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Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

Joe Mugovero, New London, curls 100-pounds. Joe, owner and trainer, Breakfastclub Gym, is 61-years-old and has lifted for 38 years.

by Chris Annino and Roger Zotti
photos by Christopher Annino

Joe Mugovero, 61, owner and trainer, the Breakfastclub Gym, has an impressive strongman resume. For instance, in various strength sports over the years, he has won more than 200 awards. In 2008, the Diesel Crew website, generally regarded as the world’s leading instructional grip strength website, recognized him as Athlete of the Month. Joe has lifted for 38 years and holds three age group CT records in the bench press.

When Joe was 58, he challenged the famous Thomas Inch Dumbbell. If you’re wondering what’s so special about this dumbbell, consider this: “It weighs 172 lbs and has a very thick handle and two big bells on each side, making it nearly impossible to lift,” said Joe. Guess what?  Since age 58 Joe has lifted it 97 times, all verified! “I am the only person over 60 years of age known to have lifted it in CT.”

About 20 years ago, Joe said, “at the Sports Complex in New London, an onlooker observed me training every Sunday morning. I was in serious competition at the time and benching fairly well for this area.” After a while, “others interested in competing in power-lifting started to train with me.” Before long someone nicknamed the group the Breakfastclub. “We trained and competed under that banner.”

Roy Saluk, Waterford, lifts a 114-pound Thomas Inch Dumbbell.

Several years passed and Joe opened his cellar to trainees: “We branched out into strongman and grip strength training. Our present site is located in New London, near Ocean Beach, and we specialize in strength, not necessarily fitness.” The small private club has been in existence for 13 years, and right now there are about 12 members, from ages 17 to 68.

The gym is unique. “You can go in most of the gyms around here, and you won’t find hundred-pound-plates,” Joe said. “I have, for example, eight-hundred-pound plates and 42 45-pound plates. It’s heavy duty stuff because we specialize in strong man implements, like you see on television. It’s frowned upon in regular gyms because they don’t want people doing that stuff.”

As for women, “We had a woman who drove in from Waterbury, in the warm weather, so she could train here.” She has competed and “wants to again. She’s in her early thirties. Her husband also competes and he’s very good.”

Joe speaks with pride – quite rightly – about “some recent results in competition and general training.” For instance, Mystic’s Chris Annino, photographer/writer for “The Resident,” set a record in the dead-lift competition; teenager Sal Gromolini won second place in an arm wrestling contest in Providence; Mike Richards emerged victorious, in a New Hampshire strongman camp, lightweight division; and several weeks ago, two members carried 600-pounds for 100 feet.

Joe added,  “We have one guy, John Retkowski, who did a feat of bending done by only 58 people – ever. It’s called bending a Red Nail. John McGuire just lifted 485-pounds, five times in a row. John’s 68 years old. We’re all friends with each other. Everybody pushes everybody. It’s all about camaraderie.”

Posted on February 3rd, 2010  | category: Blood Sweat & Tears, Sports


Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

“…it’s not a big deal.” - Chuck Brenker, after completing his 100th marathon

“…it’s not a big deal.” - Chuck Brenker, after completing his 100th marathon

by Roger Zotti

After Lisbon’s Chuck Brenker finished the 2009 Hartford Marathon, October 26, you’d think he’d have reason to celebrate. After all, it was his 100th marathon.  But Chuck didn’t celebrate because, as he put it: “It’s not a big deal.” I have news for Chuck: His accomplishment is an extremely big deal.

As for the race itself, Chuck explained, “I was injured beforehand, so I knew it was prudent that I back off the pace. My friend Gary Tremblay and I had initially planned to run a certain pace, but he took off and had a beautiful second half….I planned to finish at 4:30 and I did. It wasn’t a run for a personal best.” Then, about a month after the Hartford Marathon, Chuck competed in the JFK 50 Miler, in Hagertown, Maryland. “It was my ninth consecutive ultra-marathon, and it’s an incredible course,” he said. “The first one I ran was when I was fifty years old.”

Interestingly, Chuck doesn’t believe that running marathons “makes you any healthier. Most of us are so obsessed with what we do that we will run through injuries, like I did in Hartford. We’ll do whatever we have to do to cross that finish line. Guess what? I’ll be going in for an MRI in a few days to see if I have a stress factor in my foot.” So, did he entertain ideas of pulling out of the JFK 50 miler? “No way,” he said, with a laugh.
In 1969 Chuck started running. Then in 1970, when he was stationed on a submarine, the Commanding Officer announced a contest. “Whoever lost the most weight could go to whatever school he wanted to,” said Chuck said, who lost the most weight and picked Navy Diver School.  There, he became intensely involved in calisthenics and running. Fast forward to 1976 and Chuck’s first marathon: “It was the Oceanside California Marathon. At the time I was stationed with the Naval Criminal Investigative Service at Camp Pendleton, California….I ended up my active duty in 1976.”

Yes, Chuck has a goal when he runs – which “is to run long, to run healthy, and to have the best life I can as long as I can.” His advice to runners is “find a running group. When I moved here I saw a few guys running, befriended them, and soon it became an informal running group. It is so much easier to run with other people. Try to find people who enjoy running. Talk and have fun while you run. And for a first time marathoner – don’t over-train.”

Clearly, running is a huge part of Chuck’s life and so is apheresis which, according its website, is defined as a procedure that “collects platelets or plasma from a donor. The remaining blood components, including the red cells, are returned to the donor.”  A State of CT Special Donor, Chuck has completed almost three hundred apheresis procedures and wants to “get the word out” about the process. For more information about apheresis, visit www.bloodct.org/what_is_apheresis.php.

Posted on December 23rd, 2009  | category: Blood Sweat & Tears, Featured Articles


Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

by Roger Zotti

Here are some vitals about the upcoming “Runners in Support of Education…and Walkers, too!” The North Stonington Grange Fairgrounds, Wyassup Road, is where the 5K road race, the two mile fitness walk, and the children’s races begin and end. Pickup is also held at the Grange from 8:30-9:45 a.m. on May 23rd. Proceeds from the event go to the North Stonington Education Foundation. For pre-registered runners and walkers, ages three and up, there will be free T-shirts, while available. After the race, it’s chow time, so be ready for hamburgers, hot dogs, home baked goodies, soda, and bottled water. For more information, call Bob Lohmann, Race Director,  at 860.889.5543.

The North Stonington resident pointed out that “last year’s overall winners were Spenser Rogers, Quaker Hill, for the men, and Allison Gallerani, Uncasville, for the women. The course is the same scenic one as in past years. It’s moderately rolling. There’s nothing excessive about it.” As for overall participation, “Well, it’s not as much as I thought I would get,” Bob commented. “Last year 57 ran the race, and we had a few more runners the year before.” But the last two years are an improvement over the first year when “we had slightly over forty runners. In truth, I’d like to see eighty to one-hundred participants this year.”

Brace yourself: over a 15-year period, Bob competed in 58 triathlons. “I do typically four a year,” he said. “Two are sprints. Another is the Olympic distance, (0.9 mile swim, 24 mile bike, and a 6.2 mile run), and another’s the Half-Ironman (1.2 mile swim,  56 mile bike, 13.1 mile run).”

Bob started running, swimming, and biking about 15 years ago, when he was 50. He said, “I was working at Electric Boat at the time, and I was working out at the fitness center. I was getting bored on the machines, and I asked the woman in charge, Donna Kay Ness, if she thought I could do a triathlon. Donna is a successful triathlete. In fact, she won the Hawaiian Ironman twice in her age group. I think she’s working at Springfield College now. I told her I knew how to swim but running and biking I haven’t done in years. She said, ‘Sure, you can do it.’ So she gave me a lot of ideas, and I trained, and I did the Mystic Sprint Triathlon and finished and the rest, as they say, is history.”

Final points: First, running is the most difficult event for Bob, swimming the easiest, and biking somewhere in between. Second, he has advice for anyone interested in an exercise program. “You can start at any age,” he said. “You just have to start slowly and sensibly. If it’s running or jogging, go from one telephone pole to the next. Then walk a few. And you’ll gradually build up strength and stamina.”

Posted on April 15th, 2009  | category: Blood Sweat & Tears


Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

by Roger Zotti

This just in: Ron Dombrowski, 66, is still running strong, and in August he’ll travel to Stanford University, San Francisco Bay, California,  to compete in his fourth Senior Olympics. In Ron’s age group (65-69), he has already qualified for the 1500, 400, and 200 meter dashes, and the 5K road race.  “The last Senior Olympics I did was in Hampton Beach, Virginia, in 2003,” said the Uncasville resident. “Eight medals were given out. I’m hoping for a medal this time. You see, I’ll be running against the same people I ran against before. We all just got older.” Ron noted his friend, Jerry Lavasseur, “Got me involved in the Senior Olympics and he’ll be competing this year, too.”

As for Ron’s weekly mileage, he’s up to eighteen but, he pointed out, “I hope to build to twenty-five. I’ll stay at that level.” Because of his training schedule, Ron, a veteran runner and longtime member of the Mohegan Striders, probably won’t be competing in as many road races this summer as he usually does. At the same time, he said, “If I  feel like getting into a race, maybe I will.” As for Ron’s diet: he’s more careful at 66 than he used to be. In past years, especially during the winter, he’d put on a few pounds. “Not this year, though,” he said. That bag of potato chips he used to devour in one day is a thing of the past. And as for injuries, so far Ron hasn’t had any, though he admitted he’s extremely careful because of this year’s harsh weather.

Yes, Ron is critical of the way CT treats its senior Olympians. Competitors from the state are running in its uniform, he said, “which is a black t-shirt with silver letters. That’s not a uniform. We look like paupers when we’re out there.” Ron singled out New Mexico because it provides its runners “with a new running suit, $1,000, and new running shoes – at least that’s the way it was in the past. CT wants us to compete, but it really doesn’t want to spend the money.” Ron has been in contact with State Senator Edith Prague and State Representative Kevin Ryan. “I don’t think anything will be done because of the economy, which I understand.”

Competing in the Senior Olympics has always been an education for Ron. “You have a great time and meet and talk with and learn from many people from all over the world,” he said. The event is a challenge, too: It enables Ron to gauge where he stands in relation to runners, in his age group, from other parts of the country and the world. And how long does Ron intend to compete in the Senior Olympics? “For as long as the good Lord lets me,” he said, smiling.

Posted on April 1st, 2009  | category: Blood Sweat & Tears


Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

story & photo
by Christopher Annino

The third annual Mohegan Sun World Softball Coaches Convention, sponsored by Gold Orluck and Partners, and Americas Game, had a tremendous successful turnout of coaches, players and fans from throughout the nation. Olympic Gold Medalists Jennie Finch and Cat Osterman, of The Stratford CT Brakettes, and NCAA legend and coaching guru Sue Enquist presented an uncanny amount of knowledge to softball coaches and youth ball players. “I have learned a lot and it is a thrill getting to meet my hero Cat Osterman. I can’t wait to comeback next year,” said 16-year-old Lauren Tuiskula, Millbury, MA.

Sue expressed several  points that are crucial in conditioning for ball players. “Make sure you take time to recover.  Don’t lift too heavily and make your weight increase gradual, if training with weights.  Make sure your diet is full of nutritious foods, get proper sleep and the most important, make time for school work because you can’t always depend on athletics to get you by in life.”

Jennie  also offered great advice in becoming a focused ball player on and off the field. “The secret to success is to keep things in perspective and prioritize. For example, my religion keeps me focused and helps me through difficult and confusing situations.”

Cat added, “The best advice I can tell any young player is dream big, but work hard for that dream. Too many kids think it will be handed to them. It won’t. When you make it by earning what you deserve, it is more fulfilling.”

Recently, an ugly cloud has plagued the game of softball: it was voted out of the 2012 London Summer Olympics. Speculation for the current expulsion is because European countries are seemingly jealous for not medaling or qualifying in past Olympics. Softball is a very popular sport and is played by 50 million people in 125 countries worldwide.

When asked in an exclusive interview about their feelings in regards to this recent decision, Sue, Jennie, and Cat agreed in saying, “There is no reason for this decision, the sport is growing tremendously. Unfortunately there is not a lot we can do. But there is two things that will remain the same about softball, it will grow in popularity and will always be played as a fun sport.”

Posted on February 4th, 2009  | category: Blood Sweat & Tears, Mohegan Sun

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