Henry was born in the small town of
Silsbee in East Texas, 90 miles northeast of
Houston. As a child, he was a big wrestling fan and
André the Giant was his favorite wrestler. While attending a wrestling show in
Beaumont, Texas, young Henry tried to touch André as he was walking down the aisle, but tripped over the barricade. André picked him up out of the crowd and put him back behind the barricade.[27] When Henry was 12 years old, his father, Ernest, died of complications from
diabetes.[28] When he was 14 years old, Henry was diagnosed with
dyslexia.[29]
Henry comes from a family in which almost all of the men are larger than average, especially his great uncle Chudd, who was 6 ft 7 in, weighed approximately 500 lb (230 kg), never had a pair of manufactured shoes, and was known as the strongest man in the
Piney Woods of
East Texas.[30]
Henry played
football in high school until his
senior year, when he strained
ligaments in his wrist during the first game of the year and scored below 700 on the
SAT.[29]
Powerlifting career
By the time Mark Henry was in the fourth grade, he was 5 ft 5 in (1.65 m) and weighed 225 lb (102 kg).[29] His mother bought a set of weights for him when he was ten years old.[29] During Henry's freshman year at Silsbee High School, he was already able to
squat 600 lb (270 kg), which was well over the school record.[29] As an 18-year-old high school senior, Henry was called "the world's strongest teenager" by the Los Angeles Times, and made it into the headlines in early 1990 for winning the National High School Powerlifting Championships and setting teenage lifting world records in the squat 832 lb (377 kg) and total 2,033 lb (922 kg).[31] By the time Henry finished high school, he was a three-time Texas state champion with state and national records in all four
powerlifting categories—the
squat at 832 lb (377 kg),
bench press at 525 lb (238 kg) and
deadlift at 815 lb (370 kg) as well as the
total at 2,033 lb (922 kg).[29][31]
At the Texas High School Powerlifting Championships in April 1990,
Terry Todd, a professor of
kinesiology at the
University of Texas at Austin and former weightlifter, spotted Henry and persuaded him to go to
Austin after he graduated to train in the
Olympic style of weightlifting.[29] In July 1990 at the USPF Senior National Powerlifting Championships, 19-year-old Henry came second only to the legendary six-time World Powerlifting Champion
Kirk Karwoski.[32] While
powerlifting relies primarily on brute strength and power, which Henry obviously possessed,
Olympic weightlifting is considered more sophisticated, involving more agility, timing, flexibility and technique.[33] There have been few lifters in history who have been able to be successful in both lifting disciplines. Mastering the technique of weightlifting usually takes many years of practice, but Henry broke four national junior records in weightlifting after only eight months of training.[28] In April 1991, he won the
United States National Junior Championships; 20 days later he placed fourth at the
U.S. Senior National Championships, and finished sixth at the Junior World Weightlifting Championships in
Germany two months later.[28] Only few weeks afterwards, he became 1991's International Junior Champion in Powerlifiting as well.[1][10] In Henry's first year in competitive weightlifting, he broke all three junior (20 and under) American records 12 times, and became the United States' top
Superheavyweight, surpassing
Mario Martinez.[15]
At the age of 19,[1] Henry had already managed to qualify for the weightlifting competition at the
1992 Summer Olympics, where he finished tenth in the Super- Heavyweight class.[4][15] Ten months before the 1992 Olympics, Henry had begun training with Dragomir Cioroslan, a bronze medalist at the
1984 Summer Olympics, who said that he had "never seen anyone with Mark's raw talent".[15] After the Olympics, Henry became more determined to focus on
weightlifting and began competing all over the world. In late 1992 he took the win at the
USA Weightlifting American Open[14] and further proved his dominance on the American soil by winning not only the
U.S. National Weightlifting Championships, but also the
U.S. Olympic Festival Championships in 1993 and 1994.[1][11] At the 1995
Pan American Games Henry won a gold, silver and bronze medal.[1][4]
Henry won the ADFPA
U.S. National Powerlifting Championships in 1995 with a 2,314.8 lb (1,050.0 kg) raw
Powerlifting Total.[9] Despite competing without supportive equipment in contrast to the other competitors, Henry managed to outclass the lifter in second place by 286 lb (130 kg), defeating not only five-time
IPF World Powerlifting Champion and 12 time
USAPL National Powerlifting ChampionBrad Gillingham, but also
America's Strongest Man of 1997
Mark Philippi.[9] In the process he set all-time world records in the raw
deadlift at 903.9 lb (410.0 kg) and the
squat without a squat suit at 948.0 lb (430.0 kg) as well as the all-time drug tested raw
total at 2,314.8 lb (1,050.0 kg).[34][35][36][37][38] Later that same year in October, he competed in the drug-free Powerlifting World Championships and won again, even though he trained on the powerlifts only sparingly—due his main focus still being on the two Olympic lifts.[39] He not only become World Champion by winning the competition but also bettered his previous all-time squat world record to 953.5 lb (432.5 kg) and his all-time drug tested world record total to 2,336.9 lb (1,060.0 kg).[8][34][39]
In 1996 Henry became the
North America, Central America, Caribbean Islands (NACAC) Champion.[4] He earned the right to compete at the Olympics by winning the
U.S. National Weightlifting Championships in the Spring of 1996 for a third time.[39] During his victory Henry became Senior US American record holder (1993–1997) in the Snatch at 396.83 lb (180.00 kg), Clean and jerk at 485 lb (220 kg), and Total at 881.8 lb (400.0 kg), improving all of his three previous personal bests.[23][40][41] No one in the history of the sports had ever lifted as much as him in the five competitive lifts—the
snatch and the
clean and jerk in weightlifting—the
squat,
bench press and
deadlift in powerlifting.[1][41]
In the months prior to the
1996 Summer Olympics in
Atlanta, Georgia, Henry received more attention and publicity than any lifter in recent United States history.[1] He guested at
Jay Leno,
Conan O'Brien and
The Oprah Winfrey Show and was featured on
HBO Inside Sports and
The Today Show.[1] He was also featured in dozens of magazines including U.S. News & World Report, People Vanity Fair,
ESPN The Magazine and Life where he was photographed nude by famed artist Annie Lebowitz.[1] During this period he connected with WWE owner
Vince McMahon for the first time, which led to him signing a 10-year deal as professional wrestler.[1]
Henry improved his lifts to 407 lb (185 kg) in the snatch and 507 lb (230 kg) in the clean-and-jerk during his final eight weeks of preparation for the
1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta.[39] Henry at 6-foot-4-inches tall and 414 lb (188 kg) bodyweight, became the largest athlete in Olympic history and was voted captain of the Olympic weightlifting team.[39][42] Unfortunately, he suffered a back injury during the competition and was unable to approach his normal performance level.[1] Due to the injury he had to drop out after his first
clean and jerk attempt and finished with a disappointing 14th place.[4][39][43] His appearance at the Olympics proved to be his last official competition in
Olympic weightlifting, as he retired from weightlifting, vowing never to return unless the sport is "cleaned up" of
anabolic steroid use.[39]
Since his career start as a professional wrestler shortly after the Olympics, he broke his leg in the fall of 1996.[39] But by the summer of the following year he had rehabilitated enough to be able to compete at the
USAPL National Powerlifting Championships 1997, where he won the competition to become the U.S. National Powerlifting Champion in the Super Heavyweight class again.[8][39] He had planned to continue heavy training in powerlifting, although his travel schedule as a professional wrestler with the
WWF (now
WWE) made sustained training difficult.[39] Mark's WWF contract was unique in many ways, allowing him at least three months off each year from wrestling, so he could train for the national and world championships in weightlifting or powerlifting.[44] Barring injury, Mark had originally hoped to return to the platform in late 1998, to lift for many more years, and to eventually squat at least 1,100 lb (500 kg) without a "squat suit" and to deadlift 1,000 lb (450 kg).[39][44]
Although in early 1998 he was still able to do five repetitions in the bench press with 495 lb (225 kg), three repetitions in the squat with 855 lb (388 kg) (with no suit and no knee wraps), and three repetitions in the standing press with 405 lb (184 kg) in training, while traveling with the
World Wrestling Federation, he never returned to compete again in official championships in favor of his wrestling career.[39] He weighed 380 lb (170 kg) at that time, and his right upper arm was measured at 24" by
Terry Todd.[39] :When asked in September 2003, who the strongest man in the world was,
Bill Kazmaier, considered by many to be the greatest strongman of all time, stated: "It would have to be Mark Henry. [...] I think he's one of the strongest men in the history of the world, without a doubt."[45]
Personal powerlifting records
Powerlifting Competition Records
done in official Powerlifting full meets
Squat – 953.5 lb (432.5 kg)[8]raw with knee wraps (done on October 29, 1995
WDFPF)
→ current
WDFPF world record squat in SHW class (+regardless of weight class and equipment) since 1995[8][21]
→ former all-time unequipped squat world record for over a decade in SHW class until 2010[46][47][48][49] (+regardless of weight class until 2007)[50][8][21][22][34]
→ Senior US American weightlifting total record 1993–1997 in SHW class (+regardless of weight class)[23]
Combined lifting records
official weightlifting total + official powerlifting total = Combined Supertotal:
881.8 lb (400.0 kg) + 2,336.9 lb (1,060.0 kg) = 3,218.7 lb (1,460.0 kg)raw with wraps[56][57][45]
5 official weightlifting & powerlifting lifts combined – the snatch + the clean-and-jerk and the squat + bench press + deadlift = Five-Lift-Combined-Total:
396.8 lb (180.0 kg) + 485.0 lb (220.0 kg) + 953.5 lb (432.5 kg) + 858.3 lb (389.3 kg) + 903.9 lb (410.0 kg) = 3,324.5 lb (1,508.0 kg)[30][56][57][45][58][59]
Professional wrestling career
World Wrestling Federation/Entertainment/WWE (1996–2021)
Early career (1996–1997)
At the age of 24, Henry made his first appearance on
World Wrestling Federation (WWF) programming on the March 11, 1996 episode of Monday Night Raw, where he press slammed
Jerry Lawler, who was ridiculing Henry while interviewing him in the ring. After Henry competed in the
1996 Summer Olympics, the WWF signed him to a ten-year contract.[4] Trained by professional wrestler
Leo Burke, his first feud in the WWF was with Lawler. At the pay-per-view event,
SummerSlam in August 1996, Henry came to the aid of
Jake Roberts who was suffering indignity at the hands of Lawler. His debut wrestling match was at
In Your House: Mind Games on September 22, 1996, where he defeated Lawler.[4] The feud continued on the live circuit during subsequent weeks.[60] On the November 4 episode of Raw, Henry served as a cornerman for
Barry Windham in a match against
Goldust. He was set to team with Windham,
Marc Mero and
Rocky Maivia to take on the team of Lawler,
Goldust,
Hunter Hearst Helmsley and
Crush at
Survivor Series, but was replaced by Jake Roberts when he was forced to withdraw from the event due to injury. On the November 17 episode of Superstars, Henry defeated Hunter Hearst Helmsley, Crush and Goldust in a
tug of war contest. Henry also worked a couple of shows for
United States Wrestling Association. Henry's career was then stalled as, over the next year, he took time off to heal injuries and engage in further training.
In November 1997, he returned to the ring, making his televised return the following month.[61] By the end of the year, he was a regular fixture on WWF programming, defeating
The Brooklyn Brawler on the December 15 episode of Raw, and beating
The Sultan on the December 27 episode of Shotgun.
Nation of Domination and Sexual Chocolate (1998–2000)
During the next year, Henry gave himself the nickname "Sexual Chocolate", adopting a
ladies' mancharacter. He first resumed his storyline with former enemy
Chyna, but it ended with her betraying him in a controversial angle including a
transvestite.[4] During a match at the August 1999
SummerSlam pay-per-view between Brown and
Jeff Jarrett for the
WWF Intercontinental and
WWF European Championships (both held at the time by Brown), Henry turned on Brown and helped Jarrett win the match and the titles.[65] The next night, Henry was awarded the European title by Jarrett in return for his help.[66] Henry lost the title one month later to Brown at the
Unforgiven pay-per-view.[67]
The night after he tried to make up with Brown[68] and later in the week claimed to be a sex addict[69] resulting in him attending a sex therapy session a week later where he claimed that he lost his virginity at eight years old to his sister, and had just slept with her two days ago.[70] He was part of a storyline about him overcoming sex addiction, which he accomplished thanks to
The Godfather.[4]
After this twist, Henry
turned into a
fan favorite, and was seen on television romancing WWF veteran wrestler
Mae Young as part of the "Sexual Chocolate" character.[4] He feuded with
Viscera during this time, as part of a storyline where Viscera
splashed Mae Young while she was carrying Henry's child.[71][72] Young later gave birth to a
hand.
Ohio Valley Wrestling and strongman competitions (2000–2002)
In 2000, Henry was sent to
Ohio Valley Wrestling (OVW) to improve his conditioning and wrestling skills. In OVW, he teamed with
Nick Dinsmore to compete in a tournament for the
OVW Southern Tag Team Championship in mid-2001.[4] He also worked a couple of matches for
Heartland Wrestling Association. Later that year, Henry's mother died,[48] causing him to go on hiatus from wrestling.[4][48] He felt he had to compete in the "Super Bowl of weight lifting"—the
Arnold Strongman Classic—in honor of his mother, who gave him his first weight set when he was a child.[48]
On February 22, 2002, in
Columbus, Ohio the competition, consisting of four events, designed to determine the lifter with the greatest overall body power, began.[1] Henry surprised everybody when he won the first event, setting a world record in the process by lifting the
Apollon's Axle three times overhead.[48] Only three men in history had ever been able to press it at all.[48][73] By deadlifting 885 lb (401 kg) for two repetitions in the second event and easily pushing a 5,000 lb (2,300 kg) or more
Hummer with nearly flat tires in the third event, Henry kept his lead continuously throughout the competition and never gave it up again.[48][59] In the final "
Farmer's Walk"-event Henry quickly carried the roughly 850 lb (390 kg) of railroad ties up an incline, winning the whole competition convincingly[48][59] to capture the winning prize — a
US$75,000
Hummer, a vacation cruise and $10,000 cash.[1][59]
Since Henry had only trained for four months and defeated the crème-de-là-crème of worldwide strongmen, who had been practicing for years, his win was a shock for strongman experts worldwide,[48] but remained basically unnoticed by the wrestling audience. Henry proved to be worthy of the title "World's Strongest Man" not only by winning the contest, but also by achieving it in record time. By doing so he was again seen as the legit "strongest man in the world" by many lifting experts for a second time since 1996.[39][56][48][57][45][58]
Various feuds (2002–2007)
Henry returned to the WWF in April 2002 and was sent to the
SmackDown! brand, where he developed an in-ring persona of performing "tests of strength" while other wrestlers took bets on the tests, but the gimmick met with little success.[74] During this time he competed against such superstars as
Chris Jericho and
Christian.[4] After being used sporadically on WWE (formerly WWF) television during 2002, as he was training for a weightlifting contest, and suffering a knee injury, Henry was sent back to OVW for more training.[74][4]
In August 2003, Henry returned to WWE television on the
Raw roster as a heel where he found some success as a member of "Thuggin' And Buggin' Enterprises", a group of African Americans led by
Theodore Long who worked a race angle in which they felt they were victims of racism and were being held down by the "white man".[4] During that time, Henry was involved in a brief program with
World Heavyweight ChampionGoldberg when former champion,
Triple H, put a bounty on Goldberg.[74] This was followed by a brief rivalry with
Shawn Michaels, before he engaged in a rivalry with
Booker T.[75][76][77] After defeating Booker T twice, once in a
street fight and once in a six-man tag team match, he lost to Booker T at the
Armageddon pay-per-view in December 2003.[78][79][80] At a practice session in OVW in February 2004, Henry tore his
quadriceps muscle, and was out for over a year after undergoing surgery.[74][4] Henry was then utilized by WWE as a public relations figure during his recovery, before returning to OVW to finish out 2005.[4]
During the December 30 episode of SmackDown!, Henry made his return to television, as he interfered in a
WWE Tag Team Championship match, joining with
MNM (
Joey Mercury,
Johnny Nitro, and
Melina), to help them defeat
Rey Mysterio and
Batista for the championship.[81] A week later on SmackDown!, Henry got in a confrontation with the
World Heavyweight Champion, Batista, and went on to interfere in a
steel cage match between MNM and the team of Mysterio and Batista, helping MNM to retain their titles.[82] Henry then had another match with Batista at a live event where Batista received a severely torn
triceps that required surgery, forcing him to vacate his title. On the January 10, 2006 episode of SmackDown!, Henry was involved in a
Battle Royal for the vacant World Heavyweight Championship. He was finally eliminated by
Kurt Angle, who won the title.[83][84]
A week later, Henry received assistance from
Daivari, who turned on Angle and announced that he was the manager of Henry.[85] With Daivari at his side, Henry faced Angle for the World Heavyweight Championship at the
2006 Royal Rumble in January, losing when Angle hit him with a chair (without the referee seeing) and pinned him with a
roll-up.[86]
On the March 3 episode of SmackDown!, Henry interfered in a World Heavyweight Championship match between Angle and
The Undertaker, attacking the latter when he was seconds from possibly winning the title. Henry then performed a
diving splash on Undertaker, driving him through the announcer's table. Henry was then challenged to a casket match by Undertaker at
WrestleMania 22.[87] Henry vowed to defeat The Undertaker and end his
undefeated streak at WrestleMania, but The Undertaker defeated him.[88] There were talks about Henry ending the streak backstage, but did not succeed. In an interview on
Heavy, Henry stated that the decision was close and that if they did ask him about it he would have refused, stating he did not want to carry that weight.[89] Henry had a rematch against The Undertaker on the April 7 episode of SmackDown!. It ended in a no-contest when Daivari introduced his debuting client,
The Great Khali. Khali went to the ring and attacked The Undertaker, starting a new feud and ending Henry's.[90]
During the rest of April and May, Henry gained a pinfall victory over the World Heavyweight Champion, Rey Mysterio in a non-title match.[91] Henry entered the
King of the Ring Tournament, and lost to
Bobby Lashley in the first round.[92] He later cost Kurt Angle his World Heavyweight Championship opportunity against Mysterio, when he jumped off the top rope and crushed Angle through a table. Henry was then challenged by Angle to face off at
Judgment Day, Henry then sent a "message" to Angle by defeating
Paul Burchill.[93] At Judgment Day, Henry defeated Angle by countout.[94] Although winning, Angle got his revenge after the match by hitting Henry with a chair and putting him through a table.[94]
Henry later went on what was referred to as a "path of destruction", causing injuries to numerous superstars. Henry "took out"
Chris Benoit and Paul Burchill on this path of destruction, and attacked Rey Mysterio and
Chavo Guerrero Jr.[95][96][97] These events led up to a feud with the returning Batista, whom Henry had put out of action with a legitimate injury several months beforehand. When Batista returned he and Henry were scheduled to face one another at
The Great American Bash in July.[98] Weeks before that event, however, on the July 15, 2006 Saturday Night's Main Event XXXIII, Henry was involved in a six-man tag team match with
King Booker and
Finlay against Batista, Rey Mysterio, and Bobby Lashley.[99] During the match, Henry was injured, canceling the scheduled match at The Great American Bash, as Henry needed surgery. Doctors later found that Henry completely tore his patella tendon off the bone and split his
patella completely in two.[100]
Henry returned on the May 11, 2007 episode of SmackDown!, after weeks of vignettes hyping his return.[101] He attacked
The Undertaker after a
World Heavyweight Championshipsteel cage match with
Batista, allowing
Edge to take advantage of the situation and use his
Money in the Bank contract.[102] Henry then began a short feud with
Kane, defeating him in a
Lumberjack Match at
One Night Stand.[103] Shortly after, Henry made an open challenge to the SmackDown! locker room, which nobody ever accepted. In the coming weeks he faced various
jobbers—wrestlers who consistently lose to make their opponents look stronger—and quickly defeated them all.[104][105] On the August 3 episode of SmackDown!, he claimed that nobody accepted the open challenge to step into the ring with him because of what he had done to The Undertaker, presenting footage of his assault on The Undertaker.[106] The Undertaker responded over the following weeks, playing various mind games with Henry.[107][108] Henry finally faced The Undertaker again at
Unforgiven in September, losing to him after being given a
Last Ride.[109] Two weeks later, Henry lost a rematch to The Undertaker after The Undertaker performed a
chokeslam on Henry.[110]
ECW Champion (2007–2009)
After a short hiatus, Henry returned to WWE programming on the October 23 episode of ECW, attacking
Kane, along with
The Great Khali and
Big Daddy V.[111] Henry then began teaming with Big Daddy V against Kane and
CM Punk, and was briefly managed by Big Daddy V's manager,
Matt Striker.[74] At
Armageddon, Henry and Big Daddy V defeated Kane and Punk.[112] Before
WrestleMania XXIV aired, Henry participated in a 24-man battle royal to determine the number one contender for the
ECW Championship, but failed to win.[113]
As part of the
2008 WWE Supplemental Draft, Henry was drafted to the
ECW brand.[114] At
Night of Champions, Henry defeated
Kane and
Big Show in a
triple threat match to capture the
ECW Championship in his debut match as an ECW superstar. This was his first world championship in WWE, which also made him the fourth African-American world champion in WWE history.[115] Upon winning the title, it was made exclusive to the ECW brand once again. Henry's title win came nearly a full decade after he was awarded the
European Championship, which was back in 1999 and the only title he held in WWE.[24] A few weeks later,
Hall of FamerTony Atlas returned to WWE to act as Henry's manager. Shortly after,
ECW General Manager, Theodore Long, unveiled a new, entirely platinum ECW Championship belt design.[116] In August, Henry defended the title against
Matt Hardy at
SummerSlam after getting himself
disqualified; however championships cannot change hands via disqualification, meaning that Henry retained the title.[117] Henry later lost the title to Hardy at September's
Unforgiven in the
Championship Scramble match.[118]
Henry attempted to regain the championship throughout the end of 2008, and had a match against Hardy at
No Mercy, but failed as he was unsuccessful.[119] Henry and Atlas then engaged in a scripted rivalry against Finlay and
Hornswoggle, which included Henry losing a
Belfast Brawl to Finlay at
Armageddon.[120][121] At the start of 2009, Henry qualified for the
Money in the Bank ladder match at
WrestleMania 25, and was involved in a series of matches with the other competitors on Raw, SmackDown, and ECW.[122][123][124] He was unsuccessful at WrestleMania, however, as
CM Punk won the match.[125] In May, Henry began a rivalry with
Evan Bourne, which began after Bourne defeated Henry by countout on the May 26 episode of ECW.[126]
Tag team championship pursuits (2009–2011)
On June 29, Henry was traded to the
Raw brand and redebuted for the brand that night as the third opponent in a three-on-one
gauntlet match against
WWE ChampionRandy Orton, which he won, turning Henry into a
face in the process.[127] In August 2009, Henry formed a tag team with
Montel Vontavious Porter and the two challenged the
Unified WWE Tag Team ChampionsJeri-Show (
Chris Jericho and
The Big Show) for the title at
Breaking Point, but were unsuccessful.[128][129] They stopped teaming afterwards, becoming involved in separate storylines, until the February 15, 2010 episode of Raw in which they defeated the Unified WWE Tag Team Champions
The Big Show and
The Miz in a non-title match.[130] The next week they challenged The Big Show and The Miz in a title match but were unsuccessful.[131] At
Extreme Rules, Henry and MVP fought for a chance to become number one contenders to the Unified WWE Tag Team Championship, but were the second team eliminated in a
gauntlet match by The Big Show and The Miz. Ultimately,
The Hart Dynasty (
Tyson Kidd and
David Hart Smith) won the match.[132]
On the April 25, 2011 episode of Raw, Henry was drafted to the SmackDown brand as part of the
2011 WWE draft. In the main event of the night, Henry attacked his teammates John Cena and
Christian, turning
heel in the process.[139] On the May 27 episode of SmackDown, Henry participated in a Triple Threat match against
Sheamus and
Christian to decide the number one contender to the
World Heavyweight Championship, which was won by Sheamus.[140] On the June 17 episode of SmackDown, Henry was scheduled to face an angry and emotionally unstable Big Show, who warned Henry not to get into the ring; Henry ignored the warning and Big Show assaulted him before the match could begin.[141] This act ignited a feud between the two; Henry attacked Big Show both backstage and during matches[142][143] while on the July 1 episode of SmackDown, Big Show's music played during Henry's match against
Randy Orton, causing Henry to be counted out and costing him a shot at the World Heavyweight Championship. Henry reacted by destroying the audio equipment and attacking a technician.[144] Henry faced Big Show in a singles match at
Money in the Bank and won. After the match, Henry crushed Big Show's leg with a chair, (
kayfabe) injuring him, an act Henry later referenced as an induction into the "Hall of Pain".[145] Henry did the same to
Kane on the next episode of SmackDown,[146] and in the months ahead,
Vladimir Kozlov and
The Great Khali suffered the same fate.[147][148]
On the July 29 episode of SmackDown, Henry was informed that he could no longer compete as no one dared to fight him, but Sheamus interrupted, saying that he wasn't afraid of Henry before slapping him.[149] At
SummerSlam, Henry defeated Sheamus by count-out after slamming him through a ring barricade.[150] On the August 19 episode of SmackDown, Henry won a 20-man Battle Royal to become the number one contender for the World Heavyweight Championship to face Randy Orton at
Night of Champions,[151] and throughout weeks on SmackDown and Raw, Henry regularly attacked Orton, getting an advantage over him.[152][153][154][155] At Night of Champions, Henry defeated Orton to win the World Heavyweight Championship for the first time.[25][156] Henry successfully defended the title against Orton at
Hell in a Cell in a
Hell in a Cell match.[157]
On the October 7 episode of SmackDown, Big Show returned and chokeslammed Henry through the announce table, thus earning a title shot against Henry at
Vengeance.[158] During the match, Henry
superplexed Big Show from the top rope, causing the ring to collapse from the impact and the match to be ruled a no contest.[159] Henry began a feud with the Money in the Bank briefcase holder
Daniel Bryan on the November 4 episode of SmackDown, challenging Bryan to a non-title match to prove that Bryan could not become champion. During the match, Big Show knocked out Henry, making him win by disqualification. Big Show then urged Bryan to cash in his contract, but Henry recovered and attacked both Bryan and Big Show before the match could start.[160] At
Survivor Series, Henry retained the World Heavyweight Championship against Big Show after a low blow that disqualified Henry. Angered by Henry's cowardice, Big Show crushed Henry's ankle with a steel chair.[161] On the November 25 episode of SmackDown, Henry was knocked out again by Big Show, at which point Bryan cashed in his briefcase for a title match and quickly pinned Henry. However, SmackDown General Manager Theodore Long revealed that Henry was not medically cleared to compete and voided the match, so Henry remained champion and the briefcase was returned to Bryan.[162] Later that night, Bryan won a fatal-four-way match to face Henry for the World Heavyweight Championship in a
steel cage.[163] On the November 29 episode of SmackDown, Henry defeated Bryan in a steel cage match to retain the World Heavyweight Championship.[164]
Then at
TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs, Henry lost the World Heavyweight Championship to Big Show in a
chairs match. After the match, Henry knocked Big Show out, resulting in Daniel Bryan cashing in his Money in the Bank contract to win his first World Heavyweight Championship.[165] On the January 20 episode of SmackDown, Bryan retained the championship against Henry in a lumberjack match after Bryan provoked the lumberjacks to come in and attack them to cause a no contest.[166] At the
2012 Royal Rumble event, Henry faced Bryan and Big Show in a triple threat steel cage match for the World Heavyweight Championship; Bryan escaped the cage to retain the title.[167] On the February 3 episode of SmackDown, Henry was suspended indefinitely (in storyline) by SmackDown General Manager Theodore Long, after Henry physically accosted Long as he demanded a one-on-one rematch that night with Bryan.[168] In reality, Henry had hyper-extended his knee the previous week.[169] Henry returned to in-ring action on the February 20 episode of Raw, losing to Sheamus.[170] On the April 2 and 9 episodes of Raw, Henry faced
CM Punk for the
WWE Championship which he won by count-out and disqualification; as a result, Punk retained his title.[171][172] On the April 16 episode of Raw, Punk defeated Henry in a no-disqualification, no count-out match to retain the WWE Championship.[173] On May 14, Henry announced he was going under a career-threatening surgery for an injury.[174]
Final feuds (2013–2017)
After a nine-month absence, Henry made his return on the February 4, 2013 episode of Raw, brutally attacking Daniel Bryan,
Rey Mysterio and
Sin Cara.[175] Four days later on SmackDown, Henry defeated Randy Orton to earn a spot in the number one contenders' Elimination Chamber match for the World Heavyweight Championship at
Elimination Chamber.[176] At the pay-per-view on February 17, Henry eliminated Daniel Bryan and Kane before being eliminated by Randy Orton. After his elimination, Henry attacked the three remaining participants before being escorted out by WWE officials.[177] Henry then began a feud with
Ryback after several non-verbal confrontations.[178][179][180] On the March 15 episode of SmackDown, Henry was defeated by Ryback via disqualification, following interference from
The Shield. Afterward, Henry delivered the World's Strongest Slam to Ryback three times in a row.[181] On April 7 at
WrestleMania 29, Henry defeated Ryback in a singles match.[182] Later that month, Henry reignited a feud with Sheamus by repeatedly attacking Sheamus backstage.[183][184] Henry and Sheamus then challenged each other in tests of strength, but with Sheamus unable to best Henry, he resorted to attacking Henry with Brogue Kicks.[185][186] After Sheamus (during his match) Brogue Kicked Henry (who was on commentary), Henry snapped and brutally whipped Sheamus with a belt.[187] This led to a
strap match on May 19 at
Extreme Rules, where Sheamus emerged victorious.[188] With the loss to Sheamus, Henry declared that he was "going home".[189]
After being absent from television due to injuries,[190] Henry used
social media to tease his retirement.[191] On the June 17 episode of Raw, Henry returned, interrupting WWE Champion
John Cena and delivering an emotional retirement speech, which was revealed as a ruse when Henry gave Cena a World's Strongest Slam after concluding his speech.[192] The segment was highly praised by fans and critics.[193][194][195] With Henry stating his intent to challenge for the "only title he's never held", he was granted a WWE Championship match against Cena at
Money in the Bank.[192] On July 14 at the pay-per-view, Henry failed in his title challenge against Cena after submitting to the STF.[196] The following night on Raw, Henry cut a promo to congratulate Cena on his win and asked for a rematch for
SummerSlam, but was ultimately attacked by The Shield, turning
face in the process for the first time since 2011.[197] Henry continued his face turn the following week, by confronting The Shield and teaming together with
The Usos to fend them off.[198] Henry and the Usos went on to lose to The Shield in two six-man tag team matches, the first on the July 29 episode of Raw, and the second on the August 7 episode of Main Event.[199][200] On the August 12 episode of Raw, Henry competed in a Battle Royal to determine the number one contender for the
United States Championship, but was the last man eliminated by
Rob Van Dam. After the match, Henry and Van Dam were confronted by The Shield, before the returning Big Show came to their aid.[201] Four days later on SmackDown, Henry, Show, and Van Dam defeated The Shield in a six-man tag team match.[202] After a suspected hamstring injury on August 31 at the
TD Garden in
Boston Massachusetts, Henry was cleared to compete.[203] Henry, however, took time off and during his time off, he dropped down to 405 lb (184 kg) and shaved his head bald.
Henry returned to in-ring action on November 24 at
Survivor Series, answering Ryback's open challenge and defeating him.[204] On the January 6, 2014 episode of Raw, Henry tried to confront
Brock Lesnar during separate encounters after Lesnar's return, resulting in Henry receiving an F-5 the first time and then Lesnar injured Henry's arm after getting it in a kimura lock hold, causing Henry to wail in pain and be absent.[205] He returned on February 10 episode of Raw, and answered
Dean Ambrose's open challenge for the United States Championship, but was unable to win the title due to interference by the rest of The Shield. In March, Henry suffered another attack from Lesnar, this time resulting in Henry receiving an F-5 through the announcing table.
On the August 4 episode of Raw, Henry defeated
Damien Sandow after a few months absence.[206] That same week on SmackDown, Henry formed a tag team with
Big Show to defeat RybAxel (Ryback and
Curtis Axel).[207] On the August 18 episode of Raw, Henry entered a feud with
Rusev by attacking him.[208] This set up a match between Henry and Rusev at
Night of Champions, which he lost by submission.[209] The following night on Raw, he lost to Rusev again by knockout via submission.[210] On the October 27 episode of Raw, Henry attacked Big Show during their tag team match against
Gold and Stardust, and turning heel in the process.[211] On the November 3 episode of Raw, Henry lost to Big Show via disqualification and slammed Big Show onto the steel steps.[212] On the November 10 Raw, he joined
The Authority's team to face
John Cena's team at
Survivor Series.[213] On November 23 at Survivor Series, Henry was the first to be eliminated from Team Authority 50 seconds into the match after being knocked out by Big Show.[214][215] Henry then took another hiatus due to an unspecified injury.
Henry returned on the March 12, 2015 episode of SmackDown, confronting
Roman Reigns for having a lack of identity and for not being respected, resulting in Reigns attacking Henry. The attack caused Henry to become a believer in Reigns, and turning face in the process.[216] Henry was unsuccessful in the
Elimination Chamber match for the vacant
Intercontinental Championship at
Elimination Chamber, replacing Rusev who was injured, but was eliminated by Sheamus[217] At
Royal Rumble pre-show on January 24, 2016, Henry teamed with
Jack Swagger to win a Fatal 4-Way tag team match to earn their spots in the Royal Rumble match.[218] Despite this victory, Henry entered the Rumble match at #22 and lasted only 47 seconds when he was quickly eliminated by
The Wyatt Family.[218] At
WrestleMania 32, Henry entered his third
André the GiantMemorial Battle Royal, where he made it to the final six competitors until being eliminated by Kane and
Darren Young.[219]
Following WrestleMania 33, Henry retired and transitioned into a backstage producers role. He later made his return in a backstage
cameo at the Raw 25 Years event in January 2018.[225] On March 19, 2018, it was announced that Henry would be inducted into the
WWE Hall of Fame by Big Show, who was one of his closest friends in WWE.[26] On April 27, at the
Greatest Royal Rumble, Henry participated in the event's
Royal Rumble match, scoring 3 eliminations, but was himself eliminated by Daniel Bryan and Dolph Ziggler.[226][227] In early 2019, Henry took on a backstage mentoring role helping talent work on their off-air attitude, including cleanliness and respect in the locker room.[228]
Henry appeared on the January 4, 2021 episode of
Raw, on its Raw Legends Night special, where in he appeared riding on a scooter due to an injured leg. He was verbally confronted by
Randy Orton in what was his final appearance in WWE.
All Elite Wrestling (2021–present)
Henry made his debut for
All Elite Wrestling (AEW) on May 30, 2021, at
Double or Nothing where it was announced that he will be a part of the commentary team for its new show AEW Rampage, as well as a coach.[229]
Personal life
Henry has an older brother named Pat.[28] He lives in
Austin, Texas with his wife Jana, son Jacob,[230] and daughter Joanna. He also has a two-foot ferret named Pipe.[231] He drives a
Hummer that he won in the 2002 Arnold Strongman Classic.[232] On September 10, 2012, Henry served as one of the pallbearers for actor
Michael Clarke Duncan's funeral.[233]
In March 2019, Henry pledged to donate his brain to
CTE research once he dies.[234]
results:[8]Powerlifting Total – 2,248.7 lb (1,020.0 kg) (903.9 + 496.0 + 848.8 lb (410.0 + 225.0 + 385.0 kg) raw with wraps
Records*
Teen III (18–19 years) Level
Teen-age World Records in the squat at 832 lb (377 kg) and total at 2,033 lb (922 kg) in SHW class (+regardless of weight class) set in April 1990 at The National High School Powerlifting Championships at age 18[31]
Teen-age US American Records in the squat at 832 lb (377 kg), bench press 501 lb (227 kg), dead lift 700 lb (320 kg) and total at 2,033 lb (922 kg) set in April 1990 at The National High School Powerlifting Championships at age 18[31]
Texas state and US American Teen-age record holder in all four
powerlifting categories – the
squat at 832 lb (377 kg),
bench press at 525 lb (238 kg) and
deadlift at 815 lb (370 kg) as well as the
total at 2,033 lb (922 kg) at age 19.[29][31]
Current Texas state and US American Teen-age record holder in the squat at 936.75 lb (424.90 kg) in SHW class (+regardless of weight class) since 1991[241][242]
Collegiate Level
Current Texas State Collegiate Record holder in the squat at 936.75 lb (424.90 kg) in SHW class (+regardless of weight class) since 1991[243] (best in America as well but not registered as such)[244]
Junior Level (20–23 years)
Current Texas State Junior Record holder in the deadlift at 850 lb (390 kg) in SHW class (+regardless of weight class) since 1995[245] (best in America as well but not registered as such)[246]
Senior Level (24+ years)
Current Texas State Record holder in the squat at 954 lb (433 kg), the deadlift at 950 lb (430 kg) and the total at 2,337 lb (1,060 kg) in SHW class (+regardless of weight class) since 1995[247]
Former All-time raw (unequipped)
squat World Record holder at 948 lb (430 kg) (drug-tested as well as non drug-tested) in SHW class (+regardless of weight class) from July 16, 1995, to October 29, 1995[9][38]
Former All-time raw (unequipped)
squat World Record holder at 953.5 lb (432.5 kg) (drug-tested as well as non drug-tested) in SHW class from October 29, 1995, to June 7, 2010**[34][46][47][48][49] (+regardless of weight class until November 4, 2007***)[50]
Former All-time raw (unequipped)
deadlift World Record holder at 903.9 lb (410.0 kg) (drug-tested as well as non drug-tested) in SHW class from July 16, 1995, to May 23, 2010****[34][46][51] (+regardless of weight class until July 4, 2009*****)[52]
Current All-time drug-tested raw (unequipped)
squat World Record holder at 953.5 lb (432.5 kg) in SHW class (+regardless of weight class) since October 29, 1995[34]
Current All-time drug-tested raw (unequipped)
deadlift World Record holder at 903.9 lb (410.0 kg) in SHW class only since July 16, 1995[34][37]
Current All-time drug-tested raw (unequipped)
Powerlifting Total World Record holder at 2,336.9 lb (1,060.0 kg) in SHW class (+regardless of weight class) since October 29, 1995[34]
Current All-time American Record holder in the rawdeadlift at 903.9 lb (410.0 kg) (drug-tested as well as non drug-tested) in SHW class (+regardless of weight class) since July 16, 1995[20][248][249]
Current American Record holder in the
deadlift at 903.9 lb (410.0 kg) (drug-tested as well as non drug-tested) in SHW class (+regardless of weight class and equipment) since July 16, 1995[20][53]
Current All-time US National Championship Record holder in the
deadlift at 903.9 lb (410.0 kg) (drug-tested as well as non drug-tested) in SHW class (+regardless of weight class and equipment) since July 16, 1995[20][54]
Current
WDFPF World Record holder in the squat at 953.5 lb (432.5 kg), the deadlift at 865.3 lb (392.5 kg) and the total at 2,336.9 lb (1,060.0 kg) in SHW class (+regardless of weight class and equipment) since October 29, 1995 (categorized as "open equipped", despite performed in singlet&knee sleeves only/without suit)[21][22]
Current USAPL US American Record holder in the deadlift at 903.9 lb (410.0 kg) in SHW class (+regardless of weight class and equipment) since July 16, 1995[20][248][249][53][54]
Current US National Championship Record holder in the
deadlift at 903.9 lb (410.0 kg) in SHW class (+regardless of weight class and equipment) since July 16, 1995[20][54]
Mark Henry was voted in the All-time Top 25 All-Mens US Powerlifting Nationals Team in 2007.[248]
Mark Henry is the only human in history who has not only squatted more than 900 lb (410 kg) without a squat suit, but also deadlifted more than 900 lb (410 kg) raw.[250]
Mark Henry is the only human in history to have squatted more than 900 lb (410 kg) without a squat suit and deadlifted more than 900 lb (410 kg) raw in one and the same powerlifting meet.[34][37][38]
Mark Henry's 948 lb (430 kg) raw squat and 903.9 lb (410.0 kg) deadlift, done on July 16, 1995, is the highest raw "squat-pull-2-lift-total"(squat+deadlift=1,851.9 lb (840.0 kg))ever lifted in a competition.[250] (Andrei Malanichev's 948 lb (430 kg) squat and 881.8 lb (400.0 kg) deadlift = 1,829.8 lb (830.0 kg) on October 22, 2011, being the 2nd highest ever; Mark Henry's 953.5 lb (432.5 kg) squat and 865.3 lb (392.5 kg) deadlift = 1,818.8 lb (825.0 kg) being the 3rd highest,
Benedikt Magnusson's 837.75 lb (380.00 kg) squat and 975.5 lb (442.5 kg) deadlift = 1,813.3 lb (822.5 kg) being the 4th highest; Malanichev's 992 lb (450 kg) squat and 815 lb (370 kg) deadlift = 1,808 lb (820 kg) being the 5th;
Don Reinhoudt's 904.5 lb (410.3 kg) squat and 885.5 lb (401.7 kg) deadlift = 1,790 lb (810 kg) being th 6th)[250]
Mark Henry does not only hold the greatest all-time drug-tested raw (unequipped)
Powerlifting Total in history at 2,336.9 lb (1,060.0 kg),[34] but also the second greatest in history at 2,314.8 lb (1,050.0 kg).[9]
This article needs to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(November 2014)
*incomplete
** surpassed by Robert Wilkerson (SHW class) of the United States with a 975 lb (442 kg) raw squat with knee wraps on June 7, 2010, at the Southern Powerlifting Federation (SPF) Nationals (open competition, not drug-tested) as the all-time raw world record in the SHW class[49]
***surpassed by Sergiy Karnaukhov (308-pound-class) of Ukraine] with a 970 lb (440 kg) raw squat with knee wraps on November 4, 2007 as the all-time raw "regardless of weight class" world record[50]
****surpassed by
Andy Bolton (SHW class) of the United Kingdom with a 953 lb (432 kg) raw deadlift on May 23, 2010 (open competition, not drug-tested) as the all-time raw world record in the SHW class (+regardless of weight class)[51]
*****surpassed by
Konstantin Konstantinovs (308-pound-class) of Latvia] with a 939 lb (426 kg) raw deadlift without a belt on July 4, 2009 (drug-tested competition) as the all-time raw "regardless of weight class" world record[52]
Olympic Games team member representing USA at the Olympics 1992 in Barcelona, Spain, finishing 10th place in SHW division at age 21[33]
Team Captain of the Olympic Weightlifting team representing USA at the Olympics 1996 in Atlanta, Georgia, finishing 14th in SHW division due to back injury at age 25[33]
First man in history to one-hand clean and push press the "unliftable"
Thomas Inch dumbbell (172 lb (78 kg); 2 3/8" (6.03 cm) diameter handle)[256][257]
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