July 2022 | DC Beacon

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VOL.34, NO.7

Senior Olympians go for gold

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Each year, local athletes who qualify for the National Senior Games by medaling at the prior year’s Maryland Senior Olympics, Northern Virginia Senior Olympics or DC Senior Games, participate in the national competition, which was recently held in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The local competitions are getting underway again soon in this area.

fierce. Pickleball, a racquetball-type sport played in teams of two, is the most popular and widely attended event at the National Senior Games, with 1,600 players on 40 courts. D.C. resident Robert Gordon, 76, participated in the Fort Lauderdale games in May and won one of his mixed doubles pickleball matches. “We didn’t get any medals, but we

Competition for some events can be

played well, and we really had a lot of fun. I learned a lot for next time,” he said. Gordon, a retired engineer and current partner at Little Beast restaurant, started playing pickleball about six years ago, after he saw a segment on NBC News about the hot sport. “I decided to check it out,” he said. “I got See SENIOR OLYMPIANS, page 10

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L E I S U R E & T R AV E L

For your bucket list: a visit to Cairo and a cruise down the Nile; plus, the peaceful calm and great seafood of the San Juan Islands, near Seattle page 24 FITNESS & HEALTH 4 k Surprising ways to cut calories k Delay or prevent dementia LIVING BOLDLY 17 k Newsletter for D.C. residents LAW & MONEY 19 k Protect your portfolio in 2022 k How to haggle for anything ARTS & STYLE 28 k Shakespeare outdoors k Bob Levey’s perfect marriage

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Pickleball most popular event

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JULY 2022

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By Margaret Foster Alexandria retiree Eva Sorensen, 98, and her daughter, Peg Moyer, 76, made an athletic pilgrimage together last spring. As they’ve done for the past decade, the two traveled to the National Senior Games — held in Fort Lauderdale, Florida this year — and returned home with some shiny medals. “We’re pretty modest,” said Moyer, who with her softball team, the Fairfax-based Golden Girls, won fifth place. Her mother “likes to brag, though,” Moyer said. “It’s hard not to be big-headed when you get so many medals and compliments,” said Sorensen, who took home a gold medal for women’s single bowling and silver for shuffleboard. Sorensen, who has been bowling since she was a teenager, said the sport takes her back in time. “When I bowl and I’m around the other young people, I don’t feel my age at all,” she said. Since 2006, mother and daughter have been participating in the Senior Games in Northern Virginia, the Huntsman World Senior Games in Utah, and the National Senior Games, Moyer said. “That’s one of the reasons [my mother] is doing so well,” Moyer said, “because she has that to look forward to every year.” Many older adults from D.C., Maryland and Northern Virginia participated in the National Senior Games in Florida from May 10 to 23 this year. Almost 12,000 athletes over 50 participated in the 21 sporting events, many of them beating records. In fact, 154 athletes established new National Senior Games records this year.

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