Barrel-chested to beat the world record for the most push-ups performed in one hour, 33-year-old Brisbane, Australia resident Lucas Helmke exerted all of his strength and endurance. In a single hour, Lucas completed 3,206 push-ups, or an average of more than 53 per minute. Another Australian, Daniel Scali, previously held the record with 3,182 runs in April 2022. For his one-year-old son, Lucas set out to break this record in order to “provide inspiration” and “show him nothing is impossible.” To beat this record, Lucas trained for two to three years.
Lucas divided the push-ups into sets of 30 seconds, completing 26 push-ups in each
His former powerlifting facility, Iron Underground in Brisbane, hosted the official attempt. Lucas divided the push-ups into sets of 30 seconds, completing 26 push-ups in each set. Lucas marginally outperformed this goal, averaging 26.7 push-ups per 30 seconds. Each push-up Lucas performed had to be performed with perfect form in order for them to contribute to the record total.
There can be no bending at the waist or knees; the body must remain straight the entire time. The body must first be lowered until the elbow has at least a 90-degree angle, then elevated until the arms are straight. Given that he was attempting to beat the record as quickly as possible, only 34 (1%) of his push-ups were disallowed for incorrect form.
“This will be the first record I wish to set”
After earning this Guinness World Records title, Lucas is not content to sit back and relax; he wants to continue breaking records every year going forward. Out of several other push-up records, Lucas said, “This will be the first record I wish to set.” Onto more physical records after that. Over the past ten years, the record for the most push-ups performed in an hour has been continuously broken.
Before Lucas and Daniel, the record was held by Jarrad Young from – you guessed it – Australia, who broke it three times from 2018 (with 2,806 push-ups) to 2021 (3,054 push-ups). Prior to Jarrad, in 2017, Carlton Williams (UK; 2,682 push-ups) held the record. In 2014 (1,874), Carlton first broke the record. Are we nearing the point where human potential is exhausted? Or will someone have increased the record by another 1,000 in eight more years?