r/AskEurope 5d ago

Sports Are Poles the „fittest“ Europeans?

Currently Poland for the weekend, and It seems like the average pole is either „military buff fit“, or „cyclist endurance fit“. I mean even the dudes with the plumber-bodies despite having a beer-belly, have arms that could lift trucks. That type of „farmer-strength“ build

If Europe ever was to do a similar version of that Netflix show in South Korea „physical: 100“, it should definitely take place here.

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19

u/[deleted] 5d ago

No, check the overweight map

8

u/Ecstatic-Method2369 Netherlands 5d ago

That doesnt look great for all of Europe, sadly.

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u/pannenkoek0923 Denmark 4d ago

Really depends on how they classify overweight. If this map uses BMI then it is worthless.

More than 20% of the country lives in the capital region here and I barely see anyone extra chunky, let alone obese

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u/Regular_Resort_1385 5d ago

Scary that the lowest bracket is max 48...

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u/Jagarvem Sweden 5d ago

The very lowest is Italy coming in at 41.3%. The others in the bracket are closer to that limit.

Being overweight (50.8%) is more common than the category labelled "normal" (47.6%).

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u/Masseyrati80 Finland 5d ago

Thanks for the link!

People have started to criticize the BMI system, but it still does tell a lot on the national and international scale of things.

As an anecdote: I peaked in performance in bicycle racing as I was hovering right at the limit of being underweight in terms of BMI. I was healthiest and happiest, and most capable of trying new sports, when I was smack bang in the middle of the normal weight bracket. And now that I'm tickling the limit of being overweight, long uphills on foot, ski or bicycle feel like struggles instead of interesting and enjoyable challenges.

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u/[deleted] 5d ago

It’s true BMI is a bad indicator when you have a lot of muscle, but the average human doesn’t go to the gym, I’d say most of the people don’t do ANY sports nowadays.

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u/ErebusXVII Czechia 5d ago

At no point in history majority of people did sport. In fact, the amount of people doing any sport was never higher.

But the regular life is much easier and food cheaper - and less healthy.

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u/Jagarvem Sweden 5d ago

BMI is an index, not a health evaluation tool. Sure it could serve as a very basic rule of thumb, but it's not meant to be applied at the individual level. Especially not as some system of weight classification.

It's a population-level statistical tool. It has its limitations and biases, but it is generally fine for averages and trends over a broad population.