Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

PEI

66-year-old weightlifter still winning medals

Summerside's Tilman Gallant is just back from his latest trip to the world powerlifting championship, and has a bronze medal to add to a growing collection of awards and string of records.

Tilman Gallant won bronze at World Masters Benchpress Championships

Summerside's Tilman Gallant is just back from his latest trip to the world powerliftingchampionship with a bronze medal to add to a growing collection of awards and string of records.

"I've broken 28 national records and one Commonwealth record. And I've come second in the world and third in the world just lately, so that's a pretty good accomplishment I think," Gallant said, standing in the Summersidegym where he trains.

Tilman Gallant has just returned home with a bronze medal from the World Benchpress Championship (Mitch Cormier/CBC)

His latest medal came twoweeks ago at the World Master's Benchpress Championship in Northumberland, England. It was the fourth time Gallant represented Canada at a world championship. His medal-winning benchpresssaw him lift160 kilograms. The records are based on the weight of the athlete and the amount of weight they lift.

"All my life I just liked lifting things, even when I was younger I liked lifting things. I figured I had better get a sport where you do that," he said.

At 66 he's been lifting for 25 years, before there wereorganized powerliftingcompetitions on P.E.I. He would go to Nova Scotia to compete, and sincethe sport established itself on the Island he has repeatedly set, then broken his own records in the 50- to 60-year age range, and now the 60- to 70-year-old group.

I don't think in numbers like that, but you know it's hard to believe it is only four years away- Tilman Gallant on turning 70

Gallant said he is no different than any other senior, only his sport is lifting heavy weights instead of playing golf or curling. Even with a wall of plaques, medals and records he is not planning on slowing down. The International Powerlifting Union has just established a new ago category for lifters over 70.

"That's actually my long-distance goal, to be benching in my seventies and to go to a worlds and actually have a world record," he said.

"I don't think in numbers like that, but you know it's hard to believe it is only four years away."