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New Brunswick

Former javelin champion from Moncton competes on world stage at 70

After Giovanni Corazza won gold medals for his country at the alternate Olympics in 1980, he happily retired. Last week, he dusted off his javelin for his first competition in 44 years and placed 6th in the world.

Giovanni Corazza wants others to know it's never too late to get fit

a man throws a javelin pole on a track
Giovanni Corazza placed 6th in javelin throwing at the 2024 World Masters Athletics Championships in Gothenburg, Sweden. (Submitted by Lubo Novek)

One of Moncton's lesser-known gyms sits in the back of a commercial building on Mark Avenue.

Giovanni Corazza converted a one-car garage into what he calls Rosa's Gym. It has a single squat-rack, a basket of weighted medicine balls and bright yellow javelin poles.

It's where Corazza, a former Olympic javelin thrower, has spentmost of his time since he retired from his careeras a construction project managerin 2022.

And it's where at 70 years of age, he trainedfor his first competition in 44 years.

With the power of a teenager, he could presswell over 100 pounds above his head.

That power that made him a fearsomecompetitor at this year's World Masters Athletics Championship in Sweden.

WATCH | 'It's about feeling good about yourself':

Former javelin champion wants to defy how we think about age

29 days ago
Duration 3:40
In 1980, Monctons Giovanni Corazza was Canadas javelin champion and strong competitor on the international stage until, at his peak, he retired. At 70, he dusted off his javelin for his first competition in 44 years and placed sixth in the world.

The championship, held around the world every two years, welcomes competitors over the age of 35 who want to prove that age is justa numberand that passion for sport only fades if you let it.

When Corazza retired, he saw it as an opportunity to dust off his javelin and start training.

"I figured, why not try it and I did."

Earlier in August, he headed to Sweden with his son and his former javelin coach.

three men sit on metal stands
'My dad is actually pretty cool,' says Alessandro Corazza, who accompanied his father to Sweden, along with his dad's former coach, Bill Heikkila, far right. (Submitted by Alessandro Corazza)

Alessandro, Corazza's son, was on the field with him at the competition. To him, his dad embodied the expression of "my dad is stronger than your dad" on that day.

"Line him up against the other guys thereand he was pretty ... jacked compared to the other guys," hesaid, laughing. "My dad is actually pretty cool."

Corazza finished the world event with an impressive 6th place finish.

Reflecting on his time among other athletes his age and younger, he said he felt like he belonged there.

But what makes the feat even more impressive is that the last time Corazza competed was 44 years earlier, an experience that, at the age of26, gave himbest summer of his athletic career.

The boycotted games

By 1980, Corazza had cemented his place as the greatest javelin thrower in Canada. He was going to represent his country at the Moscow Olympics.

Until he couldn't, when "Canada and 62 other countries decided to boycott the Moscow Olympics," Corazza said.

Canada, along with the United States, Germany and other countries, did not attend the games in protest of Russia's invasion of Afghanistan.

"This was a big disappointment for all of us who had worked hard."

Along with other Canadian athletes, Corazza made his way to alternate games held in Dusseldorf, Germany.

A man dressed in 1980s athletic gear throws a javelin in front of a crowd.
In 1980, Canada and other countries around the world boycotted the Olympic Games in Moscow and attended alternate games held in several European countries. (Submitted by New Brunswick Sports Hall of Fame)

One of Germany's very own was highly favoured for the meet, Corazzasaid. When his turn came to throw, he walked out in front of a bench full of some of the fittest men on earth.

"I was nervous and I figured ... I'm not top seed here. I'm going to go for it," he said. Onhis first throw, helanded a personal best of 82 metres.

"The whole lot of them, they shot up from the bench like a rocket. I won the meet and walked away with two personal bests on that particular day."

The next day, he flew to Londonand won again. Then he did the same in Oslo, Norway.

Corazzaearned threegold medals and a best-ever performance with a 84.34-metre throw. That year, it ranked as Canada's third all-time best.

To this day, he recallsthe thrill of onlookers watching a Moncton man winworld titles so far from home.

Shortly after the alternate games, Corazza retired to begin his working life and start a family.

"To finish a career on a high and having fulfilled my objectives, which I felt I did, was the right decision then," he said. "And many years later I can tell you I never regretted that decision."

A man smiles in a gym holding a yellow javelin pole
In 2022, Giovanni Corazza converted a small garage into a customized gym he uses to train for javelin throwing, a sport that has come to define his life and how he thinks about aging and fitness. (Katelin Belliveau/CBC)

Corazza's son said he is proud of what his father has accomplished.

"From back in the day, having reached the level that he did and then to pick it up again, I don't know that a lot of people would do that," he said.

While Corazza said he has not committed to competing again, he said he may help coach the next generation of javelin throwers.

"When I traded in my pencil for an Olympic bar two years ago, it was a shock," he said about his choice to retire. "But I persevered and, to a certain extent, I conquered this self-perceived weakness that I had when I retired."

It's a message he hopes will inspire others.

"It's not about going to compete in a world championship, it's about feeling good about yourself."