Eric Duplain
Eric Duplain defines generosity, kindness and selflessness, and possesses the sheer determination and talent to master whatever he sets his mind to.
75-year-young endurance athlete extraordinaire Bob Knuckey relives his career from his running days as a youth in high school, to his recent Age Group win at this years’ 2023 IRONMAN World Championship in Nice, France.
We had a race around the schoolyard. It was like 800 meters, and I finished third and that got me hooked on running. Grade 11 I finished third, grade 12, I finished second… grade 13, I finally I won it.
I've done about 55 marathons... my best one was 2 hours, 28 minutes and 53 seconds in the Toronto Marathon.
In my early sixties, one night after working out with the Etobicoke Huskies, on my warm-down run, I went by a C3 workout with Barrie Shepley, and I got to know him through there and he eventually got me... So that's how I got coaxed into it. I started with duathlons and then for a whole year, Barrie and I argued over whether I would get the swim going... and he won.
Three months before (IRONMAN 2007 Wisconsin) I discovered that I had prostate cancer, so I chose the route of having it removed... I hadn't planned on competing, but the night before the race and I saw the cow medal and I had to have it.
[With no running, and only two bike rides and two swims since surgery, Bob ended up sixth in his age group to claim his medal]
The second time I went to Kona, I had nailed down the pacing on the bike. My nutrition was better and I ended up finishing fourth.
When you finish in the top five, you get a salad bowl. It's a small salad bowl, unless you're the winner, then you get a big salad bowl. So that was my focus for the next few years - to get the big salad bowl.
I think the fact that I am doing it (staying active and running triathlons) has kept me young, and I am going to keep doing it as long as I can. I can see myself when I'm 85... Racing people in a walker because I love to race.
I didn’t really celebrate (after winning my first 70.3 World Championship). I just came back home and started training for the next one.
I noticed a big change in my running form when I turned 50, and I noticed another big change when I turned 70. So you're slowing down every year and that's a little concerning, but as long as I'm not slowing down more than the other 75 year olds, I'm a happy camper.
You’ve got to jump on those injuries.
If you are a runner, branch out and do multi-sport, biking has a lot less strain on the body, swimming has even less. A lot of my running friends, I would say maybe 5% of them that I used to run with are not running anymore because they totally wrecked their bodies.
Second thing is to join a club with a lot of young people in it, which I do. I work my hardest to keep up with all the young people and that keeps me young and just keeps me moving.
I find that if you hava a goal, a lot of people don't have goals, so they don't bother training. I like to have goals and that keeps me in the game, keeps me looking forward to something.
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Eric Duplain defines generosity, kindness and selflessness, and possesses the sheer determination and talent to master whatever he sets his mind to.
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