JFIFC    $ &%# #"(-90(*6+"#2D26;=@@@&0FKE>J9?@=C  =)#)==================================================" }!1AQa"q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz w!1AQaq"2B #3Rbr $4%&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz ?LPsKF3@ J1IZ(&h%.i3@Q@JZ %%-%Z)5Qni3@&?xGT4]e9\Ve[jvdʹ:o }b';`+ZS=n.] S<0@'^ӧW] Oמxڧ0ʂs0G{֊1Rduv nwn=ʱ[ozdum$]iHQ;gC*FO} nNZRsZ쫞JҰ4RQ3@ Fi44Ppx,9jSs)a:#aixg7ݴLmcH.5ximmI~g>R{c.|5>75Ư0\ۦW}=ϭ5g#OgJjɟ?mTY.l r4L+ "HʢA#xq+@H'V>{8, -s0t?)=:bKC',c{ǿy=Jks -BNcj]NXn|S.3 \n%΃_]6FH`g^n{GW{Iv"~mhugiR^8-א*K?G`Q V:G$7OכKʍ c9Ի3ҵQZErg 9r +o5iEmpX;^22)¨3bX> 6Dnp[Ex"HҊ9SKہ&|F9SOk{A4'x#Ej7s=E8J,obyfl(㠣KnK{R]\d\y?*#ڮ@Nk;UHTGG֙ڞr0%qzVW,Mq 4s喞ynN}ڳlpq+k5ad-Ǯ>kE2RЌ2?tnph|pa8@$W9qӵDג:q {եĚlq]@ ݿ [zK+ Q{b@{S{~u6~Fq~I[K+ktrF<`4EJm C{4_Ru];FP7",=@늏PӶ@b6i{u$Ycz0v]FksR]J=mZ3)n?(AfzzWp=0UmFɃjHޥy>Gnj5 rfWՍ35rto҄jsu xۆ\(c'KE!ѭ~f8Hzjχƃ`_̞gc X&⺝yG+sW|Ss'3|" i$~SľEfO^cxwu ( +Pr1އ_=BI.Tj~Y?>0FAzO8ǰ4}(q4SN~APyW[ѭ56K+ 1\n*SO{Ѯ&Ӟ,3yCNCYn"qV=[#T>'e=}A>/^O>jNȖ_i<,`€LUiDXK%P1sv6"2(tR$B=x-eo)=}N}+n `W{~kc;P~$xK+ +(99F8֡z+Xׂ_[ŽdVu~}^צQkEܕC`=sVՑr.9c=9SCe@Lq^ukWBs gp7FI{z?tAsBsd,:8ץ &,QW28 ߚ-d8rѦ]rvOR:k 25RFI#sY1D&s^$iVz س5u\U)\z2~+5۵r<:3;wȈA= vၖFē$Q+╞0%=C9ؤ\KsNbaUʇ;}[SI!uHAjQD aYy ʠ (IEn\_[rIAZuRLL*OڰuhӎM}eyp&8 2_,Hq+}Yp%a=x|q鎏z'H Pv*֪6Fiŝ3R;'$|˴ˑ o+x[>X89r?+" !wv.~8 ]Y:\Vyd`RkZzncdÏfhzm/E>~U"0IN$߼:* >=!n=rMLԅO9?zxUucpYSJ&{oyk:M;K#g6Ð9&cr=xgQ46{_.qӴymcHFZMU9'Ԛ ksM'$|Sٛ?ˊ+3[$ E?7~u&Ss`ՃΣ9PH\̉ Ăi4r;,aXU- #J* N {i݈H_=y;i&*gq^)*Hd-Sp@^SckDs]'ڶ00<oC@F21q]b8T:Î{՘ Y}s:k9dl f}3q|{# Ud'n/cZWs]6 HRi|eNt=֎p̒KrU]™Y7]U5Ji9g'shwM%վJA.:q8O^RDOwV&8~jյaǘ n݌V7{&K1'kCq0k\s5wj? 2|Qwr"d3UbŎI1I9C>w&ަ*:"|1ޘːF\GO eGL̈3J)Fry"Y\  LQcbOU)_ךA$, I8ZjF;s sjZ̑tGϥm#Jm Vd1biIӃL,Dd*ky BdSX 0@8='zDƍ-8+0=? е!uEՇZCiݏjq!5/tmE<1_c8q]#D #HdAɤ5"*Gx%1>YNA޵on]:w%yI%ʂm3 PcXWZLE5KPcUn0IW4t\F/0[81 F T%f4n$3wP0Q=spqP2dgBFp;Ԅ|@(VIPsִQ=H36ayN<ՠr=q[< 'y ӣƭ01Q`b.{ D 9)9="Fr0ISHCֹ[%Ԁre6̝r4I/)~ӟ|.PMn }5x\cƅ4m\A=0;&/$ `1e̬ f&J{)Dn r=Ihn *\&OS֣>N`1ȠJ<0zn'i$MزAXSTo83Yԏj>]puWGnO!T u㚉PLuF yEdZdzQ{ em˖r E7>M-o* Uκ3RD`cҭ y&K#@yIN<$\!1SzzsEV8LwSVROF.zҰRRǨG u@UPT0}Ezڋ yd say|k6!Ajj犍PCn`G$8QIT'amNXtQhU\]wMgn!6qZBUJE84BXC8SJ9ڭ]3Hm¶u ~f77/5(B%&#nqUT"Dl5ׇ|-$lּې;(ԕDѝZj/^jRsq<; ogU8[08?62?Zfj7Q.7pk|/˓͎-UQK^լ+j B'Zw͞~S Sʰ:q^S3193Vn\Uv3ސ}8-|ڕТ .qʆ˜Az԰r3N{U'95-̪lmԇn 7N2~lVet13S^x1+ Har1\|~7&6q8%{f,/QR⺅7:Fs >`|e7|T8=קf3Gk7SHζ[I={Ռ`={Ӡ zO+(cX+`25*lbvT5ǮSEced to professionals everywhere I go: therapists, psychologists, business managers, and trainers.&nbsp; But, I am used to being self reliant and it has worked well for me."&nbsp; Oerter's coaches were a calendar and a towel.&nbsp; He recalls, "my calendar had 1460 days on it, which was the number of days I had to train before the next Olympics.&nbsp; I checked off every day that I gave 110% effort."&nbsp; Then, during training I would use a towel to mark the distance I threw. I never set a goal on 'the perfect distance' I simply worked to beat the towel.&nbsp; Often people would watch me train but I didn't ntice them much because I was so focused on that towel.&nbsp; </P> <P>"While training for the Olympics, Oerter adopted the training philosophy of Norm Schemansky: work hard for 45 minutes with no coaxing, no looking at mirrors and no B.S. talk. &nbsp;Norm quickly became one of Al Oerter's greatest heros.&nbsp; Oerter worked hard lifting 12 months a year.&nbsp; S, at age 32 when he won his fourth Olympic Gold Medal, he was 6'-4" and weighed 295 pounds.&nbsp; He was able to arrow grip Bench Press 525 for two reps, Squat (touch a bench at parallel) for 5 reps at 725 pounds, Hang Clean 5 reps at 350 pounds, perform swinging, explosive curls for 5 reps at 325 pounds and do dumbbell alternate presses, flys and curls with 100 to 120 pound dumbbells.&nbsp; "I had a strong back from doing the old Jefferson Lift," remembered Oerter.&nbsp; "I used up to 450 pounds even at a young age."&nbsp;</P> <P>Oerter doesn't think that it is possible for an Upper Limit athlete to avoid injuries.&nbsp; "If you work at elevated levels," reasoned Oerter, "you must expect some injuries.&nbsp; You don't look for injuries but you must push yourself. &nbsp;That is the only way to become stronger."</P> <P>In Rome, Oerter slipped on a muddy ring in the preliminaries and ripped the cartilage loose from his rib cage.&nbsp; "That was devastating," remembered Oerter, "I couldn't sleep, eat or throw. It really hurt!"&nbsp; The doctors told him there was nothing they could do.&nbsp; But, Oerter persisted.&nbsp; So, the doctors agreed to try a method where they froze the muscle, taped it, gave him ammonia capsules and then hoped for the best.</P> <P>Since each competitor gets to keep their best throw from the previous days preliminaries, Oerter could have stayed in the top eight without over extending himself.&nbsp; However, he said, "I just thought about the four years of hard work and those 1460 days. &nbsp;I did not want to cheat myself."&nbsp; Then during finals each competitor was allowed three throws.&nbsp; But because of the excruciating pain, Oerter decided to make the 2nd throw his last.&nbsp; "So," tells Oerter, "on that second throw I gave it everything I had."&nbsp; He threw an Olympic record!</P> <P>When asked about the struggles experienced in training for the Olympics, Oerter replied, "Barriers in life happen all the time.&nbsp; You have got to step it up.&nbsp; If you back down, you never learn anything about life or yourself."&nbsp; Later in his career Oerter did have Olympic coaches who would really push him but he always knew it was to make him better.</P> <P>Al Oerter was also a great success in the business world. Ironically, he worked with computers and advanced technology. Currently, Al Oerter is living in Colorado.&nbsp; And he is still a lean, but powerful 260 pound man.&nbsp; Although he is retired, he stays quite busy as a motivational speaker for a variety of corporations and as a hus