Weight Listed
A sports medicine professor demonstrates the power of the human body when she sets a new world record in an Olympic category
At 71, Olympic weightlifter Laurie Nelson is in better shape than the students in her anatomy and kinesiology courses. The Seaver College professor鈥攚ho has taught physical education and sports medicine courses for over 40 years and serves as the pre- health professions advisor鈥攃an easily lift nearly 100 pounds, an impressive feat for a woman with a petite 5'3" frame who picked up her first barbell at age 64.
Recalling the remarkable journey that commenced just seven years ago, Nelson reveals that the force behind her motivation was realizing she could no longer place her own luggage in the overhead bin on an airplane. Shortly after that experience, the lifelong exerciser and avid hiker joined a local CrossFit gym to build her upper body strength and combat the new challenges her body was experiencing.
After a few years of working out at CrossFit Malibu, Nelson doubled her efforts and joined Takano Weightlifting gym in Woodland Hills, California, owned by USA Weightlifting Hall of Famer Robert Takano. As she continued to build muscle and improve her form under Takano鈥檚 coaching, Nelson felt that she had become strong enough to participate in the USA Masters Weightlifting competition.
鈥淚 decided to compete in the US Nationals when I turned 70 because I saw that I could actually lift competitively and wanted to see if I could set the US records鈥濃攚hich she did two years ago in both the snatch (an exercise where the bar is pulled from the floor to a locked-arms position in one continuous move) and the clean and jerk lifts (a two-movement exercise in which a weight is raised above the head following an initial lift to shoulder level).
In April 2016, Nelson returned to the USA Masters Weightlifting competition in Savannah,
Georgia, where she set the National Masters Weightlifting women鈥檚 record (and broke
her own previous record) for lifting 34 kilograms (75 pounds) in the snatch competition
and 42 kilograms (92.6 pounds) in the clean and jerk competition in the women鈥檚 70
to 74 age category. Her clean and jerk stats, which were 6 kilograms (13.2 pounds)
over the previous record, were so high that she even outscored the younger women in
the 60 to 69 age category and qualified to compete the following year in the ninth
World Masters Games in Auckland, New Zealand.
鈥淭here is a certain amount of fear involved,鈥 the athlete admits. 鈥淵ou have to squat down, lift the bar, and then get under it ... all in a coordinated fashion. But when you鈥檙e older, it鈥檚 harder to make your body do what it doesn鈥檛 want to do. My nervous system isn鈥檛 as snappy as it used to be and it doesn鈥檛 respond as well maintaining good form. But if I could improve my form, I could actually lift even more weight.鈥
With three judges and three referees intently observing her form at the World Masters Games (often characterized as the Olympics for mature athletes), Nelson broke two international records in the women鈥檚 70 to 79 age category (the oldest competitive category for women) with a snatch of 29 kilograms (64 pounds) and a clean and jerk of 42 kilograms (92.6 pounds).
The sports medicine professor鈥攚ho is also a Level 1 certified CrossFit trainer鈥 acknowledges that the path toward the World Masters Games was sometimes rough. But after recovering from several injuries as a result of her workout routines and being away from her students during the end of the spring semester in order to compete in New Zealand, her perseverance ultimately allowed her to demonstrate an extraordinary鈥攁nd unexpected鈥攍evel of strength.
As Nelson points out, 鈥淎t my age, you can continue to work out just to maintain your strength because you don鈥檛 really expect to get better. In other words, how much stronger can you actually get at 71? But I did get stronger over time and I improved my technique. So there is a lot of room for growth.鈥
Having grown up during a time when girls鈥 and women鈥檚 sports programs weren鈥檛 offered in schools, Nelson explains that limitations on how far females can go in specific athletic categories still exist. While male weightlifting competitions allow men to participate well into their 80s, the oldest age category for female weightlifters is 鈥70-plus,鈥 and competitors over the age of 71 are rare.
But for the new generation of female athletes who have had access to sports training in schools, Nelson predicts that the number of female Olympic weightlifters will inevitably increase over time.
鈥淓ventually the women will have a competitive category for 75-year-olds, too,鈥 she says. 鈥淪hould any of them decide to compete in Olympic weightlifting for fun, they could do it very well. It鈥檚 very possible.鈥
With more than four decades of experience teaching young college students about the importance of physical health, Nelson is newly passionate about inspiring a different audience to step up their fitness game.
鈥淏eing a professor and teaching in sports medicine has been the perfect career for me, as I am vitally interested in health and fitness for all鈥攅specially for older adults at this time in my life,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 hope my achievements will encourage others to get involved in keeping strong and fit.鈥
鈥淢ost of the time it鈥檚 not physical fatigue preventing you from exercise, it鈥檚 mental fatigue,鈥 she continues. 鈥淵ou just think you don鈥檛 want to exercise. It happens to me with weightlifting. I have arthritis and sometimes I feel like I don鈥檛 want to work out. But I feel better after 10 minutes, so I keep going.鈥