At the age of 105, the French amateur cyclist and world-record holder
Robert Marchand is more aerobically fit than most 50-year-olds — and appears to
be getting even fitter as he ages, according to a revelatory new study of his
physiology.
The study, which appeared in December in The Journal of Applied
Physiology, may help to rewrite scientific expectations of how our bodies age
and what is possible for any of us athletically, no matter how old we are.
Many people first heard of Mr. Marchand last month, when he set a world
record in one-hour cycling, an event in which someone rides as many miles as
possible on an indoor track in 60 minutes.
Mr. Marchand pedaled more than 14 miles, setting a global benchmark for
cyclists age 105 and older. That classification had to be created specifically
to accommodate him. No one his age previously had attempted the record.
At the age of 105, the French amateur cyclist and world-record holder
Robert Marchand is more aerobically fit than most 50-year-olds — and appears to
be getting even fitter as he ages, according to a revelatory new study of his
physiology.
The study, which appeared in December in The Journal of Applied
Physiology, may help to rewrite scientific expectations of how our bodies age
and what is possible for any of us athletically, no matter how old we are.
Many people first heard of Mr. Marchand last month, when he set a world
record in one-hour cycling, an event in which someone rides as many miles as
possible on an indoor track in 60 minutes.
Mr. Marchand pedaled more than 14 miles, setting a global benchmark for
cyclists age 105 and older. That classification had to be created specifically
to accommodate him. No one his age previously had attempted the record.
But Dr. Billat had found that if older athletes exercised intensely,
they could increase their VO2 max. She had never tested this method on a
centenarian, however.
But Mr. Marchand was amenable. A diminutive 5 feet in height and
weighing about 115 pounds, he said he had not exercised regularly during most
of his working life as a truck driver, gardener, firefighter and lumberjack.
But since his retirement, he had begun cycling most days of the week, either on
an indoor trainer or the roads near his home in suburban Paris.
Read more on... Lessons
on Aging Well, From a 105-Year-Old Cyclist
Author: GRETCHEN REYNOLDS

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