This wasn’t going to be a fair fight. Everyone knew that going in.
On one side was Dan Durante, trim and fit, but seven decades on in life. On the other, about 20 members of the Liberty High School football team in Bealeton, Va., and 10 cheerleaders, all in fine shape and more than 50 years younger. This one had mismatch written all over it.
Yes, Durante crushed them.
The contest was to see who could do the most pull-ups, an exercise Durante practices every day and the kids do not. At home, on his own pull-up bar, he routinely does more than 50 in less than 60 seconds.
“There’s life after 20,” he told the teenagers as they gathered in the high school weight room for the friendly competition. Pull-ups, he said, are a “very specific exercise. If you don’t do it, you won’t be able to do a lot of them” today. “But it says what you can do.”
Indeed, it says what we all can do. Fewer than 15 percent of people age 65 and older do any regular strength training at a time in life when it is especially critical. Sarcopenia, the natural decline in muscle mass that occurs as we age, and accompanying problems, such as osteoporosis, falls, obesity and difficulty climbing stairs, can be held at bay long into old age by simple weight-bearing exercises, experts say.