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PHOTO GALLLERIES
Once again this year, in what has become a major contest on
the annual IFBB contest schedule, Ed and Betty Pariso set the table for a
gourmet muscle meal at the Dallas
Convention Center in
downtown Dallas
and the response was one that produced the largest IFBB pro event to date. With a grandiose name like the ‘Europa Super
Show' the weekend extravaganza more than lived up to its monike
With a total of 19
female bodybuilding contestants contributing to the record-breaking overall
total of competitors in the Europa show, the women were split into two weight
classes at under and over 135 pounds as the weight break-off point. The
lightweight division totaled 11 contestants, with eight making up the
heavyweight category.
Sedia Rolls Over Ball in Lightweight Class
The lightweight battle here in Dallas was nearly a carbon copy of the Tampa
Pro Championships held just a week earlier in Florida.
Canadian Nicole Ball - the Tampa
champion - Swede Klaudia Larson, and American Debbie Bramwell were fresh from a
very successful effort in Tampa
that qualified the trio for the Ms. Olympia. In Dallas, Ball was hoping to make it two in a
row, while both Larson and Bramwell were looking to throw Ball a curve and move
up to higher places.
But none of the
trio from Tampa
was checking their rearview mirrors for a quiet, non-descript Texan named
Jennifer Sedia. Taking part in her pro debut after winning the overall title at
the 2007 NPC USA (which was also held in Dallas), Sedia found herself atop the
awards stand in front of a partisan hometown Texan crowd.
In a repeat of her
reactions to winning the USA
crown a year earlier, the 5-2, 129-pound Lubbock
native stood in stunned disbelief upon being announced as the winner.
She remained stunned in the hours after the event, still
digesting the reality that she had just qualified for the Ms. Olympia just six
weeks away.
In winning, judges
redoubled their predictions that they intended to make sweeping changes in
their selections of champions. With
terms such as aesthetics, sound muscular proportions, and pleasing overall
looks being repeated since early in the year, Sedia obviously fit the bill at
this event, even to the point of plugging Sedia into the top spot over a solid
trio of bodybuilders just one week earlier.
From the singular
standpoint of conditioning, Sedia did not measure up to the Tampa trio, but
what she did display was a very well-balanced structural foundation that falls
squarely in line with the aesthetic idea judges want to put across. They also
wanted a Ms. Olympia qualifier from this contest that stood on her own as a pro
contest winner. And without taking
anything away from Ball, Larson and Bramwell, that's exactly what they got. For
her efforts, Sedia pocketed a check for $1,500.
Nicole collected
her second paycheck in as many weeks earning $1,000. Her overall look also fits
the new trend in physique selection with clean lines, a creditable level of
muscle - and in perfect proportion to her height. Weighing in at 126 ½, it remains to be seen
how her look will stand at the Olympia
level, but Sedia, Larson and Bramwell are all in the same boat. They Make Up
much of what the ‘new breed' is about in the IFBB's idea of the physical ideal.
Finishing third was
Klaudia Larson who actually bumped her conditioning level up a notch from her Tampa runner-up
placing. A very well-detailed 126 pounds
at check-in, Larson is a favorite of fans with her signature high-peaked
biceps, and deeply-defined quads. Based on her performances this year, she
easily qualifies as the most improved female bodybuilder this year. And she is
on track to make a solid showing at the Olympia. In qualifying for the Ms. O, Larson is the
first Swede (the fifth all-time) to make it to the Olympia stage since Veronica Dahlen in 1988 -
20 years ago. Her third-place finish netted Larson $500.
In equally
exceptional condition, Debbie Bramwell claimed the fourth position and still
appeared to be swooning over her Ms. Olympia invitation from the week before.
At this event Bramwell easily earned the ‘Best Poser' award - even though a
trophy was not handed out for that effort.
She will add plenty of color to the Ms. O in September, just as she did
here. Bramwell's contest weight was 133 ½.
Rounding out the
top five was Italy's
striking Claudia Partenza. Looking much sharper than in Tampa, weighed a solid 124 pounds, looking
much like the bodybuilder she was in winning the IFBB World Amateur
Championships as a lightweight a few years back. Last year at this event
Partenza finished sixth in the LW class.
Sherry Smith Takes the Heavyweight Title.
Only eight contestants made up the heavyweight contingent,
but Oklahoma's
Sherry Smith made short order of the group with a 152-pound package that was
well-balanced and showed excellent muscular detail - especially in her quads
and shoulders. A former overall winner
at the IFBB North American Championships, Smith avenged the fourth place spot
she took at this event a year earlier.
At the 2007 Europa Smith weighed 160 pounds, but her conditioning level
was more in tune with showing the best qualities of her physique. In winning this class the 5-6 Smith earned
the Europa's second Ms. Olympia qualifying spot - and she will happily make her
first appearance at that premier event. Working as a firefighter/paramedic in Oklahoma City, the
victory was a unanimous one in the eyes of the judges and she claimed the
$1,500 check for finishing first.
Oklahoma City made it a one-two punch in this
class when Kim Perez collected the trophy and $1,000 for second place. Weighing
a solid 143 pounds, Perez showed a ‘Murrayesque' upper body on her 5-5 ½
frame. The difference in the two
Oklahomans came by way of Smith's considerably move heavily muscled legs. At a point in time when Perez brings her legs
up to the breathtaking quality of her upper body, she will be a major player at
events such as the Ms. International and Ms. O. As was the case with Sherry
Smith in 2006, Kim Perez earned her pro status at the IFBB North American
Championships in 2005. A week earlier in
Tampa, Perez
finished fourth behind the ‘Tampa Trio' from the lightweight class here. In
placing second, Perez earned $1,000.
Third went to
veteran Annie Rivieccio. Since turning
after winning the overall NPC Nationals in 2003, Rivieccio has been a frequent
entrant in pro events and had her best year in 2006 when she placed third at
the Ms. Olympia. More recently, she has been off her best muscular levels, and
has fallen short of the finished look she has shown so often in the past.
Still, Rivieccio claimed the $500 check for her third place finish.
Finishing fourth
was Sweden's
Irene Andersen in fourth. Equaling her best pro showing - a fourth place finish
at the 2007 Jan Tana Classic in her pro debut - Andersen tipped the scales at a
very well-conditioned 172 pounds on her 5-6 frame. One of the largest active
pro competitors, Andersen was the Swedish champion in 2004.
The final top-five
placing went to Austria's
Jana Linke-Sippl. Like Andersen, Link-Sippl equaled her best showing as a pro
matching the fifth-place showing she claimed at the 2007 Jan Tana Classic.
Linke-Sippl was the event's largest competitor weighing in at a thickly muscled
175 pounds.
No Overall
Promoter Ed Pariso gave two reasons for not selecting an
overall winner. First he stated that he didn't want to further dilute the prize
money that had been divided by the two weight classes.
Second he mentioned
that IFBB administrator wanted to make an effort to keep the time of the event
to a minimum and felt that the additional moments to bring back the class
winners for another judging round and posedown would not be part of the event
schedule when weight classes were contested.
So the 2008 Europa
has two champions - Jennifer Sedia and Sherry Smith. And both are on their way
to Las Vegas
and a date with the Ms. O.
PHOTO GALLLERIES
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