Rousseau Picks Running Over Reclining

Posted by John Rothchild


Pioneer Press

It’s impossible to determine whether Ed Rousseau has greater amounts of enthusiasm or stamina.

One thing is certain: The passionate and long-winded Rousseau has another jewel on his running crown.

A 67-year-old retired project manager from Minneapolis, Rousseau is a moving testament to the joys of Long Distance Running, three words in Rousseau’s world that deserve capitalization.

“A guy’s got to run or head for a recliner,” he explained. “I’ll take running.”

Rousseau runs like many people dine, voraciously and daily. He establishes an annual schedule that always includes the Twin Cities and Grandma’s marathons, the Edmund Fitzgerald 100-kilometer race and several 24-hour races, with a fixture being the FANS 24-hour event at Lake Nokomis, just a few blocks from his home.

In addition, he travels to Park Rapids, Minn., where for nearly two weeks every month he works on a lake home he has been building from the ground up. He works inside and out on the place, then takes a daily break to run.

As if that’s not enough, every year Rousseau focuses on one significant ultramarathon. This year, he chose the Ultracentric 48-hour race Nov. 17-19 in Grapevine, Texas.

For Rousseau, a veteran of several six-day races, you could almost label the little two-day event a “fun run.” But there are two things wrong with that designation: Every time Rousseau runs it’s a fun run, and every time he races it’s a helter-skelter dash in search of fast times and state or national records.

Here’s how Rousseau readied himself to run 48 hours on a 2.4-mile loop along park roads: He set the U.S. 65-69 age-group record for his 100-mile time in the Cornbelt 24-Hour race in Iowa last spring, then logged 91 miles at his 17th consecutive FANS race, then placed third in his age group in 3 hours, 56 minutes at Grandma’s in Duluth (”my slowest Grandma’s time ever”), finished seventh in his age group in 3:44 at his 25th consecutive Twin Cities Marathon and then covered the 62 miles of the Ed Fitz along Minnesota’s North Shore in 13 hours (”a disaster”).

After that impressive string of events and before the Ultracentric, he had five weeks “to heal and train.”

“I ran short, hard training runs with my YMCA New Marathoners training class, and they inspired me,” he said. “I did long runs of up to six hours on indoor tracks at the YMCA and at Bemidji State University near my cabin. I ran wooded trails with steep hills.

“I felt strength and speed and endurance coming back.”

The field was just 20 for the 48-hour event at the Ultracentric, where the U.S. 24-hour championship was also contested. Also entered were two threats to Rousseau’s age-group dominance, but he demonstrated his focus as he allowed several participants to move in front of him early while he stayed with his formula of running interspersed with fast walking plus regular stops to stretch.

“I adopted this method a few years ago, when I found I could still run the same pace and be pain-free after six or more hours,” he said. “Otherwise, if I just run steady, I’ll really slow down with creeping leg pain after several hours.

“It’s tempting to run with the other runners early on, but I know I’ll catch and pass a lot of them in 12 or more hours.”

These are only numbers, but if you think about them for a moment … holy cow!

Rousseau cruised through 24 hours with 100.8 miles behind him and set off for Day 2. A few 10-minute naps revived him as “Fast Eddie,” as he signs his e-mails, pushed ahead at a less rapid pace. But he was unstoppable.

“Ed was amazing,” said Kristine Hinrichs of Milwaukee, who ran the 24-hour event. “He just kept moving.”

Late in the race, Rousseau eclipsed the U.S. age-group record of 158.8 miles held by Michael Allen of Arizona. He kept chugging and finished second overall, claiming a national-record distance of 166.3 miles and a warm handshake from Allen, who was there.

“Michael told me he was pleased to be at the event where he could meet the runner who ultimately broke his record,” Rousseau said, “and for me, it was a real treat to meet him. What a gentleman. The visits we had and the hug we shared after the race were as significant to me as anything that happened during the race.”

Four days after returning home, Rousseau was back to his old habits, running around Lake Nokomis and preparing for 2007. He’s planning to do “some snowshoe races, add long training runs and probably shoot for a 24-hour race or possibly a six-day race in April,” he said.

Neither the enthusiasm nor the speed has waned for Ed Rousseau.

Bruce Brothers can be reached at bbrothers@pioneerpress.com.


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Oct
05
2009
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Soccer Fossil Scores First goal at 109

Posted by John Rothchild

(By Emerald Catron, Lemondrop 9/29/2009)

You might imagine that once you’re old, the only “firsts” you have to look forward to involve medical procedures and great-great-great-grandkids. But at 109 years old, Anna Ferris just scored her first soccer goal

Word started spreading about Anna last year, when she finished a 100-meter dash at the Orange County Senior Games in her walker. This past weekend at the 2009 games she managed to smack a softball 15 feet, throw one 16 and lob a football more than 3 yards. Every event is another chance at victory for this sprightly centenarian (not to be confused withAnna Faris, the similarly-named starlet of “House Bunny“). 

In addition to her athletic endeavors, Anna enjoys chocolate and good wine. Not bad for someone who was born before the crossword puzzle was even invented.

Her family attributes Anna’s good health to the fact that she exercises to stay strong, sometimes taking to the driveway to do laps with her walker. That officially makes her more athletic than we are.


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Oct
05
2009
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Nun, 60, Running “Keys 100″ in Her Habit

Posted by John Rothchild

 Source: Cammy Clark, Miami Herald -5/15/2009

Race: 100-mile marathon from Key Largo to Key West, 43 bridges. 

Entrants: 65 people running solo, 265 in relay teams

Notable: Sister Mary Elizabeth Lloyd, wearing her full-length black habit.

Resume: New Jersey native, high school track team, joined a Catholic order (Religious Teachers Fillipini) in 1967, devotes her life to helping women and children, especially orphans whose parents died of AIDS. 

Sidekick: Lisa Smith-Batchen, extreme marathoner bit by a scorpion in a Sahara Desert 100 miler, ignored the pain, finished the race

Why the nun garb: “When people ask me ‘why in God’s name’ are you doing this? I can say ‘for the orphaned children’.


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May
15
2009
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Cycling Fanatic, Goodbye

Posted by John Rothchild
British cycling hero Harry Hill, the oldest surviving male winner of an Olympic medal, died Feb 5, 2009. He was 92.

Hill won bronze in a team race in 1936, at the Games that made Jesse Owens famous. He got his first bike at 13, and the boy from Sheffield showed serious speed in time-trials. At 20, he made the British Olympic squad. Too poor to buy a train ticket to London, to join the rest of the team, he cycled the 200 miles on the racing bike he took to Berlin.

He spent his last cash on a souvenir jacket, so on his triumphant return to Britain, he cycled back to Sheffield.

“He was very proud of his medal and always kept it safe,” he son, Hedley Hill, remembered.

After the Olympics, in 1937, Hill broke a world record on a indoor track in Milan: the first cyclist to go 25 miles in an hour. In World War II, he built submarines, then went into the garage business. He biked every day, and competed in local club races.

To celebrate his retirement at 65, he spent five weeks cycling 2500 miles from New York to Vancouver and back. At 80, he sprinted all-out for an hour, competing against his earlier self, who’d set the record in Milan. He went 23.5 miles, just 1.5 short of his all-out effort at 21.

In 2002, Hill fell of his bike in Spain and fractured his hip. That ended his life in the saddle. In 2005, he met the Queen and Prince Philip at Buckingham Palace, part of a centennial celebration for British Olympics. In 2006, a bike path he’d lobbied for was opened with his name on it. “His whole life was cycling and everything hinged on that.”

Source: Bury Times

 

 

 

 

 


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Feb
27
2009
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Granny Oakley and Other Olympic Oldies

Posted by John Rothchild

The NY Times weighed in on “older-than-usual” Olympians: some medal winners, some looking ahead to London, 2112. Dara Torres’ exploits well-publicized, and 41 is too young for Offtheirrockers. Same for Constantina Tomescu-Dita, oldest women’s marathon winner, at 38. Ivan Millar qualifies at 61, won silver on horseback for Canada’s equestrians. My first reaction was “big deal, he was sitting on a horse”, but balance, focus, eye-rein coordination favors youth, amazing he’s on top of the game at his age.

 Jeannie Longo-Ciprelli, a tad shy of 50 (49) deserves mention for her fourth-place finish in time-trial racing: going full-speed on a bike, and beating most of the world’s best half her age, there’s a big deal for her and for France.

Israel’s Haile Satayin, 48 or 53, depending on which ID you believe, came in 69th in the marathon, not too bad when you clock in at 2:30.07 and the 68 in front of you are the world’s best, plus you’ve got an injured leg. 

Luan Jujie, 50, Canadian fencer, 32nd in women’s individual foil.

Iain Murray, 50, Australian, 14th in keelboat racing. 

Nick Skelton, 50, British equestrian. 

Richard Johnson, 52, U.S. flew through the first round in archery.

Libby Callahan, 56, oldest U.S. woman in the Games, 25-meter pistol. Granny Oakley!

Susan Nattrass, 57, Canadian trap shooter.

Laurie Lever, 60, Australian equestrian. In horse years, 15 generations between rider and steed.

Oldest Olympian on Beijing roster: Horoshi Hoketsu, 67, Japanese dressage. Doesn’t rule out a 2112appearance in his 70s–in horse years, 10-15 generations between him and the animal.

 

 

Hiroshi Hoketsu. (David Heckar/AFP/Getty Images)

“I will try my best to ride as long as possible,” Mr. Hoketsu said after the games. 

Times’ piece by Tara-Parker Pope. 8/25/2008

http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/08/25/golden-and-silver-oldies-at-the-olympics/#more-503


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Nov
01
2008
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Take Me Back to The…

Posted by John Rothchild

Bob Scambree, 51, a minister from Missouri, now playing second-string linebacker for the Westminister (Minn.) College Blue Jays–no age barrier in Division III football. Says he’ll live the dream through the entire season, then stop knocking helmets.


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Oct
10
2008
0

Gridiron Gramp

Posted by John Rothchild

Too old to play college football? Not Mike Flynt. Thirty-seven years after he was kicked off the team for fighting, he went back to Sul Ross State, made varsity. A grandfather, eight years older than the coach, his two kids older than any of his teammates, played the 2007 season.


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Oct
01
2008
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Jumping to a Different Drummer

Posted by John Rothchild

Weia Reinboud is a self-described anarchist, lesbian, abstract artist, jazz saxophonist who eats vegan-organic and studies dragonflies. She comes from the Netherlands. The least interesting thing about her, given the above, is that she set a world high-jump record for 50 year olds. Source: www.masterstrack.comnews2002/dec2.html


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Oct
01
2008
0

He Bikes, She Bikes, at 72/92

Posted by John Rothchild

British retiree (’pensioner” in Britspeak) Bert Brett logs 250 miles a week on the bike–or so he claimed in a recent media report. Even if he exaggerates the mileage (I do, when I’m in brag mode) it sounds like he’s got a bad case of OCGBE (ob/com geezer bike disorder). Anyway, he’s 73, and in perpetual training for time-trial races. His wife Elsie pedals at home on a stationary bike. As of this post, she’s 90-plus.

At 20 years her junior, Bert’s the boy toy. He took up cycling a decade or so ago; does he bike to avoid things? Avoidance is a big part of the geriathletic revolution–endorphins make us feel good and compulsion takes us away from grim subjects. Anyway during the day he bikes to Cardiff and back home to Merthyr; then walks four miles and lifts weights. “I don’t see age as much of a barrier”, he said. “I sometimes beat men in time trials who are half my age, but we don’t tend to dwell much on how old anybody is.” He credits a vegetarian diet and his spartan regimen for “still feeling as though I’m 18 or 19 in my mind.”


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Sep
30
2008
0

It’s a Bird, It’s a Plane, It’s….

Posted by John Rothchild

Why the skydive crowd at the far end of the actuary tables? Better to end life with a bang, hitched to ropes, than waste away in a gurney bed, hitched to tubes? Survive the fall and you’re rejuvenated; don’t survive and you’re liberated, like the Indian who flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest. With a death-defying leap, you can forget your age: momentarily or permanently. No  there’s a crowd at the static line and if you don’t, you’re liberated, like the Indian who flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest. So the parachute, the hang glider, the parasail provide two ways to forget your age, momentarily or permanently. No wonder there’s a crowd on the static lines and age records don’t stay unbroken for long. Oldest skydiver, at the moment, is Australia’s Frank Moody. In 2004, the 101-year-old was in a pub minding his beer when bar mate egged him into a sky dive. His 3000-meter tandem drop with instructor Karl Eitech landed Moody in the Guinness Book of Records. Eitech said it was strange to jump with a man who was alive before planes were invented. Moody said he was pushed.

www.abc.net.au/perth/stories/s1134109.htm

 The same year Moody took his record dive, his female equivalent, 100-year-old Estrid Geertsen broke the woman’s record, strapped to an expert over Roskilde.

Meanwhile, in the parachute department, a diminutive 92-year-old with fake knees, a hearing aid, and no prior plummets, donned his flight suit and exited a plane at 3500 feet.  “I always wanted to parachute but my wife wouldn’t let me,” said the ex-pilot, Herb Tanner. “She died last year.”

Then there’s Milburn Hart, who tried to break the solo sky-dive record at 96 (in 2005, over Brementon, WA) and lived to tell the story.  Jim Foreman, NBC News, Seattle, brought Hart back to the studio to watch the video clip. Here’s part of their running commentary:  

FOREMAN:  Hart did not go readily, but had to be coaxed out of the aircraft. And once off, the jump didn’t go quite as planned.

Hart: I sort of slipped and hit my shoulder on the plane. And that’s what caused the problem.

Foreman: Hart dislocated his shoulder as he left the plan and could not control his left arm. He had no way to steer his way into the landing zone…As the ground came rushing up at him, so did deadly obstacles, like trees, buildings, and power lines. Somehow, he missed them all, and landed in a patch of shrubs.

HART: I was trying to get me as soft a place as I could to land…See, I was going 80 miles an hour when I went in there. And that’s pretty fast. It wasn’t a real landing. It was a landing to save my bacon.

FOREMAN: Despite hitting face first, Hart’s only injury was from hitting the plane at the start of the jump. Hart is still waiting to hear from the folks at the Guinness Book to see if his jump in fact gives him the record. At the very least, he has a great story to tell around the retirement home.

HART: I think it wasn’t a bad deal. It could have been worse. 

On the women’s side, oldest female chutist, Sylvia Brett, 80, pulled the rip cord over Bedfordshire, England in 1986. She made Guinness. 

 http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/local/204473_jump20.htm

 


Mar
13
2008
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