“Older” Women Move


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Yes, we do.

 Take a lesson from 91 year old marathoner Hariette Thompson.

And Anne Garrett, who at age 80 set a Half Marathon record and then at 81, set a 5K record.

There’s also 99 year old Ida Keeling who sprinted to a 100m World record.

According to this NYTimes article:

Men, as might be expected, get slower as they age. At a recent five-kilometer race in Pine Beach, N.J., which drew nearly 1,000 runners, the fastest man was 24 years old and the men’s times increased with each five-year age group.

But the women were different — their times were all over the place with older women beating younger women in almost every age category.”

But with average runners, he said, older women may be faster because, oddly enough, they are trying harder than younger women and discovering for the first time what they are capable of.

Most middle-aged women grew up when track and cross-country teams were for men only. Some of those women, who had no opportunity to race when they were young, are just learning to be athletes and are running faster than younger women who may not care as much.

Have you read Margaret Webb’s book, Older, Faster, Stronger?

According to Joe Friel in his book, Fast After 50:

Aging doesn’t mean runners have to stop racing. It also doesn’t mean they have to slow down. High intensity workouts and strength training could be the keys to staying competitive. 

Now let’s get personal.

I started running at age 55.  I happily finished my first 5k at 37:36. At age 61, I PRed with a time of 27:11 and I plan to improve on that this year!

Biggest Loser 5K Run Walk

I ran my first Half Marathon at age 57. My finish time was 2:28:27. My most recent half marathon time was 2:09:40.

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Yes, we “older women” move!!

Stockadeathon 15K

imageHappy Running! Do you have examples of older women who move?

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18 thoughts on ““Older” Women Move

  1. You know i love this post! I started running at 57 (almost 58) and turned 61 in December. I have had the same trajectory of improved times, but do realize that at some point they may not improve. But that won’t keep me from trying! Rock on old lady runners, we are a tough bunch!

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Love every part of this post!! The only race I haven’t PR’d this year is my 5k. I completely identify with realizing our potential later in life. It’s motivating to hear other people’s stories! Congrats on all your success!!

    Liked by 1 person

  3. AMAZING! I love how so many women “find” running in their 30s, 40s and beyond.
    At 31 I ran my first half and full marathon. At 35 I cut 13 minutes off my half and 29 minutes off my full marathon time. I plan to continue pushing myself to see exactly what this body is capable of.
    Rock on with your badass self! 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  4. You do NOT look your age and you’ve been smokin’ it with those PRs lately. I’m proud to be an “older” runner. It’s fun when you pass youngsters in a race and they look at you like…what???? I hope I’m smart enough to be able to run for years and years to come.

    Liked by 1 person

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