Virtual Lift Off
By Steve Gardner
IAWA vs Covid-19 Virtual Lift Off
By Steve Gardner
IAWA vs Covid-19 Virtual Lift Off
By Bill Clark
A few months ago, Clark’s Gym kicked off a challenge to anyone in the world age 40 and older to do a different lift for each year of their life. The challenge is called “Lift Your Age.”
For such an effort, Clark’s Gym sends you a certificate of achievement – a simple, unframed piece of parchment worth less than the postage required to mail it. But, like an Olympic medal, face value is not important. It is the effort made to beat the challenge.
The latest to “Lift Her Age” was a 57-year-old recently recovered cancer victim from Lee’s Summit named Amorkor Ollennuking.
She joins Boone County’s Northern District Commissioner, Janet Thompson, as the only two women to accept the challenge and win. Thompson is the senior one of the two – at age 63.
Unlike Thompson, who had never been in a weightlifting meet of any kind in her 63 years, Amorkor, who goes by the handle of “Mokkie,” has a long record of success in the strength world.
She has been nationally ranked as an Olympic lifter, as a power lifter and as a physique contestant. She has dominated the record book in the U.S. All-round Weightlifting Association as well as the Show-Me State Games powerlifting record book.
Mokkie had lifted earlier this year in a February meet at Clark’s Gym and apologized for not being up to her usual self but didn’t tell anyone why. And no one asked.
She had just succeeded in a challenge much tougher than “Lift Your Age.” She had emerged from a year-long battle with breast cancer and was no longer in chemotherapy and radiation. She was happy to return to competition and battle again with the record book, not cancer.
Mokkie had dominated the Show-Me State Games power meet in 2018 and soon after learned that she had breast cancer. An operation brought the removal of 12 lymph nodes – seven of them cancerous – and sent Mokkie on lengthy rounds of radiation and chemotherapy.
When she lifted here in February, the portal for the chemo was still imbedded.
Mokkie returned home and her health continued to improve and she decided to tackle the challenge to “Lift Her Age.”
She did the first 17 lifts in her home gym, then called and said she wanted to return to the friendly confines of Clark’s Gym where she could do some personal records with a two-inch barbell, an implement not found in most gyms.
It turned out to be an amazing day. In a marathon that lasted seven hours, this amazing 57-year-old of Ghanan descent, did 45 different lifts – 33 of them with the two-inch barbell – to log 65 – not 57 – different lifts and said she would be back next weekend in an effort to extend her challenge to 100 lifts to match Ol’ Clark’s effort last month.
She returned Saturday past and finished off the 100 and seemed ready to do 100 more. I grew very tired just watching and judging her efforts.
There was no comparison between Ol’ Clark and Mokkie. She did it with more weight than Yours Truly. And she weighed only 159 1/2 pounds, 50 pounds less than Ol’ Clark.
I was in awe.
So, who in the hell is this dynamo and how did she get here?
Amorkor (pronounced Amoko, The “r’s” are Ghanan additions to local English) was born, Christmas Day in 1962, in Mainz, Germany, where her father, Nil Amaa Ullennu, was a medical student. Her mother, Elizabeth Roane, was from Virginia and the couple had met and married at Howard University. Her father was a native of Ghana; her mother of mixed race.
Her older brother, Koi, owns a doctorate in mechanical engineering; her older sister, Amerley, works in marketing for the Washington Post.
The family returned to Richmond, Virginia, when Mokkie was nine, moving to New Carrollton, Maryland, when Mokkie was in the 10th grade. She graduated in 1981 from Northwestern Senior High, but had played no sports. Her dad had returned to practice medicine in Ghana. Lifting was not a part of the Ollennu family life.
Except for Amorkor.
When she was hardly old enough to walk, she remembers watching Vasily Alexeev, the great Russian heavyweight, in action and she never forget the thrill of watching him ram almost 600 pounds overhead.
She had watched the power lifting class in high school, but the family lacked the funds to enroll her.
By 1983, she decided to join the Marines and it was while stationed on Okinawa that she began training with the power lifters and lifted in her first competition – a two-lift affair that had only the squat and bench press.
“I remember my first lifts – a 315 squat and a 185 bench at 148 bodyweight. (She now remains a very trim 160).
After four years in the Marines, she returned to civilian life, became deeply involved with bodybuilding, renewed friendship with a fellow Marine she met in Okinawa, named Vernie King, and they married in December, 1988. He remains her coach and husband in whichever order the day requires.
In 1989, Mokkie won the bodybuilders’ version of “Miss Missouri” and year later added the championship of the North America Natural Bodybuilding Association.
By 1992, she had earned her pro card in the Natural Bodybuilding Federation, and in that same year, ran into Jon Carr, who had built a major Olympic-style weightlifting program at Wesley Center in St. Joseph.
She was hooked. Training with Carr and at home, she won a berth three times at the U.S. Olympic Festival winning a silver and bronze and medaled one year at the U.S. National Championships.
She got better with age and won the 35-39 age group at the World Masters Championship in Orlando, Florida. In 2002, she represented Ghana at the British Commonwealth Games (Ghana had been a British colony and as still a member of the Commonwealth). She finished sixth at age 39.
Along the way, she added at least one national power lifting title and has won the Show Me State Games power meet in each of the five years she has competed, twice winning with a 220-pound bench press.
In recent years, she has been very active in the all-rounds – also known as the odd lifts. Thus, she had no problem in mastering the 100 lifts she performed in less than three weeks in September.
She credits Joe Caron of Iola, Kansas, for introducing her to the odd lifts, where she has set dozens of records. Joe is a long distance member of Clark’s Gym and, at age 75, one of the seven gym members who have now joined the “Lift Your Age” club.
And Vernie? He squatted 400 in high school but has never competed later in life. “He’s my essential coach,” Mokkie is quick to tell you.
In discussing her failure to move into the international level, she sums up her career with one brief sentence: “I have always lifted drug-free.” ‘Nuff said.
To stay in shape, Mokkie rides her bicycle and uses her tricycle to haul groceries home. She and Vernie have a large home gym where she trains and walking three dogs – the smallest which weighs “only”55 pounds – keeps one in shape.
A quick look at her best-ever lifts – Clean and jerk – 209 pounds; snatch – 154 pounds; squat – 405; dead lift – 405; bench press – 225; the very difficult Steinborn Lift – 225; Zercher lift – 315; leg press – 450; hand and thigh – 1,150; hip lift – 1,325; harness lift – 1,705.
And now she becomes the first female to do 100 different lifts when she meant to do only 57.
Mokkie is one of a kind as her oncologists have discovered.
AGING AND STRONG
Part VI: Growing Ever Stronger
By Dan Wagman, Ph.D., C.S.C.S.
I hope that most readers of this series of blogs will derive at a new sense of motivation for training and competing. After all, the prognosis for getting older and bending barbells is rather good. Still, I know there are those who will dismiss what they read. After all, everybody sees how, when you get older, you get weaker.
If you hold observation in higher regard than science, why not consider instead your author’s positive observations? At the 2006 USAWA Nationals I claimed to be 35 and hit a 360-pound bench press feet-in-the-air. In 2015, when according to the age adjustment formula I should’ve lost 5% in strength, and while still entering the Open division and claiming no age, I lifted 380-pounds in the same lift for a new Open American Record, exceeding the Open World Record. Similarly, at the 2012 IAWA World Championships, and claiming to be 50, I performed a 104-pound strict reverse curl. At the 2019 Worlds, where I should’ve been 7% weaker due to aging, and accepting to be listed as 39-years old in the Open division, I broke the Open World Record in that lift with 153 pounds. Yes, I’ve been rebelling against agism by claiming to be younger than I am (and proving the age adjustment formula to be absurd). Sure, doing so gives overall placing advantages to other lifters, but they’re based on a fictional formula and I’d prefer to have my ranking based on strength in our strength sport as opposed to being artificially inflated. But I digress…so while I could provide more than just two examples, in the 30+ years I’ve been lifting weights I simply haven’t observed a meaningful decrease in overall strength…some lifts are up, others are down, next mesocycle it’ll be different lifts, just like in my 20’s. So why not generalize from such positive observations?
Enter Science
The fact is that the above self-observations constitute conjecture if generalized on to others. It constitutes flawed and lazy thinking to base decisions on simple observation without any controls and statistical analyses. Now, certainly, as it pertains to my strength performance over the years, I could’ve conducted a single-subject design experiment—called ideographic research—for the purpose of generalizing findings onto others. In fact, much of science in the 19th century was conducted via principles of ideographic research. But investigators learned that generalizing from the individual to groups of people is problematic compared to the reverse. And so in the 20th century research methods shifted to where groups of individuals were studied—called nomothetic research—so that one could more accurately predict what applies to the individual or, to be more precise, the vast majority of individuals. Therefore, if you want to figure out if chronological age results in reduced muscle strength, by how much, at what rate, and when, you have to turn to nomothetic research instead of just observations.
In Parts I, II, III, IV, and V I shared research demonstrating that muscle strength does not decline to the extent commonly believed, nor to begin at the chronological age most sports organizations believe this to occur. Even in sedentary but otherwise healthy people, their ability to activate muscles and generate force doesn’t decline to any meaningful extent until around 70 years of age. And for people who lift weights you can expect to make gains until somewhere in the 7th decade of life. You therefore have a clear and undeniable contradiction between what research discovered and what just about every lifter has observed. So what might explain this contradiction?
It’s All About Training
While the observations many lifters have made aren’t wrong, the conclusions generally are. In all the observations about the impact of increasing age on loss in muscle strength, has anyone considered the most important variable in not only maintaining strength, but gaining strength—lifting weights? Is it not obvious that if the primary and most effective way to increase strength revolves around lifting weights, that if your training is performed in a manner that doesn’t maximize your body’s ability to adapt, your strength gains will be inferior, stall, result in overtraining, and/or injury? And since any and all of that can occur at any age, chronological age ought to be but a minor consideration.
When you pump iron a lot more goes on than just muscles contracting and relaxing. Lifting weights impacts all systems in your body: the brain and neurons that connect to muscle fibers, metabolism, the neuroendocrine system, nutrients and stored energy sources, bones, sensory systems, connective tissues…everything, including psychological factors. Within that complex system, just as the medical doctor must consider multiple layers of effects of a particular surgical intervention, drug, etc., so, too, must the strength athlete consider how lifting weights will impact the entire body and how an error, while not as grave as a medical doctor’s mistake, can result in less than optimal strength gains.
If you’re healthy and you’ve observed your strength declining over the years and you haven’t even reached 60, it isn’t your advancing chronological age that’s to blame, rather your training method. Please understand, I’m not suggesting that if you want to maximize your strength gains you need to obtain the equivalent of a medical degree in pumping iron. What I am suggesting is that if you don’t consider the complexity of human physiology and how it responds to your training approach, you can’t leap to the conclusion that losing 100 pounds in your pull is due to aging. Unless there’s an underlying pathology at play, you’ve been training in less than optimal or counterproductive ways. Perhaps you’ve been following training advice based on beliefs rather than evidence. The research has shown that with increasing age things do change in a person’s physiology which result, as an example, in different ways in which muscles not only respond to weight training but also adapt and register gains. Therefore, if you simply follow age-old training wisdoms or new training conjectures, your only expectation can be mediocre gains that’ll fizzle out over time—regardless of age.
Entering A New Age
This series of blogs has demonstrated that you can make gains in strength of similar magnitude as young people in to your 60’s. Moreover, consider that the notion of you losing 1% in strength per year once you turn 40 is utter nonsense. In fact, giving lifters a 1% age adjustment is on one hand providing older lifters with an unfair advantage and on the other hand, if these lifters are indeed weaker than what they used to be, rewarding silly and non-productive training practices. How does that constitute fair competition?
If you feel that reason and fairness ought to govern all-round weightlifting, then you cannot support the age adjustment formula nor Masters starting at 40. Simply put, that practice needs to die. Having a Masters division, however, is not entirely unreasonable. But when should it start? Based on research, 65 could be defensible. So who will step forward and lead the fight against agism in all-round? I’ve given you the playbook, go run with it! And if nobody does, or all-round simply won’t accept the evidence, no worries. For all of you barbell benders out there, how you train is the fountain of youth. So how ’bout rejecting agist defeatism, turning to science-based training practices, and taking a dip in to that fountain with me?
AGING AND STRONG
Part V: Recovery
By Dan Wagman, Ph.D., C.S.C.S.
When I was in my 20’s I would frequently hear older guys, like in their 30’s, talk about how they couldn’t recover as well from training as they used to. At that point in my lifting career I couldn’t relate. Now, several decades later, I hear guys much younger than me making the same complaint—and still can’t relate. But one of the worst things any person can do is generalize from their own experiences onto others. And so we need to discuss training recovery based on evidence and not experience or beliefs.
Investigating Recovery
In looking at recovery research you have to pay close attention to detail. To illustrate, two studies have found older people to have a reduced immune response to a graded exercise test compared to younger adults, indicating a delayed recovery response.(3, 6) Other studies have associated the decreased muscle mass found in older adults to increase muscle repair time after exercise.(2, 7) Then a study found that older adults (~69-years old) who recreationally train between 3 to 6 hours per week take longer to recover than younger people.(9) On the other hand at least two studies have found no differences in recovery time between younger and older people.(1, 5) It’s important to understand, however, that these studies looked at different modes of exercise, training intensity, pre-training status of the subjects, and only one looked at subjects with weight training experience. This, therefore, represents the perfect example of how research evolves from study to study and why it’s critically important to look deeper than just the summary of research to derive at an accurate understanding of a particular issue.
With the above in mind I believe the best study on the topic of recovery as it pertains to us meatheads was published just a few years ago by researchers from the University of Central Florida.(4) They looked at recovery abilities between young male adults aged between 18-30 compared to middle-aged ones between 40-59. All of the subjects had been training with weights for many years and had no physical limitations. They went through ridiculously tough training of 8 sets of 10 reps to failure in the leg extension. The machine used controlled the speed (isokinetic) of each rep so that no variability between subjects was possible. Baseline data were collected via a visual analog scale designed to record each subject’s subjective feelings of pain and soreness including ultrasound; blood draw; and performance measures at baseline, i.e., before the training session, immediately after training and 30, 60, and 120 minutes after training and again 24 and 48 hours after training.
The researchers were interested in seeing what differences there might be between the age groups in terms of various recovery-related variables such as their feelings of pain and soreness, cross-sectional muscle size and overall muscle thickness, isometric (static) muscle strength, and biochemical recovery markers of creatine kinase, c-reactive protein, myoglobin, and interleukin-6 concentrations. The findings can be best summarized in the researchers’ own words and in but one sentence:
“Results of this study indicated no differences in the recovery response between
young-age and middle-age for any of the performance measures, nor in subjective
levels of muscle pain or soreness.”
Recovery Reality
Most lifters think about recovery this way, “I’m gonna squat till I drop today, so I’ll eat a big steak tonight and maybe I’ll even take tomorrow off.” That’s a simplistic way to look at it. In fact, even looking at just recovering is oversimplifying. You see, at the most fundamental level “recovering” from a training session means you’ll end up where you were before you trained. While I can’t speak for you, that’s insufficient for me as I want to end up at a place of greater strength. In other words, I want to recover from and adapt to my last training session.
When talking about recovery-adaptation you need to consider all that goes in to it. Full recovery-adaptation is influenced by all aspects of your training session, i.e., the composition of all training variables in relation to each other; heredity; demands of your job, school, family; social life; injury; sleep; nutrition; physical environment; and the sort of coach-athlete interaction you’re exposed to.(7) I’d like to shine a bright light on the fact that the athlete’s age is not part of the recovery-adaptation formula. Thus, regardless of your chronological age, if any of these variables are out of balance as necessitated by the demands of your training, recovery and adaptation will be compromised.
So now you know all there’s to know about the impact of chronological age on your ability to gain strength. That, of course, is an exaggeration. One of the hardest parts for me in writing this series of blogs was to decide what and how much information would fit the blog format, which is anything but scholarly. Still, there should now be little doubt in your mind that any losses in strength performance prior to your 60’s are not age-related and thus unnecessary and avoidable. And you’d most certainly agree that there’s little chance if any of you turning 40 and from then on you’ll bend the barbell less, and less, and less with every year of life as all-round weightlifting and many other strength sports would want you to believe. Yet I cannot dismiss what many of you are thinking, “If all this science is true, why am I weaker now that I’m in my 50’s than what I was in my 20’s? How do you argue against the fact that now that I’m 53 I’m benching 75-pounds less than when I was 26?” I’ll address that and more in the final part.
References
AGING AND STRONG
Part IV: Still Ageless
By Dan Wagman, Ph.D., C.S.C.S.
I’ve really enjoyed revealing the science behind the effects of aging (click here for Part I, Part II, and Part III). I derive at new-found levels of motivation knowing that my age won’t impact my strength until I’m close to 70. I sincerely hope that the readers of this series will feel similarly. Though you cannot argue the scientific facts, they do seem to fly in the face of what just about every older lifter has experienced. It is, therefore, necessary to look even deeper into the impact age might have on your muscles’ ability to handle a loaded barbell.
Older and Pumped
In 1945 a Captain in the United States Army Medical Corps investigated the effects of lifting weights on injured soldiers.(1) His research highlighted many important lifting insights, among them that regardless of how old an injury might be, or how old the soldier might be, if he began a weight training protocol and over time increased the weight lifted, he would be able to make sizable gains. Still, as research built upon these findings, sport scientists began to understand that as a person ages the degree of muscle mass decreases. But since lifting weights via a carefully designed training approach increases muscle mass, could it turn old muscles young?
Researchers at the Department of Medicine and Physiology at Rochester University, NY, recruited young (22 to 31) and older (62 to 72) males and females.(9) Baseline MRI studies for muscle mass were conducted, then 3-RM baseline strength was recorded. At baseline there were no significant differences between age groups in the size of the biceps and hamstrings, but the quads in the older group were 22% smaller. Also, at the beginning of the study the older group was significantly weaker than the younger group. Next, the subjects began a three-month scientific strength training program for the quads, hamstrings, lats, and biceps.
Upon completion of the training regimen the researchers found increases in bicep and hamstring size were significantly less in the older group (13% and 7% difference, respectively). For the quads, however, there were no significant differences between groups. In terms of the amount of strength the subjects developed, there were no differences between groups. As an example, overall the biceps increased in strength for the young group by 21% and for the older group by 19%. When, however, the scientists considered how much weaker the old group was at baseline, biceps strength increased in the older group by 64% compared to 28% for the younger group. The research team concluded that, in terms of gains in muscle mass, “…the effect of age on responses to exercise in one muscle group cannot be generalized to all muscle groups.” And related to strength gains they stated, “…substantial strength gains can be achieved in older subjects even in the absence of muscle hypertrophy [growth].”
A few years later an international group of scientists from Finland, Australia, and the United States collaborated in a much more extensive study.(3) They recruited young (29 ±5 years) and older (61 ±4 years) men to examine the effects of an involved and highly scientific 10-week training program on their muscle mass, peak strength, and explosive strength. They performed the squat, leg extension, leg curl, calf raise, back extension, bench press, and crunch. Each week had training days dedicated to muscle growth, muscle strength, or muscle power. At the end of this project both groups recorded significant gains in all measures, though the physiological means by which they were achieved were a bit different.
What appears to be the case is that older people can make the same amount of strength gain compared to a younger person, but there are differences in how their bodies respond and adapt to weight training. One study actually found that after a 6-week weight training period the maximal motor unit (a motor unit consists of the nerve and all of the muscle fibers it innervates) discharge rates increased in young subjects by 15% compared to 49% for older subjects.(5) This is an indication that as you age, there might be a shift away from increasing muscle mass to increasing neurological function as the main driver for strength gain.
From Nerves to Protein
To expand upon this interesting finding a 2014 study looked at what differences there might be between men with average ages of 29 and 64 years.(8) The subjects participated in a 10-week high-volume medium-load training program designed to enhance muscle growth. Although the subjects performed whole-body training the research emphasis was on the leg press, leg extension, and leg curl. The researchers found that despite the fact that both groups made “large increases in strength” (13% young, 14% old), “the dominant mechanisms that may have led to these increases appear to be different between the two groups.” This, because although strength increases were large, they were accompanied with a significant increase in muscle mass in the younger participants, which was not found in the older ones.
The research team acknowledged that the issue of diet was not addressed in their study and believed that it’s possible that the older individuals’ dietary intake may have resulted in less gains in muscle mass. Previous work found that following a 21-week weight training protocol the younger trainees made quicker gains in strength early on compared to the older ones. At the end of the training cycle, however, strength gains were equal.(7) The gains in muscle mass, on the other hand, were greater in the young group and since the subjects’ diet was recorded, the scientists were able to link smaller gains in muscle mass in the older subjects to less daily energy and protein intake.
So protein remains a critical aspect when it comes to developing muscle mass, regardless of age. But since a muscle’s protein “accretion,” as physiologists like to put it, is a highly complex matter related to hormones, cell signaling, etc., it could be that these mechanisms are stunted in older lifters. Scientists from the Universities of Alabama and Arkansas found out, however, that if you trained young and old subjects with weights over a 16-week period, there is “no evidence” that older subjects would synthesize protein to a lesser extent than younger ones.(6) So regardless of age, all you have to do is make sure you pump iron and ingest sufficient amounts of protein. In the short term, if you’re older and say, you’re supplementing your diet with essential amino acids, all you need to know is that your protein synthesis rates are a bit slower compared to younger people (3-6 hrs. vs. 1-3 hrs., respectively). In the long term, however, there are no significant differences.(2)
The Middle-Aged
As you can see, the vast majority of studies tend to look at strength and age between young people in their 20’s and older people in their 60’s and beyond. But since all-round weightlifting considers people to be Masters at 40 and starts to apply an age adjustment, it would be important to know what difference there might be between 40-year olds and 70-year olds. An international group of researchers recruited healthy and fit subjects active in walking, jogging, cross-country skiing, aerobics, and cycling—though none had background in strength training—representing both genders and at average ages of 40 and 70.(4) The subjects trained with weights for six months with the goal of enhancing maximal and explosive strength via a periodized training regimen, meaning that training intensity and volume were manipulated over time to maximize physiological adaptations. Once the scientists crunched the numbers, here’s what they found:
The main finding of this extensive study reveals that healthy and fit 40- and 70-year olds can make tremendous gains in strength and power. And what struck the scientists was that these gains were much greater than what the smaller, yet still significant, gains in muscle size would suggest.
What these studies teach us is that if you lift weights and you’re older, the age factor seems to have little impact. What does seem to occur, however, is that in older people the way in which the body responds to strength training is a bit different. Moreover, it appears that certain exercises and body parts are impacted differently, meaning that whatever age effect there may be, it doesn’t impact the entire body equally. But before we conclude this series, there’s one more issue to consider—recovery. A common mantra of older lifters is that they just can’t recover from training the way they used to. We’ll take a close look in Part V.
References