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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Geezer Dog! Stump, 10, Best in Show

Posted by John Rothchild

 

Wenig

America is about to fall in love with Stump - the adorable, droopy-eyed spaniel who wowed the crowd at Westminster and became the oldest Best in Show winner in dog show history.

Stump proved an old dog can still pull off some new tricks - and he can count at least one fellow senior among his biggest fans: Dr. Ruth Westheimer. The celebrated sex therapist was in the stands at Madison Square Garden for the competition Tuesday night.

“When I found out he was the oldest to win, I was so happy. I’m 80, and he’s 70 in dog years,” she said.

And there are plenty of other things fans should know about the 10-year-old champion Sussex spaniel, so here we offer the official “Stump Dossier.”

1.  His official name is Ch. Clussexx Three D Grinchy Glee

2.  He was born is Dec. 1, 1998

3.  He is named “Stump” … because he has stubby legs, is brown and resembles a tree stump

4.  He has sired pups named Root, Forest and Myrtle

5.  His favorite chew toy is a plush Grinch doll

6.  He weighs about 50 pounds

7.  He lives in Houston, Texas with the 2001 Best in Show winner J.R., a Bichon Frise

8.  He didn’t train at all for his return to the ring

9.  He is the oldest dog ever to win Westminster, that title was previously held by the 1999 winner, an 8-year-old Papillon

10.  The Westminster show was his 51st career best in show win

Stump is in fabulous shape for his age and will travel the dog world circuit just like the younger pups who’ve held the best in show title

Judge Sari Tietjen said she had no idea the winning spaniel was an elder in the dog world.

“He showed his heart out,” she said. “I didn’t know who he was or how old … I just couldn’t say no to him.”


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Feb
12
2009
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Woman, 56, First to Swim Atlantic

Posted by John Rothchild

Jennifer Figge. who lives far from oceanfront property in Aspen, Colorado, did a one-way from Cape Verde, Africa to Trinidad, beaching herself (February 5) after 21 days in big swells and strong winds. A sailboat tagged along as her watery base camp. 

After some R&R in a Trinidad hotel (staying away from the pool) Figge plans to swim second leg, to the British Virgins. If all goes OK, she’ll reach land later this month.

Back in Aspen, she trained in an outdoor pool during blizzards.

Source: Associated Press, February 8, 2009

Or so we thought! Latest report, Figge swam in a cage pulled along by the boat, she was in and out of the water, so it’s unclear how many hour/miles she actually swam. In athletics, as in finance, the unbelievable often deserves to be called that….


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Feb
08
2009
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Isometric Workout for Retirees On a Budget

Posted by John Rothchild

Stand on a comfortable surface, where you’ve got some room to maneuver.

With a five-pound potato bag in each hand, extend your arms straight out from your sides and keep them up there as long as you can. Try to reach a full minute, then relax.

Each day you’ll find that you can hold the pose for just a bit longer. When it starts to feel easy, switch to ten-pound potato bags.

A week or two later, try thirty-pound bags, then fifty. Eventually, you can lift 100-pound bags in each hand, with your arms outstretched, for more than a minute!

(I’m at this level.)

As soon as you can handle this without straining, put a potato in each bag.

Source: Internet

Feb
03
2009
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