LONDON – Feats ranging from the most alternating single-arm handstands in one minute to solving the most rotating puzzle cubes while skateboarding are being celebrated in this year’s Guinness World Records Day.
With the theme of ‘Super Skills’, the 19th annual event has prompted people across continents to set new milestones for what is humanly possible.
While skateboarding around a skateboard park, British student and speedcubing champion George Scholey solved 500 rotating puzzle cubes handed to him by helpers.
In Japan, Junji Nakasone rolled three basketballs from one outstretched arm to the other across his chest 56 times.
“Guinness World Records Day is a global celebration of the superlative so it’s a chance for everyone around the world to have a go at getting their name in the famous Guinness World Records book,” said Craig Glenday, editor-in-chief of Guinness World Records.
“We’ve all got skills, we’ve all got party tricks but are they good enough to make it into the Guinness World Records book. Are they extreme enough? We see hundreds of attempts in lots of different countries.”
In Dubai, Ammar Ahmed Alkhudhiri and Abdulla Saeed Alhattawi combined two skills. One performed a wheelie on a quad bike, with the front wheel off the ground as the other sat on top bouncing a football on one foot 70 times.
Alkhudhiri also did 87 consecutive football touches in 30 seconds while hanging from a bar with one hand.
Nicolas Montes de Oca from Mexico scored three titles: most single-arm handstands in one minute (male) with 23 repetitions, most handstands in one minute (male), totalling 41 repetitions, and most alternating single-arm handstands in one minute, with 32 repetitions.
In Orlando, Florida, Dinesh Sunar did 21 backward somersaults while blindfolded in one minute.
In China, cyclist Zhang Jing Kun took the title of most bunny hops to rear onto a bar in one minute, springing over the hurdle 14 times on his bike.
Here's a list of all the incredible records broken so far on #GWRDay!https://t.co/24JaQX6y73
— Guinness World Records (@GWR) November 10, 2022
This article was first published in Asia One . All contents and images are copyright to their respective owners and sources.