80-year-old Regina track star named World's Best Athlete for a second time
Regina’s Carol LaFayette-Boyd has been named the 2022 World Masters Athlete of the Year. LaFayette-Boyd won the same honour in 2018.
“It’s almost like I know other people that I thought deserved it, and I think ‘now why don’t they get it?,’” LaFayette-Boyd said on the news of receiving the honour for the second time.
Masters athletics is a class of the sport athletics for those aged 35 or older. Athletes can compete in track and field, road running and cross country. The competitors are put into five year age categories.
“I didn’t even know there were Masters athletes until 1992 actually, I was turning 50 and the Canadian Masters Games were going to be in Regina. My husband and I had been trying to run a mile and just trying to stay in shape. I looked at these games and there was track and field for 50 plus, and I was turning 50 that year so I thought ‘This is what I will do’,” she said.
“If it’s in my hometown, I won’t have to travel, I won’t waste any money if I make a fool of myself.”
LaFayette-Boyd then went on to break multiple world records at the age of 76 and once again when she reached the 80 plus category. In 2022 she broke the outdoor world track and field records for the 100 metre, 200 metre, Long Jump and Triple Jump. She also broke the indoor track and field records for Long Jump and 60 metre.
“The biggest lesson I’ve learned is that I need to take care of myself. Every day I get up, I ride my bike, I read my Bible, do my stretching and I do the elliptical,” LaFayette-Boyd said.
“It doesn’t matter how well you do or don’t do. If you just get out there and keep fit and healthy, that’s what’s important.”
LaFayette-Boyd trains under Chadon Dorsch, the head coach of Excel Athletika.
“She’s been an inspiration to all of us and all of the young kids that we have coming up. To have somebody of her age and caliber is absolutely amazing,” Dorsch said.
“For me being 46 and coaching an 80-year-old and she listens to me, that’s fantastic,” he laughed. “Our goal is to make our athletes better and get them to the goals they want to achieve. It doesn’t matter what age you are, it doesn’t matter what skill set you are. Everybody’s proud of somebody making that kind of accomplishment. I absolutely love training her.”
Another Masters athlete that trains alongside LaFayette-Boyd is 69 year old Selina Coward. The two call themselves a dynamic duo because they help push one another to stay healthy and reach new heights in the sport.
“Carol props up my tree when I don’t feel good or if I’m not healthy that day. She pulls me along and it’s the same with her. When she doesn’t feel good or she’s got something on her plate. We talk to each other and we help each other out,” Coward said.
Coward enjoys the sport because she said it makes her feel healthy and strong, among other perks.
“I get mistaken for a 45-year-old which really helps me a lot and people come up to me and say, ‘I’ve seen you working out, how can I do this?.’I’ve offered to help out and give them a hint or two. If I see someone needs help, I don’t hesitate,” Coward said.
The two train amongst the club’s younger athletes every week.
“Right now we’re coming Monday and Wednesday nights and Saturday morning. It’s really supposed to be an hour and a half. But we usually end up two hours because we start early to keep up with these kids,” said LaFayette-Boyd.
Despite the fact LaFayette-Boyd has broken multiple records and earned a world-class honour for the second time, she is nowhere near finished when it comes to her career.
“Right now we [Masters Athletics] have three 106-year-old women. One in India and two in the United States. So that’s my goal, 26 [more] years.”
“I think there’s only one thing that I would really like to happen and that’s to get into the Saskatchewan Sports Hall of Fame. Then I think I can relax and I don’t have to collect any more medals or do anything else. But in order to eat there they say you have to retire and I won’t be retiring for at least 26 years.”
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
China and Russia: A long, complicated friendship
Chinese leader Xi Jinping just concluded a three-day visit with Russian President Vladimir Putin, a warm affair in which the two men praised each other and spoke of a profound friendship. It's a high point in a complicated, centuries-long relationship.

'I'm a Canadian': MP named in foreign interference report speaks out, refutes claims
The Liberal MP who allegedly benefitted from Chinese election interference is speaking out against the report, categorically stating the foreign government did not help him in his nomination campaign.
Doctors expected to testify in Gwyneth Paltrow's ski trial
More witnesses are expected to testify on Wednesday in a trial about a 2016 ski crash between Gwyneth Paltrow and a retired Utah man suing her and claiming her recklessness left him with lasting injuries and brain damage.
So many doctors are being driven away by Idaho abortion ban that this hospital can't deliver babies anymore
An Idaho hospital has announced that it will no longer be able to deliver babies because the state’s near-total abortion ban — one of the most extreme in the U.S. — has driven so many doctors away.
Calgary doctor performs spine surgery on conscious patient
Last month, Dr. Michael Yang, a spine surgeon at Foothills Medical Centre, performed a discectomy to remove the damaged part of a herniated disc in the spine, on a patient who was wide awake.
Don't assume U.S. minds are made up about Safe Third Country treaty: Canada's envoy
President Joe Biden's administration is not dismissing out of hand the idea of renegotiating the bilateral 2004 treaty that governs the flow of asylum seekers across its northern border, says Canada's ambassador to the U.S.
Shake Shack to come to Canada in 2024 with first location set for Toronto
Canadians with a hankering for Shake Shack's juicy burgers soon won't have to cross the border to satisfy their cravings. Toronto-based private investment firms Osmington Inc. and Harlo Entertainment Inc. announced plans Wednesday to bring the U.S. fast food giant to Canada.
'A very, very difficult odour': Senate adjourns early after foul smell in the building disrupts proceedings
The Senate adjourned early on Tuesday afternoon after a foul smell in the building caused headaches in the chamber and disrupted proceedings.
Asteroid discovery suggests ingredients for life on Earth came from space
Two organic compounds essential for living organisms have been found in samples retrieved from the asteroid Ryugu, buttressing the notion that some ingredients crucial for the advent of life arrived on Earth aboard rocks from space billions of years ago.