
Ex-World's Strongest Man Eddie Hall shares incredible throwback aged 13 as fans refuse to believe he's a child in pic
EDDIE HALL has left fans stunned with an incredible throwback picture.
The former World's Strongest Man looked unrecognisable in old photos he has dug up and posted on social media.
4
4
Hall, 37, weighed a staggering 195kg (31 stone) during his Strongman days.
And the 6ft2in giant has seemingly always been a man mountain.
In old snaps posted on Facebook, he is stood topless with a chain around his neck, a pierced nipple and cream trousers on.
Hall captioned the image: "13-years-old and on the doors."
And in another photo, he shows off his ripped physique alongside his brother and dad.
The throwback images have wowed fans and many refuse to believe he is aged 13 in the first picture.
One said: "You must be kidding me."
Another joked: "Thirteen years old grown man."
BEST ONLINE CASINOS - TOP SITES IN THE UK
A third commented: "Thirteenth birthday bash at working men's club after 30 pints."
Hall was a competitive swimmer who competed in the UK Nationals when he was a youngster - even setting a British record for his age group in the pool.
But at his peak, Hall won the prestigious World's Strongest Man competition in 2017 and set a world record by completing a 500kg deadlift.
The legend has gone into fighting in recent years and scored a knockout victory in 30 seconds over Mariusz Puzianowski in his first MMA bout earlier this year.
Hall shed 45kg (seven stone) from his heaviest weight for the clash, ditching his 12,000-calorie-a-day diet to be a lean machine in the octagon.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Times
35 minutes ago
- Times
Keir's kitchen sink drama (that wasn't just a big act after all)
J ust seven minutes stood between the sweat-saturated mass of pasty flesh in the mirror and my profound need to be in a visual state to not scare people over their dinner on national television. Sloughing the glistening moisture from my torso with paper towels in the men's loos as my long-suffering producer, Ryan Thrussell, didn't quite know where to look was the definition of being 'a bit tight on time' for my show. Ryan raced through the running order and list of guests as I hastily dabbed down the inevitable results of one of the hottest days of the year, the 12.58 from Uttoxeter via Derby running more than half an hour late, and a sprint from the Tube by a profoundly unfit 41-year-old. As Ryan handed me a dry shirt and I inserted my earpiece, we both knew the prime ministerial interview I had chased for four months was recorded, almost ready to go, and this was just a temporary, albeit rather damp, interlude.


Times
35 minutes ago
- Times
The Liz Hurley effect: she unites families (as well as selling bikinis)
Y ou have to hand it to Elizabeth Hurley. Thirty-one years since we first encountered her on Hugh Grant's arm at the premiere of Four Weddings, she's still making headlines with a different boyfriend, Billy Ray Cyrus, but has the same cleavage. This weekend she debuted her latest look: sexy matriarch, queen of the blended family, bringer of peace where once there was Cyrus family strife. She posted a picture on Instagram of her son, Damian, 23, standing close to Cyrus's daughter, Miley, 32, with the hashtag 'proud parents'. 'This is what rock'n'roll is all about!' commented Billy Ray, somewhat implausibly. 'The kids are together SO PROUD.' The kids were indeed together at the West End premiere of Something Beautiful, Miley's new 'visual album' of music (translation: video). Miley's mother, Tish, was married to Billy Ray, for 20 years, and she has described their 2022 divorce as a 'really difficult, dark time' for the family. Half her family weren't on speaking terms at one point, she has said, but she was working on that.


Times
35 minutes ago
- Times
Madeleine Kasket obituary: publicist who brought stars to Classic FM
When Classic FM launched in 1992, its programme controller, Michael Bukht, realised that regular appearances by famous cultural figures would help to cement the new broadcaster's reputation. Around the same time, he received a letter from a middle-aged, unemployed classical music publicist asking if there might be opportunities for secretarial work at the station. Bukht asked Madeleine Kasket to come and meet him, and told her that, if she could guarantee the regular presence of big names, she had a job. It was an inspired appointment. Over the next few years a steady stream of well-known guests made their way down the glass-and-wood staircase that led to Classic FM's basement studios in Camden Town, north London. Dame Kiri Te Kanawa, Yehudi Menuhin, Sir Colin Davis and Andrew Lloyd Webber were among those welcomed by interviewers including Susannah Simons, Margaret Howard and Paul Callan. Kasket was soon spreading her net wider, inviting writers, businesspeople and fashion designers. Those who at first declined were worn down by persistent rounds of telephone calls and letters; when the designer Sir Hardy Amies eventually came in, he described Kasket as 'imperious, but delightfully bloody-minded'. Madeleine Kasket was born in London in 1934. Her father Maurice was a violinist, whose band was resident at the fashionable London nightclub Ciro's. He would play a summer season in Bournemouth, where his aunts kept a Kosher hotel. Her mother, Fay, encouraged her to study hard at Maida Vale High School. When she was 13 her parents moved into a flat adjacent to the school in Morshead Mansions. Later she took over the lease of the rent-controlled apartment, and lived there continuously for more than seven decades. After school came a spell working as a secretary, then in 1956 she was spotted by the society photographer Baron, who included her in his 'Top Ten Beautiful Profiles', a series he was shooting for the Evening Standard. 'He was obsessed with my neck,' she recalled, 'making me balance awkwardly on a piano stool, pushing my head forward so as to recreate Queen Nefertiti's famous pose.' Relishing the taste of fame that publication of the pictures brought, she decided to try her hand at acting, following in the footsteps of her older brother Harold, who was to enjoy a long career on stage and screen. She made her debut alongside Harold in Clive of India, an episode of Sunday Night Theatre broadcast on BBC Television in December 1956, in which she played 'the Indian fruitseller'. More prominent parts in The Avengers, Danger Man and the children's series Garry Halliday followed; she also appeared as a contestant in the ITV version of the American quiz Dotto, hosted by Jimmy Hanley. She was in demand as a date for balls, parties and dinners. On Dotto she wore what the Daily Herald described as a 'dazzling nine carat-gold sari', a gift from one of her consorts, the handsome and hugely wealthy Maharaja of Baroda, Sir Pratap Singh Rao Gaekwad. Her acting career having stalled, in the 1960s she worked for the fashion designer Mary Quant (obituary, April 14, 2023), combining occasional modelling with the role of assistant to the sales director. Kasket was a confident French speaker, having been taught as a child by an émigré Romanian neighbour, and soon found herself making regular trips across the Channel couriering Quant's pret-a-porter lines to the boutiques of Paris. In 1969 she moved into public relations, joining the classical division of the record label RCA. With a generous expense account, she was able to entertain clients at her favourite restaurants and fly critics and journalists on trips to Europe to watch recording sessions. The roster of artists she helped to look after included the pianist Van Cliburn, the singers Leontyne Price, Sherrill Milnes and Plácido Domingo, the guitarist Julian Bream (obituary, August 15, 2020) and the flautist James Galway. 'She always had the strongest contacts with the company's artists,' recalled the late critic Edward Greenfield in an article marking her 60th birthday. 'Never one to fawn, she treated them all with a refreshing directness.' She recalled that the Polish-American pianist Arthur Rubinstein was always formal: 'It was years before he would call me Madeleine rather than Miss Kasket.' They were at the Savoy Grill together when she spotted Ava Gardner dining alone, and quickly realised that Rubinstein's presence gave her a golden opportunity to meet the actress. 'I went over to Gardner and asked if she would care to meet my guest. She said yes and a jolly fun lunch followed.' Kasket was in the RCA offices in Curzon Street in the mid-1980s when the harmonica virtuoso Larry Adler dropped by. He had been asked to present a classical music programme on Capital Radio, and needed some recordings. After an hour or so browsing the shelves, he left with a bag of albums and a date for dinner in his diary. Adler and Kasket went on to live together for a decade; he moved into her Maida Vale flat, and the pair travelled widely, often on cruises where Adler would perform and talk about his friendships with stars including George Gershwin, Fred Astaire and Vivien Leigh. In 1994 Bream, Galway, the cellist Julian Lloyd Webber, the soprano Lesley Garrett and the actor Fenella Fielding (obituary, September 13, 2018) were among those who took part in a gala benefit concert in Kasket's honour at the Palace Theatre. She retired from Classic FM a few years later. Her last three years were spent in a Jewish care home in Golders Green. She had shed most of her possessions on leaving Maida Vale but kept close at hand a radio, a fridge stocked with champagne, a family menorah and several of Adler's old mouth organs. Madeleine Kasket, actor, model and music publicist, was born October 10, 1934. She died on May 30, 2025, aged 90