Retirement has not dulled Iain Valliere‘s eye for competitive bodybuilding. The Canadian veteran, who stepped away from competition in September 2023 after a career spanning over a decade, has turned his attention to analyzing the sport he left behind. With firsthand experience on the Olympia stage and multiple pro victories to his name, Valliere’s perspective on the 2026 Detroit Pro carries considerable weight.
Valliere’s competitive background gives him a credible lens through which to evaluate Men’s Open talent. Having debuted at the Mr. Olympia in 2018 and achieved his best career placement of 7th in 2021, he understands what separates contenders from pretenders at elite-level shows. His picks for the Men’s Open division at the Detroit Pro reflect an emphasis on conditioning and stage-ready presentation — qualities he himself prioritized throughout his professional career.
In Classic Physique, Valliere’s connection to the division runs deeper than casual observation. His brother-in-law, Chris Bumstead, is the dominant force in Classic Physique, and their shared training environment has given Valliere an intimate understanding of what the division demands. That proximity shapes how he evaluates competitors vying for placement at a regional pro show like the Detroit Pro, where emerging talent often surfaces before larger stages.
Valliere retired at 32 after qualifying for the 2023 Olympia through his win at the Toronto Pro Supershow, choosing to exit on his own terms rather than through injury or declining results. He cited a waning motivation rather than any health concern, a distinction that preserved both his credibility and his standing within the community. That clean exit has since allowed him to engage with the sport as an informed outsider.
His amateur roots began in 2010, and he earned his IFBB Pro card in 2014. By the time he retired, he had accumulated wins at the New York Pro, Tampa Pro, Texas Pro, and Toronto Pro Supershow, among others. That record positions his competitive analysis as something more than opinion — it reflects the perspective of someone who competed at the sport’s highest levels. Born on November 27, 1990, Valliere brought a lifelong dedication to athleticism that shaped his approach to both competing and evaluating the sport.








