The Borneo Post

Baby boomers show not odd to compete at older age

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NEWS stories about older athletes are often a study of novelty. The implicatio­n that “old people” shouldn’t be competing at a high level - or any level - can ring through each paragraph: The fact that they are active at all should amaze us.

George Haywood has a problem with this narrative.

Haywood, a 63-year- old District of Columbia native, strongly believes that high-performing athletes in their 40s, 50s, 60s and beyond are not an oddity. He should know: He won the gold medal in the 300-metre hurdles at the World Masters Athletics Championsh­ips this summer in Lyon, France, with a time of 45.31 seconds (for context, 25year- old Nicholas Kiplagat Bett, the 400-metre hurdle winner at the IAAF Track and Field World Championsh­ip in Beijing, won in 47.79). The masters athletic championsh­ips fielded more than 8,000 runners from 98 countries in all categories of track and field.

Nancy Avitabile doesn’t feel like an oddity, either.

At 67, Avitabile, who lives in Bethesda, Maryland, and has competed in triathlons since her 50s, won the women’s Olympicdis­tance 65- 69 category at the World Triathlon Championsh­ip in Chicago this September.

Gregory Chaconas wasn’t alone in running the Marine Corps Marathon in Washington as an older athlete. ( This autumn’s race was his 27th MCM.) More than 11,000 masters runners, as the category is known – for racers, 40 and older – finished this year. John Corbet, the most senior runner at 82, clocked in at just a few minutes over six hours.

Chaconas, 70 and also from the District, finished in 4: 32: 23, eighth in the men’s 7074 category. He estimates he’s completed about 110 marathons, 90 of those after turning 40.

Masters athletes are showing it’s not a novelty to compete at an older age. Rather, it’s an opportunit­y to reach their potential.

“We baby boomers are very concerned with physical and mental decline,” Haywood said. “What many of us do not realise is how much of that decline is avoidable if one does the right things.

“You are exerting a little extra effort to change your momentum. Your angular momentum is changing because running straight is easier than running around a curve.”

Haywood was explaining how he properly paces himself to clear the hurdles on both the straightaw­ay and the curved parts of the track. Although Haywood ran hurdles in high school, it was only when he started competing in masters track at 50 that he began to understand how to train - or, as Haywood said, knowing how to use the curves, both on the track and in life, to your advantage.

It’s true that the body begins to lose its agility and strength as it ages. Studies find that VO2 max levels (the measuremen­t of how much oxygen a person can use while exercising) begin to decline in the 30s and 40s, and it’s worse for those who lead sedentary lives. Those who engage in regular exercise help slow the breakdown of the body.

But the notion that masters athletes can feel stronger in their 60s than their 30s can be met with skepticism. Yet Haywood, a private investor in his day job, says he is faster now than he was as a student in 1969. Avitabile, who owns an accounting business, is reaching new levels in her strength training, and Chaconas, a retired federal employee, still runs 30 to 40 miles a week.

Although these individual­s are in the older levels of the masters- athlete category, they aren’t late bloomers when it comes to athletics. Avitabile and Chaconas began to run marathons during the racing boom of the ‘ 70s. Chaconas

We baby boomers are very concerned with physical and mental decline. What many of us do not realise is how much of that decline is avoidable if one does the right things.

George Haywood, 63-year-old athlete

ran in the first Marine Corps Marathon, in 1976, finishing in just over three hours. In addition to running hurdles in high school, Haywood stayed active as an adult by playing tennis and swimming.

Even still, masters athletes have to adjust with age.

Charlie Brown, a sports psychologi­st based in Charlotte, North Carolina, said masters athletes have to deal with the mental shift of working smarter, not harder. “You are one of the most incredible machines, organisms, in the world, but you have to take care of the hardware,” he said. “And the hardware requires more maintenanc­e.”

This comes in both training and recovery and knowing the value in both. Good training requires variety; for instance, interval training becomes more important as athletes get older.

Good training also includes preventive maintenanc­e, such as warm-ups and cool- downs during workouts, stretching, hydration, and fuel-loading after a workout.

Brown said masters athletes have to come to grips with the physical changes that come with ageing. Those who decide to get back into strenuous physical activity after a period of inactivity run a major risk of injury. When Haywood first started to train for masters track, he approached his workouts with a competitiv­e fervour. But - like those who, as he put it, “have the flashback to their glory days in high school” and go all out - he got injured. It took him two years to finally get to his first masters track race.

When it comes to injury, the question for masters athletes is not “if,” but “when” - and how long will it take to recover.

“I can’t snap back like I used to,” Chaconas said. “I tried to do two marathons close together, but I messed up and miscalcula­ted. In the past, I could have gotten away with that, but not anymore.”

Brown says that recovery becomes more crucial to the athlete’s success.

“Training doesn’t make you stronger. It breaks you down,” Brown said. “The way you get stronger is by recovery, and a younger body recovers faster than an older body.”

Finding a coach also can help in finding the balance between what an athlete wants to do and what is realistic. Avitabile credits her coaches at Bethesda Sport& amp; Health with helping her find that sweet spot in her training. “The thing is that as you get older, it takes a long, long time to recover from an injury, so you don’t want to do anything stupid.”

As athletes get older, time and energy are at a premium, so good management is essential. Energy management “is about understand­ing pacing and checking the ego,” Brown said. “If you’re serious about winning, the only time you have to be in the lead is at the finish line.”

Regardless of age, the motivation for competing is the same for anyone who runs races: winning, beating your opponents, getting a faster time. What’s different for masters athletes is that life experience works on their behalf to push through. As Avitabile said: “I’ve gotten stronger mentally as I’ve gotten older. I can push my body for longer and harder. A lot of it is physical training, and a lot of it is mental. It’s saying, ‘ Yeah, I can do this, I can dig deeper.’ “

She said the mental endurance that comes with life experience is necessary because the physical endurance is harder to come by.

“When I was younger, competing came easy and I was like, ‘ Meh,’ “she said. “It’s harder to get to the finish line now. But it feels great.”

Haywood said he feels his best days are ahead of him. He plans to compete in a 400-metre dash in Florida next month. He’s always looking for ways to improve.

“It’s fascinatin­g to lower your times. There’s always another goal out there,” Haywood said. “I don’t have any individual world records. I don’t know if I could, but I would like to try.” — WPBloomber­g

 ??  ?? Gregory Chaconas, 70, just notched his 27th Marine Corps Marathon, which he finished in 4:32:23, eighth in his category. Part of his success stems from knowing how to recover. — WpBloomber­g photos
Gregory Chaconas, 70, just notched his 27th Marine Corps Marathon, which he finished in 4:32:23, eighth in his category. Part of his success stems from knowing how to recover. — WpBloomber­g photos
 ??  ?? George Haywood, 63, took home the gold in the 300-metre hurdles at the World Masters Athletic Championsh­ips this summer in Lyon France. Mental and physical decline, he says, “is avoidable if one does the right things.”
George Haywood, 63, took home the gold in the 300-metre hurdles at the World Masters Athletic Championsh­ips this summer in Lyon France. Mental and physical decline, he says, “is avoidable if one does the right things.”

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