Following a lengthy and rigorous verification process, the Guinness World Records organisation officially validated the new achievement of George Kotsimpos in the category “Most decline push-ups on medicine balls in one minute (male).”
During the attempt, which took place in Heraklion, the Greek fitness athlete, who lives, trains, and works in Crete, completed 83 valid repetitions within one minute. This achievement marks a major milestone in his career, as it represents his 14th Guinness World Record overall.
The significance of breaking the record for a third consecutive time
This distinction is not an isolated accomplishment, but the result of a systematic and continuously evolving training journey. It is the third consecutive time that Kotsimpos has broken the world record in this highly specialised category, gradually pushing the limits of the discipline:
- Initial record: 76 repetitions
- Second record-breaking performance: 79 repetitions
- New world-best performance: 83 repetitions
This continuous progression (76 → 79 → 83) highlights the importance of the achievement. At this elite level of athletic performance, even adding a few extra repetitions requires months of targeted preparation, neuromuscular adaptation, and strategic optimisation.

The high technical difficulty and the importance of the number “83”
The category of decline push-ups on medicine balls is internationally recognised as one of the most demanding tests of explosive strength and endurance due to its complex technical requirements.
According to experts in the field, the true physical strain and level of difficulty of this exercise cannot be fully understood without personally attempting it. This fact gives the achievement of 83 repetitions exceptional significance by global standards.
The main factors contributing to the difficulty include:
- Extreme instability: The athlete’s body is supported entirely on the unstable surface of medicine balls, requiring exceptional neuromuscular coordination and constant activation of stabilizing muscles to maintain balance.
- Increased physical load: The decline position (with the feet elevated higher than the hands) transfers a greater percentage of body weight onto the shoulders and upper chest, dramatically increasing resistance.
- Speed and power demands: Maintaining a pace exceeding one repetition per second, while adhering to strict execution standards, requires elite levels of explosive strength and lactic endurance.
- Strict total-disqualification rule: Psychological and physical pressure intensifies due to Guinness regulations stating that any fall or loss of contact with the medicine balls before the completion of the 60 seconds results in automatic disqualification of the entire attempt. This means that even if the athlete achieves an exceptional score, losing balance before the timer ends nullifies all previous repetitions.

International dominance on unstable and stable surfaces
With the ratification of his 14th title, Kotsimpos further establishes himself as the world’s leading athlete in the field of push-ups performed on unstable surfaces.
The athlete is already widely recognised in the international community for two equally iconic explosive-strength performances:
- The world record for push-ups on medicine balls, with 112 push-ups in one minute.
- The world record for one-leg-supported push-ups on medicine balls, with 101 push-ups in one minute.
Based on these achievements, he is the only athlete in history to surpass the barrier of 100 repetitions per minute on medicine balls, a historic milestone he has accomplished three separate times.
At the same time, his athletic success extends equally to stable-ground disciplines. In the past, Kotsimpos has also recorded world records in hand-release push-ups as well as tandem push-ups, performed in collaboration with his long-time training partner, Apostolos Dervas.
Kotsimpos stated regarding the official validation of the record: “The achievement of 83 repetitions was the result of a long-term and rigorously structured training process. Surpassing my own previous best performance for the third time confirms that the limits of human endurance and explosive strength can be pushed further through systematic work and absolute dedication to technical precision.”