Teen athletes lose to pull-up rival, 70

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. Score one for the old guys.

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 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.”

Specifically, it says that your upper body is designed to be able to do pull-ups (not every upper body is). But beyond that, it says what we all can do: more.

Fewer than 15 percent of people age 65 and over 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.

None of that was on anyone’s mind during the pull-up challenge. Issued by Durante to the teens, it was a fundraiser. For every pull-up (palms facing outward) or chin-up (palms in) they could do, he would contribute a dollar to the football team, which needs more than $15,000 every year for equipment and travel costs that the school doesn’t cover. The top boy and girl would each earn $200 for the team. And if any of them could get within 10 pullups of Durante’s total, he’d pay $10 per pull-up.

“This is all Dan’s idea. This is something he wanted to do for the team,” head football coach Sean Finnerty told the group in the weight room, which included a few parents who came to watch.

Durante, he said, had come to every football game, cheering as Liberty won its conference championship and made it to the second round of the playoffs.

“If he can do this at age 70, what can you do as high school kids by pushing yourselves?” he asked.

Finnerty is also Durante’s stepson-in-law. They hatched the fundraiser sitting around on the deck after a cookout one day. The first one, in March, raised more than $900. This time, unfortunately for the kids, Durante had more time to train.

As a teenager in Quincy, Mass., Durante did pull-ups to rehabilitate a shoulder injured playing sandlot football, and he never stopped. Now a masters age division sprinter, he ramped up his pull-up training when a knee injury halted his training recently. The knee is better now, and Durante hopes to compete in 2014 national and world meets in the 60-meter dash. He also has reserved a booth at an area health expo in January, where he will offer $500 to anyone, of any age, who can beat him.

He went first Dec. 14, recording 39 pull-ups in 53 seconds before he exhausted his arms. The pull-up bar at Liberty had a bit of sway in it, he said, reducing his total a bit.

Up first for the football team was … no one. Like rockers refusing to follow Jimi Hendrix on stage, none of the kids was willing to be the first compared with Durante.

Finally, middle linebacker Matt Nailor stepped up and did 18. Keith Miller did nine. Daniel Jackson did 16. Tailback Brent Smith clocked 20, and Anthony Spagnoletti, a receiver and safety, did 21.

“It’s amazing,” he said of Durante. “Not many people like him can do that. He’s got heart.”

A couple of 300-pound linemen did one each before Kevin Nailor, Matt’s twin, achieved the team high at 26.

On a lower bar, Haileigh Hurst, all of 14 years old, topped nine other cheerleaders with seven chin-ups. Deonae Carter-Beale did five.

ActiveStyle, Pages 30 on 12/23/2013

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