Going for the Gold in the Golden Years
By Amy Zipkin, NY Times, Sept. 16, 2016
Three times a week David Gladfelter, an 80-year-old semiretired lawyer, dons a swimsuit, goggles and cap. For the next hour, varying his strokes, he swims 80 laps at a community center pool.
Earlier this year, he traveled from his home in southern New Jersey to the Bronx, where he placed first in three events among 80- to 84-year-olds in a United States Masters swim meet. After more than three decades in the water, he now concentrates on maintaining momentum.
“If you don’t keep it up, times are slowing, swimming becomes more difficult,” he said. He travels up to 20 days a year, entering as many as a dozen competitive meets.
The weekend after Labor Day, Mr. Gladfelter raced unopposed in several competitions in the New Jersey Senior Games to qualify for the National Senior Games, a biennial athletic competition for adults over age 50. Sponsored by the health care company Humana, the next big event will be in Birmingham, Ala., in June 2017.
At the last National Senior Games, held in Minneapolis, nearly 10,000 participants competed in 19 sports--not just swimming and running but also little-known contests like pickleball and retirement standards like shuffleboard. The first National Senior Games nearly 30 years ago drew 2,500 contestants.
These athletes may not capture the headlines at the Rio Olympics and earn big rewards like Michael Phelps, Usain Bolt and Simone Biles. But that isn’t stopping many fitness-oriented older Americans from undertaking rigorous training and testing themselves in competitions.
“The focus is on fun, fitness and fellowship as opposed to financial reward,” Marc T. Riker, chief executive of the National Senior Games Association, said in an email response to questions.
Senior Games are now held in 49 states; North Dakota is joining in 2017. The organization, which is based in Baton Rouge, La., has a partnership with the United States Olympic Committee to foster national interest in sports.
Mr. Riker estimates that 200,000 older athletes compete in these organized games at the local, state and national levels. Some, like Mr. Gladfelter, also participate in masters competitions. While their reasons for participating vary, the late-in-life athletes generally praise the benefits of competition and sportsmanship.
Their dedication sets them apart. In the most recent American Time Use Survey, released last fall by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the typical adult over age 65 averaged 25 minutes of exercise a day. Those 75 and older reported only 12 minutes.
Candace Kennedy-Hess, 62, who lives in Bucks County, Pa., was a cyclist and surfer in her 20s but “hung up the bike between 40 and 55” to concentrate on work and family, she said.
But when her daughter learned that she had breast cancer seven years ago, Ms. Hess entered a charity event, a 75-mile road race sponsored by the Livestrong Foundation. Out of shape, she walked the bike up hills. “I finished the race,” she said.
Now she travels around the country competing in about 25 races a year, training five to six days a week by riding one to three and a half hours daily.
She retired two years ago and works part time in marketing. Cycling can be expensive, she concedes. Her most recent bicycle, one of six, cost $12,000.
Ms. Kennedy-Hess races against women of all ages. “Young 20-year-olds literally decimate me,” she said. At national competitions, older athletes inspire her. “I’d love to have a long life and still be active.”
She qualified in Connecticut for the National Senior Games. In Birmingham, she expects to defend her titles in the women’s 20-kilometer and 40-kilometer races.
Ms. Kennedy-Hess’s return to cycling doesn’t surprise Thomas Prohaska, dean of the College of Health and Human Services at George Mason University who has studied what motivates older adults to exercise. “A big predictor of exercising when you’re older is if you did it when you were younger,” he said. For older athletes, exercise becomes part of their identity, he added.
Pickleball has become a way of life for Hubert Townsend, who will turn 66 on Oct. 6 and played collegiate tennis and table tennis at the University of Wyoming. The sport, which had 2.5 million devotees last year, according to the Sports and Fitness Industry Association, a Silver Spring, Md., trade group, is played on a badminton court, with a lowered net, using oversize paddles and a Wiffle-like ball instead of a shuttlecock. (By comparison, there are 18 million tennis players.)
“It took about 30 seconds to pick up,” said Mr. Townsend, who is on the court 15 to 20 hours weekly. As a volunteer, he travels around Wyoming to promote the sport at clinics for the USA Pickleball Association. An estimated two-thirds of the players are over age 60.
During a recent visit to his son in Sioux City, Iowa, Mr. Townsend played every day. In June, he flew to an advanced clinic in North Carolina to improve his game.
Although athletes need to compete in only one state competition to determine national eligibility, Mr. Townsend expects to play in four: Wyoming and Colorado this past summer, and Nevada and Utah in October.
The final stop on his current itinerary is St. George, Utah, a desert community near the Arizona border. He is already registered for the Fall Brawl, a pickleball tournament sponsored by the city. He considers it a warm-up to the Huntsman World Senior Games, also in St. George, which is an annual sports mecca for seniors.
“It’s a big, joyful picnic of old friends,” he said. The 13-day extravaganza, to be held Oct. 3-15, is expected to draw nearly 11,000 participants who will compete in 30 sports and attend social events and entertainment, some provided by the athletes.