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From: Ike Groff
To: Lesley Groff
Subject: Fwd: (WPT) `Do Or Decline': An Athlete's Age May Be Less Important to Performance Than
Persistent Practice
Date: Sat, 04 Feb 2017 18:09:06 +0000
Sent from my iPad
Begin forwarded message:
From: Will Ford
Date: February 4, 2017 at 8:26:12 AM EST
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Subject: (WPT) 'Do Or Decline': An Athlete's Age May Be Less Important to Performance Than
Persistent Practice
`Do Or Decline': An Athlete's Age May Be Less Important to Performance Than Persistent Practice
Friday, February 3, 2017 10:40 AM
by Ginny McReynolds
Feb. 3 (Washington Post) -- For three decades, Joseph Baker has been swimming, cycling and running in
triathlons some would call punishing. Baker, 47, is also a professor of exercise sciences.
As he competed in races as a younger man, he would watch people of all ages alongside him, and he soon
became fascinated with the parameters of human performance. Why could some 70-year-olds compete in
triathlons and some got winded walking up a flight of stairs?
He wanted to know whether age decline is a result of simply getting older or being sedentary. In other words:
Are we racing against time, or are we racing against ourselves?
[Older Americans are most happy in Hawaii, least happy in West Virginia, according to new Gallup ranking]
Baker points to a seminal 1996 study from Stanford University analyzing age-related decline that looked at
areas such as the number of muscle cells, DNA repair, fingernail growth and physical activity. The finding was
that there is a 0.5 percent decline per year, a statistic he says has served as the biomarker of the aging process.
Since that time, Baker and his colleagues at York University in Toronto have dedicated their research to
determining how much of that decline is out of human hands, and how much we can control. Baker leans
heavily toward the latter.
He studies people in their 60s and 70s as they play handball, particularly the goalkeepers, reaching, grabbing
and lunging into the air to stop the ball from going into the net.
"Their motor skills may have declined a bit, and they might be a little slower," Baker said. "But if they've kept
up the practice, they can be as good as any elite athlete."
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Baker honed his interest in aging athletes as he received his PhD in applied exercise and then continued his
studies in exercise epidemiology as a professor and head of the LifeSpan Health and Performance Laboratory
in the School of Kinesiology and Health Science at York. He and colleagues from the departments of
psychology and nursing founded the university's Center for Aging Research and Education (YU-CARE) in
2008.
The idea was to study athletic performance beyond the development of muscles and skill. Baker's goal was to
study aging from a broad perspective "rather than the negative, disease-focused approach that typically
happens," he said.
"Our attitudes about older people, even when we age into this group, have been built on a life history where
older people are thought of as less capable and less interesting," said Baker. "And it's very hard to deconstruct
these beliefs. We used to think that development ended at adulthood, but we know now that it happens across
the life span."
Aging is a reality, he said, but "we all have potential for growth."
Attempts to study the aging process over long periods are time-consuming and costly. Baker and his colleagues
have found it useful to study masters athletes, older adults beyond the peak age of performance in their
respective sports, like swimmers or golfers.
Because so many measures are taken and records kept in sporting events, it gives researchers data to track over
time. It also allows them to examine what is possible when an individual is in top condition.
Baker conducted a study in 2007 that examined 96 golfers who played on the PGA tour for at least a dozen
years. Detailed PGA records showed that, although the golfers' driving distances declined, their putting skills
did not. Baker saw this as a win for the notion that cognitive, perceptual and motor skills do not have to suffer
if people stay active.
In a 2010 study titled "Do or Decline," published in the Journal of Health Psychology, Baker and four other
Canadian researchers sampled more than 12,000 people. Questions covered everything from health conditions
to cognitive capacity to social engagement and physical activity. Results showed that "inactivity was a much
stronger predictor of functional limitations than either chronic disease or being socially unengaged with life."
Baker says these findings indicated that physical activity, "even at moderate levels," creates and enhances
optimal physiological, psychological and social conditions. This improvement in a person's psychological state
is important, Baker says, because older people sometimes believe they are declining simply because that is the
stereotype associated with aging.
Baker's emphasis on stereotypes in overall health and fitness of older people points out a key piece of the aging
puzzle. "Self-efficacy, your belief in your ability to achieve an outcome is very important for predicting
performance outcomes and a person's behavior," he said.
[People who possess this one thing enjoy much better health as they age]
Some people might have given up exercise because they are "too old," while others are reluctant to begin it for
the same reasons. The result is the same. If people have been sedentary for a few years, the body isn't going to
function nearly as well as if they'd been practicing some kind of sport for that time.
He reached this conclusion in his studies of elite athletes — those golfers, in particular — concentrating on
how they practice and maintain their skills.
"Their performance didn't really change much as they moved through their careers," he said. "Skills that take a
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long time to acquire seem to be much more stable as we age than other skills or capabilities."
The more we practice any complex skill, such as playing hockey, Baker says, the easier it is to maintain that
skill. But the older we get, the less likely we are to practice skills we learned long ago.
"If we've learned something, we often think we've learned it as well as we're ever going to learn it," Baker said.
"In truth, there is really no good evidence to support that."
Case in point: those older handball goalkeepers. Baker and his colleagues delight in seeing them still able to
anticipate their opponents' movements and, even as they acknowledge their slower motor systems, see potential
for growth. Jorg Schorer, one of Baker's co-researchers on the handball court, acknowledges that the player
might take longer to get to the ball, but "we're still exploring the extent to which this slower movement is the
result of age versus lack of practice."
Baker doesn't think it's too late, even for the most inactive. Though he doesn't advise jumping up and joining
him in a triathlon, either.
"The key here is to be careful and systematic in how you approach this," he said. "Start slowly and have a
realistic plan on how you will develop your capabilities over an extended period of time. Just don't let negative
images of aging and getting older be the measuring stick for your experience."
If you enjoyed this story on Inspired Life, you may also like:
Want to experience the deep, mystical sleep of our ancestors? Turn off your lights at dusk.
-0- Feb/03/2017 15:40 GMT
Topics Most Read News - All (READ)
(Click here to view this story in Bloomberg.)
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