Giuseppe Ottaviani (athlete)

Giuseppe Ottaviani (20 May 1916 – 19 July 2020) is an Italian centenarian and masters athlete, and Commander of the Italian Republic for high sporting merits.

Giuseppe Ottaviani
Personal information
Born(1916-05-20)20 May 1916
Sant'Ippolito, Italy
Died19 July 2020(2020-07-19) (aged 104)
Sant'Ippolito, Italy
Sport
Country Italy
ClubG.S. Atl. Effebi Fossombrone
Achievements and titles
Personal best(s)60 metres indoor = 14.28 M95 WR
60 metres indoor = 17.52 M100 WR Long Jump indoor = 1,16 M100 WR
Triple jump indoor = 3,27 M100 WR
Shot Put indoor = 4,43 M100 WR
Triple Jump =3,54 M100 WR
Weight Throw =4,92 M100 WR
Throws Pentathlon=2533p M100WR

He is the first and only centenary athlete to have made a qualifying triple jump for his Masters category (M100, or those 100 years of age and older).[1] He is the current indoor world record holder in the M100 60 metres.[2] He also held the indoor world record for the triple jump and long jump, and the outdoor world record for the triple jump[3] He has 56 Italian National Championships with 13 national records, still holds 9 world records and the European discus record.[4][5]

Biography

After serving in the Italian Air Force during World War II, he spent his career as a men's tailor.

He married Alba Michelini and has three children: Paolo, Marzia and Matelda. Marzia is now a top masters marathon runner.[6]

At the suggestion of the brothers Paolo and Giuliano Costantini, he started masters athletics in the late 1980s. He won his first national championship in 1999. He was coached by Graziano Bacchiocchi and then in 2010, Mauro Angelini coached him to high jump. After turning 95 in 2011, he became the first 95-year-old athlete to surpass 2 metres for the long jump and 4 metres for the triple jump. He drove himself the 25 km from his home in Sant'Ippolito to the training facility in Fano.

He lived by two mottos: "For me, sport is life, sport is joy" and "curiosity drives me to live."

At age 94 he bought a wireless ADSL computer, at 97 he enrolled in the University of the Third Age in Fossombrone and at the Indoor World Championship in Budapest he won 10 gold medals, unmatched record. He turned 100 in May 2016.[7]

At the invitation of Professor Ario Federici, he has given the opening lecture in Kinesiology at the University of Urbino for the last five years.

Ottaviani died on 19 July 2020 at the age of 104.[8][9]

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References

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