Rogue Invitational
The Rogue Invitational is an annual elite fitness competition organized by Rogue Fitness, featuring top athletes in CrossFit and strongman/strongwoman events that test strength, endurance, and skill through a series of challenging workouts and lifts.[1] Launched in 2019 as a CrossFit-sanctioned event at Rogue's headquarters in Columbus, Ohio, the invitational quickly established itself as a premier showcase for the world's strongest competitors, drawing invite-only fields based on prior performances in major events like the CrossFit Games and World's Strongest Man.[1] The inaugural edition, held May 18–19, 2019, featured men's and women's CrossFit divisions, with Mat Fraser and Tia-Clair Toomey-Orr claiming victory, and included a strongman exhibition that foreshadowed the event's expansion.[1] In 2020, amid the COVID-19 pandemic, the competition pivoted to a virtual format on June 13–14, allowing global participation while maintaining its high-stakes intensity; Patrick Vellner and Tia-Clair Toomey-Orr emerged as champions.[1] The event returned to in-person competition in 2021 at Dell Diamond in Round Rock, Texas (October 29–31), fully integrating a professional strongman division alongside CrossFit, with Justin Medeiros, Tia-Clair Toomey-Orr, and Martins Licis taking the titles.[1] This hybrid format became a hallmark, blending CrossFit's metabolic conditioning—such as AMRAPs, EMOMs, and odd-object carries—with strongman staples like deadlifts, log presses, and stone loads, all customized to highlight athlete versatility.[1] The invitational remained in Texas for 2022 and 2023 (October 28–30 and October 27–29, respectively), where Laura Horvath won her first CrossFit title in 2022, followed by Patrick Vellner in 2023, while strongman saw Oleksii Novikov and Mitchell Hooper prevail.[1] In a significant evolution, the 2024 edition (November 8–10) introduced a dedicated strongwoman division and relocated to P&J Live in Aberdeen, Scotland, honoring the sport's Celtic roots; champions included Jeff Adler and Tia-Clair Toomey-Orr in CrossFit, Mitchell Hooper in strongman, and Inez Carrasquillo in strongwoman.[1] The 2025 Rogue Invitational, its seventh installment, returned to Aberdeen from October 31 to November 2, reinforcing the event's international appeal with a record prize purse of over $1.5 million across divisions and live broadcasts reaching millions.[1][2] Laura Horvath won the CrossFit women's title for the third time, Jeff Adler repeated as men's champion, Mitchell Hooper secured his second straight strongman win, and Inez Carrasquillo retained the strongwoman crown, underscoring the invitational's role in elevating hybrid strength sports.[1] Beyond competition, the event fosters community through fan engagement, equipment innovations from Rogue, and a points system that influences athlete invitations, solidifying its status as a cornerstone of modern fitness athletics.[1]Overview
Founding and Organization
The Rogue Invitational was announced on November 1, 2018, by Rogue Fitness, a leading manufacturer of fitness equipment based in Columbus, Ohio, as a premier invitational event designed to elevate the sport of CrossFit through high-production-value competitions.[3] The event was positioned as a showcase for elite athletes, prioritizing exceptional production standards, athlete welfare, and spectator engagement to distinguish it from other competitions in the fitness landscape.[4] Initially structured as a CrossFit-sanctioned competition, the Rogue Invitational adopted an invitational format where top performers qualified based on results from the CrossFit Open, prior CrossFit Games finishes, or an online qualifier to fill remaining spots, resulting in fields of 20 individual men, 20 individual women, and 10 teams of three athletes each for its 2019 debut.[3] The event offered a total prize purse of $400,000 across all divisions, with $50,000 awarded to each individual champion and additional bonuses for event wins, underscoring its commitment to substantial financial incentives for participants.[5] Qualification emphasized proven elite-level performance, ensuring a competitive field that included reigning CrossFit Games champions and emerging talents.[6] Rogue Fitness served as the primary sponsor, organizer, and host, leveraging its headquarters in Columbus for the inaugural event, while partnering with CrossFit, Inc. to secure official sanctioning status through 2020, which qualified top finishers for the CrossFit Games.[4] This collaboration highlighted Rogue's role in advancing the sport's professional ecosystem, though the event later evolved independently, expanding in 2021 to incorporate strongman competitions alongside CrossFit.[7]Competition Categories and Format
The Rogue Invitational encompasses multiple competition categories designed to showcase elite fitness and strength athletes across various disciplines. The primary divisions consist of individual men's and women's CrossFit competitions, which have formed the event's core since its launch, featuring 20 athletes per gender in recent years such as 2025. A teams category, involving co-ed groups of three athletes, was featured exclusively in the 2019 inaugural event to highlight collaborative performance under scaled conditions. The Legends division, introduced in 2019 for veteran or retired CrossFit athletes over 40, provides a showcase for sport icons and has continued annually through 2025, often in a team-based format with modified workouts to accommodate experience levels.[1][8][9] In 2021, the event expanded to include a strongman category for top male competitors, selected based on international rankings from organizations like the World's Strongest Man circuit and prior elite performances. The strongwoman category joined in 2024, similarly inviting leading female athletes via global strength rankings or targeted qualifiers to promote gender parity in heavy lifting disciplines. These strength categories typically feature 10-12 athletes each, focusing on traditional strongman implements like logs, axles, and stones.[1][10] Qualification for CrossFit divisions relies on the Rogue Points System, which awards points from major events like the CrossFit Games and Wodapalooza over a three-year depreciating lookback (100% current, 75% prior, 50% two years back, 10% three years), with a minimum of 10 athletes per division selected this way; the remainder qualify directly through "The Q," an online event with three workouts submitted via video for judging. Athletes may also receive direct invites based on prior Games results or exceptional Open rankings. For strongman and strongwoman, invitations prioritize top world rankings, with occasional spots from regional qualifiers or event-specific performances to ensure competitive fields.[11][12][13] The general format unfolds over three days, with 6 to 10 events per category tailored to test diverse skills—endurance, strength, and gymnastics in CrossFit, and raw power in strength divisions. Scoring varies by event type: CrossFit workouts award points inversely to placement (e.g., 100 for first, decreasing to 1 for last), based on fastest times or highest reps; strongman events rank by total weight lifted, reps with fixed loads, or carries, aggregating placements for an overall score where the lowest total determines the winner. Ties are broken by head-to-head event results or heaviest lifts.[14][1][15] Prize distribution has grown substantially to attract top talent, reaching a total purse of $1.4 million by 2021 across all categories, with allocations scaling by division size and placements—first place often exceeding $200,000 in CrossFit by 2025, while strongman and strongwoman share proportional shares from the overall fund.[16][17][18]History
Early Years (2019–2020)
The inaugural Rogue Invitational took place on May 18–19, 2019, at the Rogue Fitness headquarters in Columbus, Ohio, marking the company's first major self-organized CrossFit-sanctioned competition.[19] The event featured a deep field of elite athletes, including 19 men and 20 women in individual competition, eight teams, and 16 legends competitors, with eight events for individuals, seven for teams, and four for legends. Mat Fraser claimed the men's title, while Tia-Clair Toomey won the women's division.[7] Drawing thousands of in-person spectators, the competition was complemented by high-tech live streaming production, allowing global audiences to follow the action in real time.[19] Originally scheduled for May 15–17, 2020, in Columbus, the second edition faced significant disruptions from the COVID-19 pandemic, leading to the cancellation of in-person plans and a full pivot to an online format held June 13–14. This virtual event included 18 men and 18 women competing from their home gyms or chosen locations worldwide, with six individual events broadcast via live video feeds from over 40 sites and an "Event Tracker" system for real-time scoring.[20] Patrick Vellner emerged as the men's champion, and Tia-Clair Toomey repeated as women's winner, demonstrating adaptability amid the constraints.[7] The shift to online required athletes to adhere to strict Rogue equipment standards for consistency, such as standardized barbells, plates, and rigs, ensuring fair play without a central venue.[21] This adaptation highlighted the event's resilience while maintaining its CrossFit focus, with strongman elements introduced only in subsequent years.[1]Expansion and Modern Era (2021–2025)
Following the challenges of the virtual 2020 edition, the 2021 Rogue Invitational returned to an in-person format at Dell Diamond in Round Rock, Texas, from October 29 to 31, signaling a key step in the event's post-pandemic recovery and expansion. This year introduced a strongman category for the first time, featuring five events such as the Elephant Bar Deadlift and Cyr Bell Ladder, with Martins Licis claiming the inaugural title after a consistent performance across the competition. The CrossFit divisions maintained their focus on elite athletes, drawing a field of 20 men and 20 women qualified through top CrossFit Games finishes and a dedicated qualifier process.[22][23] The event continued to grow in 2022 and 2023, remaining at Dell Diamond with an extended four-day schedule from late October to early November, which allowed for expanded programming including 10 CrossFit events per gender and six strongman events testing overhead strength, loading, and carries. In 2022, Oleksii Novikov dominated the strongman field, while 2023 saw Mitchell Hooper secure his first strongman title with victories in events like the Texas Deadlift and Frame Carry, highlighting the category's rising competitiveness. These editions attracted 20 athletes per CrossFit division annually, fostering deeper rivalries among top performers and contributing to increased global viewership through live streams on platforms like YouTube, which reached hundreds of thousands of concurrent watchers.[24][25] A major milestone came in 2024 with the relocation to P&J Live in Aberdeen, Scotland, from November 8 to 10, marking the event's first international hosting to broaden its appeal beyond North America and accommodate growing European interest in strength sports. This edition added a strongwoman category with six events mirroring the men's, such as the Deadlift Ladder and Yoke Escalator, won by Inez Carrasquillo after excelling in half the disciplines. The move supported partnerships with local venues and broadcasters, enhancing accessibility, while the athlete fields remained at 20 per CrossFit gender, with strongman and strongwoman each featuring 10 competitors.[26][27] The 2025 edition, held from October 31 to November 2 at P&J Live in Aberdeen, reinforced the event's international stature with repeat champions across categories: Laura Horvath won the women's CrossFit title for the third time, Jeff Adler repeated as men's champion, Mitchell Hooper repeated as strongman winner, and Inez Carrasquillo secured back-to-back strongwoman victories. This second year in Scotland underscored the Invitational's evolution, with sustained fields of 20 CrossFit athletes per gender and expanded strong(wo)man lineups, alongside boosted global engagement through dynamic prize structures tied to fan participation that distributed over $1 million in total payouts. The relocation and format innovations have solidified the event's role as a premier hybrid competition, drawing diverse international talent and viewership.[28][29][30][31]Event Details
CrossFit Workouts
The CrossFit workouts at the Rogue Invitational integrate endurance, gymnastics, and weightlifting to comprehensively assess athletes' functional fitness, typically spanning multiple days with a mix of metabolic conditioning (metcons) and maximal effort tests. These events emphasize varied movement patterns, such as rowing, running, barbell complexes, and bodyweight skills, to simulate real-world demands while challenging competitors' pacing, recovery, and technical proficiency.[14] Common workout formats include As Many Reps As Possible (AMRAP), Every Minute On the Minute (EMOM), and chippers, which test sustained output under fatigue. In AMRAPs, athletes maximize rounds or reps within a fixed time, as seen in the 2022 "Heavy Grace" event, which consisted of 30 clean-and-jerks at 225 lb (men) / 165 lb (women) for time.[32] EMOMs demand completing prescribed reps at the top of each minute, promoting consistent effort and rest management, with examples from qualifiers incorporating dumbbell snatches and bike calories. Chippers require working through high-volume reps in sequence, often descending scales, such as the 2021 Event 1 "GoRuck," which required wearing a 30 lb ruck pack to complete wheelbarrow pulls (275 lb men / 175 lb women), 10 over-under log passes, 5 rope climbs, and 3 sandbag carries (50 lb men / 35 lb women) up a hill, for time.[33] These formats ensure a balanced evaluation of speed, power, and endurance across the CrossFit spectrum.[34] All equipment is sourced from Rogue Fitness, the event's sponsor and manufacturer, including specialized barbells (e.g., Ohio Bars for Olympic lifts), multi-functional rigs for gymnastics, rowers, assault bikes, and odd objects like sandbags or kettlebells for functional carries. Scaling adjusts weights and volumes by category—lighter loads for women and legends divisions compared to elite men—to maintain equity while preserving workout integrity.[36] The structure has evolved from 8 events in the 2019 inaugural edition, focused on core metcons and lifts, to 10 events in 2022 for broader testing of skills like handstand walks and heavy complexes, with recent years (2023–2025) standardizing at 9 events to optimize recovery and spectator engagement.[37] Scoring prioritizes completion time for workouts finished under the cap, with partial efforts ranked by total reps; ties are resolved via tiebreakers like the fastest initial round or heaviest successful lift in hybrid events.[38]Strongman and Strongwoman Events
The Strongman competition was introduced at the 2021 Rogue Invitational as a dedicated category showcasing elite male athletes in power-based challenges, with the Strongwoman division debuting in 2024 to include top female competitors under similar formats but with load adjustments. These events emphasize raw strength through isolated heavy lifts and carries, typically comprising 5 to 6 disciplines per edition, distinct from the metabolic demands of CrossFit workouts.[7] Common event types include deadlifts, yoke carries, log presses, stone series, and frame carries, with variations across years to test different aspects of strength. For instance, the 2021 edition featured an Elephant Bar Deadlift as the opening event, where athletes performed a one-rep maximum (1RM) using Rogue's proprietary thick-grip barbell designed for increased challenge. Subsequent editions incorporated yoke carries combined with overhead log presses, such as the 2022 medley requiring a 50-foot yoke traversal followed by multiple log lifts, and stone series like the 2025 Mons Megs Stones event involving loading progressively heavier Atlas stones over a distance for time. Frame carries, often as a grip-endurance test, appear in formats like power drives or sled pushes in later years, such as the 2025 Power Drive combining frame elements with pulling.[39][40][10] All implements are manufactured by Rogue Fitness to ensure standardized, competition-grade quality, including custom yokes, logs, stones, and frames built for durability and precision. Weights are scaled according to gender and athlete divisions, with men's events featuring heavier loads—for example, log presses exceeding 150 kg (approximately 330 lbs) in early editions, escalating to 360 lbs in 2021 yoke-log medleys—while strongwoman events use lighter equivalents to match physiological differences.[41] Strongwoman events mirror the strongman structure but incorporate adjusted loads and occasional modifications for safety and equity, as seen in the 2024 debut with lighter yokes in the Yoke Escalator (e.g., starting at reduced weights compared to men's 1,000+ lbs setups) and deadlift ladders scaled down from men's maximums around 750 lbs. Early strongman competitions from 2021 to 2023 featured combined men's fields without a separate strongwoman category, fostering direct head-to-head competition among top male athletes.[42][10] Scoring across events is performance-based, awarding points for metrics such as maximum weight lifted (e.g., in deadlifts), distance or time completed (e.g., in yoke and frame carries), or repetitions achieved (e.g., in log or Viking presses), with the highest performers earning the most points per discipline. Total points are aggregated over all events to determine overall standings and champions, using a placement system facilitated by the official Strongest platform for real-time tracking.[43][10]Results
Overall Champions
The Rogue Invitational has crowned overall champions in the men's and women's CrossFit divisions since its inception in 2019, with strongman added in 2021 and strongwoman in 2024. These victors are determined by cumulative points across multiple events, showcasing elite athletic performance in strength, endurance, and skill. The following table summarizes the champions by year and category.[1][29]| Year | Men's Champion | Women's Champion | Strongman Champion | Strongwoman Champion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | Mat Fraser | Tia-Clair Toomey | N/A | N/A |
| 2020 | Patrick Vellner | Tia-Clair Toomey | N/A | N/A |
| 2021 | Justin Medeiros | Tia-Clair Toomey | Martins Licis | N/A |
| 2022 | Justin Medeiros | Laura Horvath | Oleksii Novikov | N/A |
| 2023 | Patrick Vellner | Laura Horvath | Mitchell Hooper | N/A |
| 2024 | Jeffrey Adler | Tia-Clair Toomey | Mitchell Hooper | Inez Carrasquillo |
| 2025 | Jeffrey Adler | Laura Horvath | Mitchell Hooper | Inez Carrasquillo |
Podium Finishes by Category
The Rogue Invitational's individual categories have seen intense competition, with athletes vying for top-three placements across CrossFit men's and women's divisions since 2019, and strongman and strongwoman events from 2021 and 2024 onward, respectively. Podium finishes highlight recurring rivalries and dominant performances, such as Patrick Vellner's multiple titles in the men's CrossFit category and Mitchell Hooper's strongman reign starting in 2023. Close point differentials, like the 15-point margin separating the top three men in 2022, underscore the event's competitiveness.[46]CrossFit Men
The men's CrossFit division has featured a mix of established stars and rising talents, with Canadian athletes Patrick Vellner and Brent Fikowski frequently challenging for podium spots. Justin Medeiros achieved back-to-back victories in 2021 and 2022, while Jeffrey Adler's 2024 win marked his emergence as a consistent top performer, often edging out rivals by narrow margins.[47][45]| Year | 1st Place (Points) | 2nd Place (Points) | 3rd Place (Points) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | Mat Fraser | Patrick Vellner | Cole Sager |
| 2020 | Patrick Vellner | Björgvin Karl Guðmundsson | Noah Ohlsen |
| 2021 | Justin Medeiros | Patrick Vellner | Jeffrey Adler |
| 2022 | Justin Medeiros (735) | Chandler Smith (720) | Jeffrey Adler (715) |
| 2023 | Patrick Vellner (660) | Jeffrey Adler (640) | Roman Khrennikov (610) |
| 2024 | Jeffrey Adler (750) | Brent Fikowski (715) | Jayson Hopper (670) |
| 2025 | Jeffrey Adler (715) | Justin Medeiros (685) | Roman Khrennikov (665) |
CrossFit Women
Tia-Clair Toomey dominated the early years with three consecutive wins from 2019 to 2021, establishing her as the category's benchmark. Laura Horvath then secured back-to-back titles in 2022 and 2023, with a tight rivalry against Toomey evident in 2024's second-place finish for Horvath. The 2025 podium reflected emerging depth, with younger athletes like Alex Gazan challenging veterans.[50][44]| Year | 1st Place (Points) | 2nd Place (Points) | 3rd Place (Points) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | Tia-Clair Toomey | Sara Sigmundsdottir | Annie Thorisdottir |
| 2020 | Tia-Clair Toomey | Sara Sigmundsdottir | Kara Saunders |
| 2021 | Tia-Clair Toomey | Laura Horvath | Brooke Wells |
| 2022 | Laura Horvath | Tia-Clair Toomey | Brooke Wells |
| 2023 | Laura Horvath | Tia-Clair Toomey | Emma Cary |
| 2024 | Tia-Clair Toomey | Laura Horvath | Arielle Loewen |
| 2025 | Laura Horvath (760) | Alex Gazan (675) | Lucy Campbell (625) |
Strongman
Introduced in 2021, the strongman category has showcased elite lifters, with Mitchell Hooper asserting dominance since his 2023 debut, winning three straight titles through 2025 and often tying or narrowly defeating competitors like Tom Stoltman in multi-event formats. Early events highlighted international rivalries, such as the 2021 battle between Martins Licis and Tom Stoltman.[51][10]| Year | 1st Place (Points) | 2nd Place (Points) | 3rd Place (Points) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | Martins Licis (45) | Tom Stoltman (42) | Oleksii Novikov (34) |
| 2022 | Oleksii Novikov (49.5) | Trey Mitchell | Mitchell Hooper |
| 2023 | Mitchell Hooper (42) | Tom Stoltman (40) | Mateusz Kieliszkowski (31.5) |
| 2024 | Mitchell Hooper (54) | Hafthor Björnsson (44) | Tom Stoltman (44) |
| 2025 | Mitchell Hooper (52) | Trey Mitchell (45.5) | Tom Stoltman (38.5) |
Strongwoman
Debuting in 2024, the strongwoman division quickly established Inez Carrasquillo as its leading figure, with her back-to-back wins highlighting superior consistency in events like deadlifts and stone loads. The 2025 competition saw repeat podium appearances for Olga Liashchuk, reflecting growing parity among top athletes.[55][56]| Year | 1st Place (Points) | 2nd Place (Points) | 3rd Place (Points) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | Inez Carrasquillo | Olga Liashchuk | Lucy Underdown |
| 2025 | Inez Carrasquillo (50) | Olga Liashchuk (43.5) | Angelica Jardine (39) |