logo
Meet the 105-year-old athletics champion

Meet the 105-year-old athletics champion

BBC News01-06-2025
This is Sawang Janpram, a gold medallist from the World Masters Games in Taiwan.What makes him special? He's 105-years-old! He was the oldest person competing in four events - discus, javelin, shot put and 100 metre sprint. He was also the only person in his age category of 100 years or older.This meant if he finished an event he was guaranteed to get a gold medal - and he bagged four of them in total!
According to news agency AFP, Sawang, who is from Thailand, started competing at the age of 90!It was all thanks to his 73-year-old daughter, Siripan, who also competes at events. She is an athlete with the Thai Veteran Athletics Association, and would often take her dad along to watch her compete. He liked the atmosphere and decided to give it a go - a great decision with four gold medals now in his collection. Speaking about his new hobby, Sawang said: "Exercise makes our life better and we get to meet friends who also exercise."It's like our lives are livelier and we do not feel lonely at home."
What are the World Masters Games?
The World Masters Games are held every four years and bring together competitors aged 30+ from around the world. There were over 25,000 athletes from 107 countries that competed at the Games in Taipei - that's more than twice the amount of competitors at the 2024 Paris Olympics. The next World Masters Games will be in Japan in 2027.Reckon you would have what it takes to be an athletics champion in 100 years time? Let us know in the comments below!
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

13 world records, each with a big bonus — is Duplantis gaming system?
13 world records, each with a big bonus — is Duplantis gaming system?

Times

time2 hours ago

  • Times

13 world records, each with a big bonus — is Duplantis gaming system?

To explain the calculated brilliance of Mondo Duplantis, it is worth pointing out that even Usain Bolt could not earn $100,000 a centimetre. The peerless pole vaulter broke the world record for the 13th time in Hungary on Tuesday and landed another nice bonus in the process of raising the bar. His dominance has been both incredible and incremental. The Louisiana-born Swede, 25, cleared 6.29 metres at a second-tier World Athletics Continental Tour meeting in Budapest. That was 1cm higher than the record he set in June in Sweden, which was one more than his 11th landmark from February in France. It had been almost a year to the day since he broke his own record in the Olympic final in Paris. Since taking the record from Renaud Lavillenie in 2020, Duplantis has increased the world record by a centimetre every time. Given that the record had previously been surpassed once in 26 years, this shows canny showmanship, as well as athletic and technical brilliance. The reasons are money and marketing. Each time he breaks a record Duplantis gets widespread attention and cash bonuses. The latter vary, with the highest rewards coming in major competitions. World Athletics, the governing body, and its sponsors pay out $100,000 (about £74,000) for records at the World Championships and $50,000 at the indoor version. The figure is not always that high and he will not get that much from the organisers of the Istvan Gyulai Memorial, where he set the record this week. Duplantis received $30,000 when he set his second world record in Glasgow in 2020 and World Athletics regulations now state that any Diamond League meeting must be able to pay out a minimum $50,000 per record. Add contract bonuses from his own sponsors such as Puma, though, and Duplantis will have comfortably cleared a million dollars from the business of record-breaking. The double Olympic and five-times world champion (indoor and outdoor) explained his methodology earlier this year. 'A man's got to make a living,' he said, 'and there is a bit of a glitch, you could say. There's not so many people making an abundance of bread in track and field and so I guess it's a good thing I can capitalise.' This approach makes him different to every other leader in the athletics sphere. Nobody else can break records almost for fun and leave more in the tank. Bolt ended his sprint career having broken the 100m world record three times and the 200m record twice. Duplantis has reasoned he can eventually get to 6.40m, which is a lot more derring-dough. Of course, he could probably have got to 6.29m in half the number of records, but his small steps from giant leaps is the way of the great vaulters. Sergey Bubka, winner of one Olympic gold and ten world titles, set 35 world records in total, including 18 indoor. Yelena Isinbayeva, the Russian star of the women's scene, set a combined 27 records. She once gave an insight into why she only nudged the bar when she said: 'The people must remember I have to pay tax and then my manager and my coach. I do it because I want to beat Sergey Bubka who has 35 world records. I think it's possible for me, so I need to do it centimetre by centimetre. Also, if I jump five metres tomorrow, I won't have anything left. I don't want to be like [long jumper] Bob Beamon. He jumped 8.9m and was finished.' Bubka, himself, conceded that he might have gone higher when in the zone rather than quitting a competition after another marginal gain. 'Potentially, sure,' he said. 'It could have been possible.' Duplantis is clearly far from finished and is good for a struggling sport. He has the profile to attract a new generation, with two pop songs already released and his wedding proposal to an influencer-model, Desire Inglander, filmed for Vogue Scandinavia. He can also talk a good game as well as deliver one. Hence, his description of breaking the world record in the Olympic final. 'That's not pre-canned nonsense, that's just overflowing with emotions, freaking out,' he said. 'I've been fortunate to do it several times now and every time the feeling is the same, but this was a more extreme version. When I'm going over the bar it's like AI. It doesn't feel real.' The son of an American pole vaulter and Swedish heptathlete, he received flak and 'traitor' accusations when he chose to compete for his mother's homeland. Dubbed the 'fat kid' at school, his rise has been heart-warming, and he clearly had a head for drama from infancy judging by the 911 call that followed his decision to climb a neighbour's tree while still in a nappy. He also fits an event that has long been a forum for mavericks and eccentrics. AC Gilbert was an Olympic gold medallist who also worked as a magician and became known as 'The Man Who Saved Christmas' after convincing the US Council for National Defence not to ban toy sales during the First World War. And then there was Don Bragg who liked swinging on vines and whose overt pitch to play Tarzan in Hollywood included letting out a trademark yell on the Olympic podium after winning gold in 1960. His bad luck meant when he finally got to be the eponymous hero in Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar, filming was curtailed by a copyright infringement. For Duplantis, this year is heading upwards, towards next month's World Championships in Tokyo where he stands to win $70,000 for another gold medal — he has been unbeaten for two years — and, of course, a possible $100,000 bonus.

Sha'Carri Richardson apologises to boyfriend Christian Coleman after airport domestic violence arrest
Sha'Carri Richardson apologises to boyfriend Christian Coleman after airport domestic violence arrest

The Independent

time4 hours ago

  • The Independent

Sha'Carri Richardson apologises to boyfriend Christian Coleman after airport domestic violence arrest

Reigning 100m world champion Sha'Carri Richardson has apologised to her boyfriend Christian Coleman following her recent domestic violence arrest at an airport. Richardson was arrested on 27 July on a fourth-degree domestic violence offence for allegedly assaulting Coleman at the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport and was booked into South Correctional Entity in Des Moines, Washington, for more than 18 hours. The sprinter was due to catch a flight to attend the US track and field championships in Eugene, Oregon, where she failed to qualify for the 200m at this September's World Athletics Championships by one-hundredth of a second. She has an automatic berth in the 100m as the defending world champion. On Monday night, the 25-year-old Richardson posted a video on her Instagram account in which she said she put herself in a 'compromised situation' and she issued a written apology to Coleman on Tuesday morning. 'I love him & to him I can't apologize enough,' wrote Richardson in all capital letters, adding that her apology 'should be just as loud' as her actions. 'To Christian I love you & I am so sorry,' she wrote. She added that Coleman "came into my life & gave me more than a relationship but a greater understanding of unconditional love from what I've experienced in my past." In the video, Richardson said she's practising 'self-reflection' and refuses 'to run away but face everything that comes to me head on.' According to the police report, an officer at the airport was notified by a Transportation Security Administration supervisor of a disturbance between Richardson and Coleman, who won the 100m world title back in 2019. The officer reviewed camera footage and observed Richardson reach out with her left arm, grab Coleman's backpack and yank it away. Richardson then appeared to get in Coleman's way with Coleman trying to step around her. Coleman was shoved into a wall. Later in the report, it said Richardson appeared to throw an item at Coleman, with the TSA indicating it may have been headphones. The officer said in the report: 'I was told Coleman did not want to participate any further in the investigation and declined to be a victim.' Richardson won the 100m at the 2023 World Athletics Championships in Budapest and claimed a silver medal at the Paris Olympics last summer. She also helped the US 4x100m relay to an Olympic gold. She didn't compete during the Tokyo Olympics in 2021 following a positive marijuana test at the US Olympic trials.

Japan boxing authorities toughen up safety measures after deaths of two fighters in two days
Japan boxing authorities toughen up safety measures after deaths of two fighters in two days

The Guardian

time5 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Japan boxing authorities toughen up safety measures after deaths of two fighters in two days

Boxing authorities in Japan will introduce stricter safety measures after the sport was left in shock by the deaths this month of two boxers competing in the same event. Officials from the Japan Boxing Commission (JBC) told reporters this week the changes would include pre-bout urine tests, tougher rules on rapid weight loss and improvements in ringside medical services. The governing body was forced to rethink its health and safety regime after Shigetoshi Kotari, a super featherweight, and Hiromasa Urakawa, a lightweight, died from brain injuries days after competing in separate bouts on the same card at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo on 2 August. Kotari, 28, collapsed and later died after emergency brain surgery to treat a subdural haematoma – a condition in which blood collects between the skull and the brain – after going 12 rounds against Yamato Hata in an Oriental and Pacific Boxing Federation (OPBF) title fight. Kotari was able to leave the ring unaided but was clearly in distress. Urakawa, also 28, died at the weekend from brain injuries sustained in a bout with Yoji Saito. His death was announced just over 24 hours after Kotari's. Urakawa fought 14 times as a professional, while Kotari contested 12 bouts. While the exact cause of the boxers' deaths has yet to be determined, concern is growing over the impact of rapid dehydration, which fighters use to 'make weight' – an approach that experts say makes the brain more susceptible to bleeding. Kotari and Urakawa's deaths sent shock waves through the world of boxing, coming only months after 28-year-old Irish super-featherweight John Cooney died of a brain injury a week after he was stopped in his first Celtic super-featherweight title defence in Belfast. In a tribute to the Japanese fighters, the president of the World Boxing Council, Mauricio Sulaiman, said on X: 'The boxing world is in shock and deep sorrow for the tragic deaths of 2 boxers who fought in the same card in Japan. May they rest in peace and their inspiration serve to all to work on finding ways to protect our boxers of the world.' The JBC, gym owners and other officials met on Tuesday to vote on emergency measures. It had already been announced that OPBF title fights would be reduced from 12 to 10 rounds. The new measures include urine tests to determine if a boxer is adequately hydrated and stricter rules on rapid weight loss, officials told reporters on Tuesday. Fighters who regain more than 10% of their bodyweight between the weigh-in and the day of the bout will be forced to move up a weight class before their next contest, public broadcaster NHK said. Ambulances will also be positioned on site and will be paired with hospitals that are able to perform emergency surgery for head and other injuries. Currently ambulances must be on standby at world-title fights, but not at other contests. 'Officials have decided to take all possible measures to ensure that the deaths of these two boxers are not in vain,' Tsuyoshi Yasukochi, secretary general of the JBC, said. Describing the boxers' deaths as 'really regrettable,' Shoji Kobayashi, the president of the Japanese Pro Boxing Association, said new rules would also be introduced on how long before an official fight a boxer must stop sparring in preparation. The tragedy has added to pressure on Japanese boxing authorities to better protect the health of it the country's fighters after high-profile incidents in the past two years. In early 2024, bantamweight Kazuki Anaguchi died aged 23 from a subdural haematoma after being knocked down four times in a bout weeks earlier. In May this year, Ginjiro Shigeoka was stretchered out of the ring and underwent emergency brain surgery after collapsing at the end of a bout in Osaka. His treatment included a craniotomy – in which a section of the skull is removed before surgery – forcing his retirement under Japan Boxing Commission rules. Other Japanese fighters voiced concern that the most recent incidents would reignite criticism of the sport. 'These incidents involved top-level boxers, so we may face the argument that boxing should be banned,' said Toshiharu Kayama, a former Japan welterweight champion who now runs a gym in Tokyo. With Agence France-Presse

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store