85-Year-Old Massachusetts Senior Athlete Receives Personal Best Award
FALMOUTH, MA – The National Senior Games Association (NSGA) visited the recent Massachusetts Council on Aging (NCOA) annual conference to make a workshop presentation highlighted with recognition of 85-year-old Amy Hicks as the first senior athlete from the state to be honored with the its “Personal Best Award.” Hicks also received a congratulatory citation signed by Governor Charlie Baker and Lt. Governor Amy Polito at the event.
NSGA CEO Marc T. Riker said the Needham resident was selected “for her perseverance to continue with senior sports for three decades despite significant physical challenges, and for helping and inspiring others to remain active.” Riker explained to conference attendees that Hicks has found ways to overcome spinal stenosis and other arthritic conditions to pursue a long career in track and field competitions with Massachusetts and National Senior Games for three decades. “Amy had an active sporting life as a youth and enjoyed helping others as an educator and coach after college,” Riker said. “Despite the pain of her affliction, she was determined to continue with sports as a senior, and has become an inspiration and role model for others seeking to keep moving.”
“This is a great honor to be selected from hundreds of other athletes in our state,” Hicks said in her comments, which concluded with advice she wanted the council members to bring back to their communities. “It’s never too late to start, and the Games are the best place to start. It’s competition, sure, but you have a good time doing something new and getting fit. Like I always say, if you don’t move it, you will rust!”
The award was given during a workshop presentation titled “Senior Games is More Than Just Fun and Games,” which NSGA made in collaboration with board members Greg Tooker and Davis Cox of the Massachusetts Senior Games. Riker shared results of National Senior Games athlete fitness screenings over several years that confirm staying active greatly improves a person’s health and quality of life, followed by information sharing about opportunities for individuals and organizations to participate in the state.
Since 2013, NSGA’s Personal Best program has profiled athletes with wide-ranging stories of overcoming challenges with the goal to inspire and motivate all aging Americans to stay active to pursue their own “personal best” lifestyle. Hicks is the first Massachusetts athlete to be recognized in the program. An in-depth interview feature about Hicks and for previous selected athletes can be found on the Personal Best page at NSGA.com.
“Our recognition program has profiled athletes of all abilities from many backgrounds,” Riker said. “They provide a simple common message of inspiration to others of all ages: Just keep moving and you will enjoy a healthier, happier and longer life. We offer Senior Games as a great option to find fitness, fun and fellowship.”
The Massachusetts Senior Games, formed in 1991 by Dr. Jack Neumann of Springfield College, serves as the state’s qualifying event for athletes 50 and over to compete in the biennial National Senior Games. Their annual games offer competitions in winter and summer sports spread across nearly 30 communities in the Commonwealth. Please visit www.MAseniorgames.org for information.
NSGA is a nonprofit Multi-Sports Council member of the United States Olympic Committee that promotes health and wellness for adults 50 and over through education, fitness and sport. It governs the biennial National Senior Games, the largest multi-sport event for people age 50+ in the world. Athletes qualify to compete at one of 53 sanctioned state games such as the Massachusetts Senior Games. 10,000+ athletes are expected to compete in 20 medal sports over 12 days in five-year age divisions at the 2019 National Senior Games presented by Humana, to be hosted in Albuquerque, New Mexico from June 14-25, 2019.
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CONTACT:
NSGA: Del Moon, NSGA Media Director (678) 549-4444 / Dm***@**GA.com
MASG: Davis Cox, President (508) 393-8785 / in**@***********es.org
- Published in News and Events, Personal Best Tour Blogs, Press Releases
“If you don’t move it, you will rust”
Amy Hicks, 85, Needham, Massachusetts
All athletes have aches and injuries that inevitably come with athletic competition, and that is especially true for senior athletes over an extended time. Some, like Amy Hicks, have also had to overcome medical challenges that often bring careers to an end, but she has learned to persevere and even excel while living with severe arthritis for decades.
The native of Massachusetts grew up before Title IX leveled the playing field for girls, but Amy was undeterred and participated in many sports. Her passion led to a career as a physical education teacher and later as an advocate serving as Chair of Senior Fitness, Activities and Necrology for the Massachusetts Board of Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance for more than 20 years. She is most proud that she introduced track and field, gymnastics and lacrosse to her high school. This led to a competition career that began with AAU meets and has yielded medals, national records, and one Olympic Trials appearance.
Amy suspended competition for 26 years while raising her two children, but picked up where she left off and has been scooping up medals as a Senior Games and masters athlete. She also loves water sports and has participated for many years in synchronized swimming competitions on an international scale. Her service to the sport earned her the Mae McEwan Award, synchronized swimming’s highest honor.
As a professional, Amy was among the first to conduct an in-pool Arthritis Aquatics Program created by the Arthritis Foundation in 1983. In a strange twist of fate, when she was diagnosed with spinal stenosis in 2003 the facilitator also became the patient as she gained therapy while leading exercises for others. A broken elbow and hip replacement surgery are also among the speed bumps she has cleared along the way.
In our conversation with Amy, she shares her sporting life history and discusses how she has managed arthritis and stayed in the game by setting an extensive exercise program for herself to build strength, flexibility and endurance. She also expresses the camaraderie and fun she has enjoyed while traveling to The Games with her “New England Bunch.”
Her advice to you is simple but resounding, and it is a common theme shared by our Personal Best athletes: Keep moving for life. If Amy Hicks can knock off the rust and still heave a hammer, there’s always something you can do to stay active and improve the quality of your life.
Amy, you have been one active lady! Tell us your sports history.
I was born in Medford, Massachusetts and grew up and graduated high school in Somerville in 1950. We didn’t have too many sports for the girls at that time. I played half-court basketball and softball. Girls could swim, bowl, and play tennis recreationally but that was it. This was way before Title IX.
Through a local YMCA program I learned to love gym activities, like running on indoor track, swinging on rings and climbing ropes. I also learned about water sports, and I taught swimming there while in high school.
College was interesting. I went to the Baroness Rose Posse School of Physical Education and Physiotherapy in Boston, which was a three-year school teaching Swedish gymnastics. In addition to a strong academic program, I was introduced to track and field and competitive gymnastics through AAU meets and the school’s summer camp in New Hampshire.
Amy teaching gymnastics in the ‘50s.
After three years, I got my ‘phys ed’ diploma and was Valedictorian of my class. I went on get my bachelor of science degree from the University of Maine in 1954. I kept doing AAU track events because there were no women’s team varsity sports at Maine. I thought nothing at the time about this being a man’s sport or that it would be detrimental to me physically. I loved to run, jump and throw, and we had a male coach in AAU who was like a father to all of us. And I did join the University’s modern dance and tumbling clubs and did all the class sports I could get into, like basketball, tennis, field hockey and table tennis.
After graduation, I taught physical education at Needham High School until 1963. I was proud my school was among the first to offer gymnastics to girls, and it led to gymnastics competitions for the state. I also introduced girls lacrosse and track and field to the high school. This also led to state championships for girls track.
Did you continue to compete when you started working?
My school offered AAU gymnastics meets and I competed along with some of my students. I stayed with track and field competition while I was teaching but soon had to stop the gymnastics because it was too dangerous without a personal coach or spotter to work with me. Then, I fell in love with a colleague who taught history, married in 1962 and started raising two kids. I had to put sports aside for 26 years.
I retired from teaching in 1976, so I began to do other things, like judging gymnastics meets and refereeing girls field hockey lacrosse games. I also started a girl’s synchronized swimming team at a local club, and I also served on the Massachusetts Board of Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance for over 20 years. I wrote several articles about the National Senior Games and other senior activities for their newsletters. I received all kinds of honors from my board work and just retired this year.
A high point for me was making the cover of the program for their National Physical Education Convention in Boston when I was 60. They had a contest to find a photo to fit the convention theme, which was “Take the Challenge – Go the Distance.” I had the perfect picture of me pole vaulting to qualify at the Massachusetts Senior Games, and they selected me. When I went to the convention a lot of people asked me to autograph the cover! [Laugh]
Autographed program cover with inscription “It’s never too late to try something new!”
Seems like you were destined to be in Senior Games as you grew older.
I found out about masters sports and Senior Games in 1989. The Nationals started in 1987, so I missed the first two. I checked in New England and found Rhode Island had Senior Games coming up. I knew I could certainly do the shot, javelin and discus because I had trained and competed in those events. I went and won them all, breaking their existing records. I had to wait a year to qualify to go to Syracuse for the Nationals in 1991. I’ve been with it ever since, except for 2013 when I fell and compacted my elbow three weeks before the competition.
The road hasn’t been smooth. You’ve had plenty of physical challenges.
I thought 2013 was my year to set a new hammer record. But the compacted elbow ended that dream. I tried to splint it, but you need two hands to swing the hammer. I could try using my other arm on the other events, but I couldn’t even drive. So I stayed home and took therapy instead-much to my husband’s relief!
Then, in 2017 my hip had been deteriorating and I hoped I could put off replacement surgery until after The Games in Birmingham. My team told me not to “turn” to get more distance in throws because I might fall and not be able to do my other events. So I threw all power throws-no turns or run ups- and I still went home with one gold and three silver medals. I also extended my streak to win at least one medal in every Nationals. I now have 33 in all at that level.
That shows determination, gutting it out like that. Were you concerned about coming back after the hip replacement was done?
I had people ahead of me who have done this before. I knew how much time it would take to recover so I had to time my surgery to be ready for the next summer. Annie [2017 Personal Best athlete Ann McGowan] had been through it, and I know synchronized swimmers who can now do beautiful things in the water after the operation.
Amy displays hammer throwing skills in 2005 National Senior Games in Pittsburgh.
I just need to be patient, not rush and do what the doctor tells me to do. I like to say, “It takes time to make fine wine.” [Laugh]
You’ve overcome a lot of injuries and maladies, but we’re told arthritis has been your constant enemy.
In the 60’s I was diagnosed with arthritis in my neck. I had also been in a moped accident in ‘85 and actually told myself then that I would probably need a hip replacement one day. The doctor gave me medications and sent me in for physical therapy and stretching exercises.
As part of my professional pursuits, I was among the first to facilitate the Arthritis Aquatics Program that was sponsored by the Arthritis Foundation back in 1983. I was in the pool nearly every day teaching these water exercises which provide full range of motion for all joints. I was an instructor trainer and did all that until 2009. The original name for this class was “Twinges in Hinges.” [Laughs]
So while you were teaching water exercise to others, you were benefiting from the therapy yourself.
Yes. Any chance I can get into the water I do it because I move so much better due to the buoyance of the water. What I can’t do on land I can do in water where I have less gravity pulling on me. It feels wonderful.
Then, in 2003 I woke up one morning with excruciating pain in my lower back. I could not stand up straight. It turned out to be spinal stenosis. What was I to do? I had all of these tournaments and Senior Games coming up, and my doctor told me I could go, but to only exert myself at 80 percent and not try to set any records. So that’s what I did. I prepared by doing exercises and keeping myself pain free through therapy in flexibility, strengthening, and endurance. On occasion I did need pain meds, but I knew exercise was the key to needing them less often.
There are still people who are afraid to move too much when they have arthritis for fear of making it worse.
It’s just the opposite of that! You need to move. Of course, the type of arthritis makes a big difference. With rheumatoid arthritis you can exercise but you don’t go as vigorously or do as much, especially if you have a flare up. Be gentle, do less repetitions. I have osteoarthritis and need the full range of motion for all of my joints.
Today, most gyms and community centers with pools offer water aerobics so it has become very popular.
Water aerobics is not for those with severe arthritis or painful joints. Arthritis exercises are done more slowly to get the full range of motion. You don’t want to be jumping around a lot. Many times you use the wall for support, and as the class progresses there is a deep water component where the feet are off the bottom, using a “noodle” floating device. That provides an opportunity to do bicycling moves and various types of kicking, which are more stimulating.
When I was preparing for hip replacement surgery last year, I spent three months doing pool exercises. I didn’t want a class because I wanted to do specific exercises for my hip. When I could get it wet after surgery I spent another month in the pool to get my body back in shape to qualify to go to next year’s Nationals in Albuquerque, which I did in June.
I also wanted to get back in the water to see if I could get my “ballet legs” back. [Laughs]
You mentioned synchronized swimming earlier. Is that another big sport passion for you?
Oh yes, I’ve been in meets all over the country and the world. I got the highest honor a person can get in synchronized swimming, the Mae McEwan Award for services and contributions made to the sport.
We need more meets on a national level. I’ve been trying for years to get it into the National Senior Games. It is in some state games. We have at least 350 registered swimmers over 50 who would go.
You must know Dr. Jane Katz, who is a National Senior Games gold medalist swimmer from New York who helped get synchronized swimming into the Olympics.
I know Jane very well. She taught me how to do a foott-first dive, where you keep your head above water. It’s an awesome move and requires great timing and strength in the arms and legs to press them down at the right moment so you don’t sink.
Have you gotten back into your synchronized swimming yet?

Synchronized swimming is as important as track and field for Amy.
No, not yet. Our national meets are always in October, which is bad timing for me to be ready. I couldn’t meet the technical requirements at this point-I need a lot more strength and endurance. Plus, I don’t have any new routines.
I used to swim in Senior Games, but there are so many events crunched together it was impossible to get to all of them, especially in the summer. I just do four throwing events now, no jumping or swimming. Financially and physically that works out just fine now.
If you had not pushed yourself with exercise and sports, where do you think you would you be today?
I would be in a wheelchair. I mean that literally. With my stenosis, I would not be able to move. I always tell people that the body was meant to move, and if you don’t move it, you will rust. You will stiffen up and your muscles will atrophy and weaken.
When I’m in pain, I know I have to move. I have to put my body through some range of motion or stretching. Sometimes I just bend over and try to touch my toes to stretch my whole back. Or just sit and stretch out my legs. Then I can walk another mile. [Laughs]
I have less pain now. Strength and flexibility has definitely improved. I have discovered the importance of not overdoing it. I have to pace myself in my fitness program, sit and not stand for long periods wherever possible, keep my weight under control through proper nutrition, and stretch out frequently.
What is it that most motivates you to stay in The Games?
I have a competitive spirit. It doesn’t matter what it is, I want to do my best at whatever I’m trying to do. If I’m not doing well I ask myself, “What do I need to do to improve?” That’s my mental attitude.
The Games are not just a competition either. There’s a social part, where you see people you haven’t seen in awhile. You’re competing in a sport, but the camaraderie and the friendships make it a fun thing, like with my travel mates. When I started there were about a dozen of us that called ourselves “The New England Bunch” and through the years we got to be like family. Some are retired or home bound now, but many of us just keep going. Annie McGowan was one of the “Great Eight” athletes who have competed in all 30 years of the National Senior Games starting in 1987. She lives in Rhode Island and is 94. She was one of the first athletes I met at my first Senior Games and is an awesome inspiration to me.
The New England Bunch, Louisville 2007 edition: Ann McGowan(RI), Elsie Adams (NY), Jeanne Berlisph (CT), Joan Youngs (CT), Virginia O’Connor (NH), Amy Hicks (MA), and Joyce Finley (MA).
Are there other athletes who inspire you?
My roommate Judy Scott from Massachusetts is quite an athlete, she did everything including being designated driver. When she was very young she started to develop polio and her mother acted quickly. Her doctor made an immediate diagnosis, which probably saved her from paralysis. Judy started running at 38 and ran her first marathon at 40. Her legs have carried her far and she has been an inspiration to all of us. I honestly don’t know how she did it.
I also admire Gloria Krug from Pennsylvania. She’s in my age division and in a league all by herself. She is always a challenge to me. And of course there’s Flo Meiler from Vermont. She’s like the Energizer Bunny. She’s done well in all of the sports – running, hurdling, vaulting. All of them are inspirations to me.
You have always been active. What do you tell others who think they can’t do Senior Games sports?
I have seen a lot of people who are physically fine but have never competed. Don’t worry about being a green beginner. Pick a sport you like to do and learn the rules. Go ahead and come out to the state games, it’s the best place to start. Just come and try, you will probably find there are things you never thought you could do. That’s been true with several beginners I’ve brought in.
There are always people out there like me who are willing to help. I’ve been doing that all of my life.
Obviously, you don’t have plans to stop anytime soon.
Why would I? If I’m still having fun all I need to do is to get myself to the starting line. The rest will take care of itself!
- Published in 2018 PB, Personal Best Featured Athletes
Setback (Literally)
TWEAK!
Uh Oh…
I knew the road might not be straight in this endeavor. Out of the blue, without any clear cause, a sharp back pain manifested in the middle of my spine. I could sit and stand without much discomfort, but when laying down the spasms would come with one wrong move. Tweak! Then, getting up after a sleep brought sharper spasms and stiffness. Tweak! TWEAK! Ugh.
The irony of having to sleep elevated on a La-Z-Boy did not escape me. I’m trying to spend less time there.

I could walk, but not for very long, so pushing it to power walk pace was not the best idea. My chiropractor provided some relief and advice, and I considered getting an MRI if it didn’t go away. You never know when your kidneys or some other machine part has a knocking valve, so to speak. Thankfully, it is subsiding and I’m easing back into the routine.
Note to self: STRETCH!
I do often stretch, but not in a consistent manner. When I wake, I will sometimes do a few slow straight leg lifts with my toes pointed, then slowly lift and “bicycle” a few times. Then rotate torso and stretch arms when I rise. However, I had not been stretching as a habit before walking. I guess the rubber band got too tight with my haphazard approach. My hammy’s need attention.
There are expansive resources online that provide advice and information about stretching. Here’s one I like by physical therapist Janice Eveleigh. The point is this: If you don’t want to Tweak!, loosen and warm up the engine before racing down the road. Take it from my rookie mistake.
Of course, not doing my routine walks and training at pace also had an adverse affect on my weight. But another event in the form of a medical procedure came to my rescue. Cue Infomercial:
Have you heard about the Colonoscopy Diet? Our scientific prep and no food intake for nearly 24 hours will melt pounds off like magic! Just a couple of delicious shakes to kick it off, and after you get clean as a whistle a doctor will give you happy gas and a thorough surgical examination. It’s over before you know it and you won’t feel a thing! And just watch those pounds and inches disappear! Try it now – “Operators” are standing by!
OK, kinda gross humor but please listen to me if you are over 50 and haven’t had one: Do it! I’ve lost two good friends far too soon to colon cancer, and the key to survival if your ticket is pulled is early detection and treatment. In my case, I have had benign polyps removed, and one of my siblings has had them too. Because of that, I am on a three-year cycle for testing instead of the usual five-year recommendation. I look forward to getting the procedure because it feels great to be told you are in the clear.

So, the procedure coincidentally helped me shed five pounds that had piled back on, and I’m up again. I’ve become a bit of a curiosity in the neighborhood, gliding at a fast pace and pumping my arms down the street. I hope people will stop me and ask about it so I can tell them about Senior Games and that a complete novice like me can “get into The Games” with a little work and motivation.
See ya next time when I take you back to understand why I shied away from sports.
- Published in Moon Walking
Heart to Heart – October 2018 Athlete of the Month
David Kucherawy, 66, Washington, Pennsylvania
All dog owners enjoy a bond with their pets, but David Kucherawy has a special connection with his cocker spaniel Raleigh. In fact, he jokes that in a sense they saved each other’s lives.
David has been competing in sprint track events and collecting medals in masters and Senior Games events since 2009, including a bronze and a silver at the 2017 National Senior Games presented by Humana. But lack of physical activity for prior decades almost cost his life. “I played football and tennis in high school, and some football at a Division II college. After that, I was an administrator at a psychiatric hospital for nearly 40 years and did not have the time to do sports.”
In 2008, he started having minor chest pains and tried to pass it off as a muscle pain or indigestion. “But the pains kept accelerating in duration and intensity,” he recalls. “I only had pains early in the morning, and that was when got up and walked Raleigh every day before going to work. I believe if I wasn’t walking that dog, I might not have noticed the pain until it became a massive heart attack.” Tests revealed his left anterior descending coronary artery had a 99% blockage. He had narrowly avoided what is called “the Widow Maker.”
Ironically, David had rescued a severely malnourished young Raleigh from a local animal shelter 18 months beforehand. “I now think, ‘We’re even, buddy,’” he says. “I took care of him, and he took care of me.”
It also opened a new path for David to follow to senior sports. After a stent was placed, he was advised to exercise and have a healthier diet. He began walking as part of his rehabilitation and decided to pick up the pace on his way to losing 35 pounds.
“I started racing in a little tri-county meet for seniors here, and people said, ‘Wow, you’re pretty fast, you should go to the Pennsylvania Senior Games,’ which I was unaware of. I went there and found there was the National Senior Games. So it was just one thing after the next.”
David also competes in masters track events and is proud of the 4×200 relay gold medal earned with his Philadelphia Masters Track & Field Club team at the National Masters Indoor Track and Field Championships. He’s also thankful that his health has never been better. “My cardiac visits are short now, and I haven’t had a stress test in almost five years,” he reports. “They told me if I’m running like this there’s no need to do that.”
We wondered if Raleigh also runs with David while he trains. “No, he’s almost 15 years old now so he’s semi-retired. We still walk every day but only go a short distance now. I know he misses the times we used to take longer walks down to the college nearby, because the kids would bring Raleigh food from the snack bar.”
David Kucherawy enjoys his new journey and maintains a steady training regimen. “It’s the adrenaline rush and excitement of the competition that I look forward to,” he says, adding, “I’m so grateful that the Senior Games exist, because it provided a goal for me.”
More Athlete of the Month Stories at NSGA.com
- Published in Athlete of the Month


