Tomasen has since written off fame and fortune, and makes a far more modest living on the streets of Havana and at nearby beach communities when collecting tips from impromptu shows.
On a recent summer morning, the squat, lean 32-year-old chewed on a half-smoked cigar and wowed a crowd by doing push-ups on his bent wrists with a man on his back.
Then he returned to beating himself with his sledgehammer, studiously pounding every joint in his arm to the winces of onlookers.
“It's all real, nothing fabricated,” said Edward Carbonell, who watched Tomasen in awe.
“He did some push-ups with me on [his back].”
Tomasen said he is content to serve as an inspiration for those who strive to break barriers and has no regrets about leaving behind a potential career in boxing.
“They have offered me millions of dollars to get back into it because they know my potential, and I have always said no,” he said.
“I want to be remembered as someone who pushed the limits of what was possible.”
Reuters
Cuba’s ‘Ironman’ beats himself with a sledge hammer and survives unscathed
Image: REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini
On a leafy boulevard in downtown Havana, a man is beating himself with a sledgehammer on his wrists, elbows and forearms, drawing a crowd of passersby who gather to film the spectacle with their phones.
What shocks the crowd is not the apparent self-mutilation, but rather that he appears to come away unscathed.
Cuban “Ironman” Lino Tomasen said he once aspired to be the next Mike Tyson, training to become a professional boxer by subjecting himself to millions of blows with the hammer, and eventually moving from the Caribbean island to fight in Mexico City.
“I had 27 matches won by knockout, but I retired because in the last of them I fractured the skull [of my opponent] and he died instantly,” the stocky Tomasen recalled in an interview with Reuters in Havana.
“I gave away all the money I made in my fights to his family,” he said, estimating the sum to be more than $100,000 (about R1.9m), a huge amount of money for most residents of Cuba.
“I vowed never to fight again.”
Tomasen has since written off fame and fortune, and makes a far more modest living on the streets of Havana and at nearby beach communities when collecting tips from impromptu shows.
On a recent summer morning, the squat, lean 32-year-old chewed on a half-smoked cigar and wowed a crowd by doing push-ups on his bent wrists with a man on his back.
Then he returned to beating himself with his sledgehammer, studiously pounding every joint in his arm to the winces of onlookers.
“It's all real, nothing fabricated,” said Edward Carbonell, who watched Tomasen in awe.
“He did some push-ups with me on [his back].”
Tomasen said he is content to serve as an inspiration for those who strive to break barriers and has no regrets about leaving behind a potential career in boxing.
“They have offered me millions of dollars to get back into it because they know my potential, and I have always said no,” he said.
“I want to be remembered as someone who pushed the limits of what was possible.”
Reuters
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