
Each sport has that announcer that serves because the “voice.” It could possibly be a hoop announcer, commentator, or analyst, however if you say the title of a sport, you may hear that voice in your head instantly. On the earth {of professional} bodybuilding, that voice is none aside from Bob Cicherillo. “Bob Chick” has been sharing his “advices” on podcast, contest recaps, and he’s been the MC for the Olympia since 2006.
Cicherillo joined Dennis James, Milos Sarcev, and Chris Cormier on the most recent episode of The Menace Podcast to lend his voice on a variety of subjects, together with one other function that he’s held for fairly a while – the Athlete’s Rep for the IFBB Professional League. After going through criticism on one other podcast, he instructed the panel that he isn’t one for taking a victory lap after conducting one thing for the athletes he represents.
“I don’t publicize it, and I don’t put stuff out to pat myself on the again for all of the issues we’ve performed,” he mentioned. “Quite a lot of these adjustments had been made a few years in the past as a result of there was a variety of s*** that was fallacious a few years in the past.”
A degree of competition that Sarcev talked about was that the posing spherical was faraway from being scored, and he felt many athletes didn’t agree with that call. Cicherillo defined why the Professional League opted to make that call, and why it’s been in place since.
“It’s by no means been scored the way in which it ought to have been,” he defined. “It obtained to some extent that it was so poorly performed, that it bit the mud. It was a make-up spherical for years. There have been individuals that ought to have gained the spherical all issues thought-about (that didn’t.)”
The dialogue additionally lined prize cash for athletes, totally different divisions, crossover athletes, a much more. You’ll be able to see the total interview as properly different bodybuilding roundtables from TMP by subscribing to the Muscle & Fitness YouTube channel. New episodes air each Sunday at 3 PM Japanese time.