beat

Records are made to be broken, but try as you might, I don’t think you can manage to beat these ones.
Whether they be difficult to do, too crazy, or too dangerous, chances are these world records will
remain intact for a very long time. Think you can beat any of these records? Answer that question at the
end of the video. Number one is particularly difficult, but hey, with enough perseverance, you just might
be able to topple the King. Here are 20 crazy world records no one can beat.

The World’s Strongest Tongue
Quite expectedly, no one really knows the average weight a human tongue can lift. It’s probably because
no one really bothered to find out, as you don’t normally really carry their grocery bags with their
tongues. But at least one person actually tried to find out the answer to that mundane question, and
while he was at it, he broke a world record along the way.
Thomas Blackthorne from the UK holds the record for the greatest weight lifted only by the human
tongue. He set the record back in August of 2008, and his record of 27 pounds 8.96 ounces still stands
unbeaten to this day. I suggest not to try this yourself as the danger of ripping your own tongue out is
very real.

The 29 feet 2 ½ Feet Long Jump
This outstanding Olympic record was set by American Bob Beamon back in the 1968 Mexico Olympics
and hasn’t been broken to this day, an outstanding feat considering that advances in sports science
especially in the field of athletics should have made athletes faster and stronger. But as we move along
on this list, you’ll see more Olympic records and quickly come to the conclusion that that’s really not the
case.
Nobody has even come close to beating this record, the closest one being set by Britain’s Greg
Rutherford in the 2012 London Olympics, which is a paltry 27 feet 3 inches. I’m not saying this record is
impossible to beat, but with the Olympics only happening every four years, it might take a very long
time.

The Longest Distance pulling an Airplane
First of all, why? And secondly, what for? These questions may never be fully answered but what we
know for sure is that Canadian strongman, and priest by the way, Kevin Fast successfully pulled a
416,299-pound CC-117 Globemaster II airplane for 28 feet back in 2009.
Fast, who holds several other weight pulling records, said that he could have even polled the plane for
much longer, had the organizers set up a finish line for him to cross. Due to the difficulty of this feat, it’s
highly unlikely that anyone will be able to break this record soon, well, not unless you are Canadian
strongman, priest, and all around good guy, Kevin Fast.

18 Olympic Gold Medals
If you have an Olympic gold medal, it means you are the best of the best in the sport that you chose to
do. With the thousands of athletes training for years just to compete in the Olympics, getting even one
of those medals is getting harder and harder. That’s why American swimmer Michael Phelps’s record of
18 Olympic gold medals will probably be never broken ever.
Of course, he didn’t get them all in one go, he could only compete in a few competitions at a time. He
won the 18 gold medals in the span of 3 Olympics. Competing in 3 Olympic games is in itself also an
achievement, and it’s extremely rare for people to qualify and compete in more than three.

The Tallest Man Ever
Now, no amount of training nor practice would help you be able to break this world record, you would
need to be born for it, either that or develop a lifelong debilitating disease, only then would you be up in
the running. However, this record has been around since 1940 and, chances are, it won’t ever be
beaten.
Robert Wadlow was the tallest man ever. Measuring at an outstanding 8 feet 11 inches. Born in 1918 at
8.7 pounds, he began growing at a rapid rate when he was a child due to hyperplasia of his pituitary
gland, which was never treated. He was so huge that he needed to consume around 8000 calories per
day. Advances in modern medicine have allowed people with hyperplasia of the pituitary gland be
successfully treated, hence stopping that persons unchecked growth, making it unlikely for this record to
be broken.

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