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The Senior Games

The first National Senior Olympic Games were held in 1987 with 2,500 competitors. Now, the Games have over 10,000 competitors each year.

Some, like John Anoka, 80, of Florida, and Lynne Lund, 60, of California, have never competed nationally before. Others, including Richard Davies, 64, of Tennessee, are prior medal winners in the international arena.

"When you participate in the Senior Games, you get a feeling from year to year that you really aren't getting older," says Davies, who brought home gold from the 1964 Olympics in Tokyo. "Senior Games gives me an opportunity to compete again on a national level and maybe one of these days on an international level."

Bouncing Back Better Than Ever

After leaving amateur athletics and launching a successful career at Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co., Davies stayed in shape and played tennis. When he retired and moved to the mountains, he learned about the Senior Games. A bout with prostate cancer motivated him to begin competing again.

"If I could keep some distance or times or improve upon them, that meant I wasn't going downhill but progressing," Davies says. He has surpassed his expectations, throwing the javelin farther than he has since college.

Like many older athletes, Davies competes in several events: basketball, tennis, badminton, and track and field. Although competition stays intense and winning medals is important, for most of the athletes, the games offer more than a chance to prove they are the best.

"There's an interesting camaraderie that I never experienced in college or international competition," says Davies.

From Fan to Dedicated Athlete

If it were not for people like Davies, Lund may never have become an international champion.

"One of the reasons I was able to go back in the pool after my first swim meet and do a second one a year later was that everybody was so positive," Lund explains. Lund has competed in the Senior Olympics and Masters Swimming.

Lund's husband, Harry, fueled the family interest in the games when he began playing basketball.

"I hadn't even been in a pool for two-and-a-half years," she explains. "I started working out and swimming a half mile twice a week, and I got a couple of my friends doing it."

She now spends four or more hours a day, Sunday through Friday, in the gym and pool at Loma Linda University. The hard work has paid off, in medals and personal satisfaction. Her current times surpass those she had in high school. She holds a gold medal from a world Masters' event.

"I'm pleased with what has happened with my body," she says. "There's a thing called endorphins, and they work. It's a high you get from exercise, and it sticks with you."

Just Plain Fun

Lund says competing in the Senior Games has enriched her life in other ways. She and Harry have met several new friends who share their love of exercise and sports. Even when shoulder surgery temporarily forced Lund from the pool, people she had met through swimming gave her a needed boost.

"I was surprised how many calls or messages I got from people I had met around the country and the world," Lund says. "That recognition and acceptance is probably the strongest I have ever had in my life."

RESOURCES::

National Senior Games Association
http://www.nsga.com

CANADIAN RESOURCES::

Canadian Senior Games Association
http://www.canada55plusgames.com/

REFERENCES::

History of NSGA. National Senior Games Association website. Available at: http://www.nsga.com/about-nsga/history-nsga. Accessed August 19, 2011.



Last reviewed August 2011 by Brian Randall, MD
Last Updated: 8/19/2011

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