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By David Pollitt,
BPE, CSCS*D, CFC
Published online April, 2006
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I have long been a fan of folks who
overcome all obstacles and succeed. I see this every
day with the clients and athletes I work with. People
who may have started out from humble beginnings or with
moderate talent and rise up the ladder of success.
Every so often we see amazing things that are truly
inspirational.
Canadian Skeleton Racer Duff Gibson
is that kind of athlete.

Duff started his athletic career with
wrestling in high school and quickly become a star in
the Toronto wrestling scene. While he was good he knew
that he would never be a standout with that sport. When
he entered university Duff followed in the footsteps of
his uncle who competed in rowing at the 1984 Los Angeles
Olympics for Team Canada. This didn’t last too long as
Duff ditched his oars for blades and spent several years
training with the Calgary Speedskating Club in an
attempt to make the Canadian National Team and represent
his country at the Olympics. The problem is that Duff
was a good skater, but not great. He had all the
necessary tools, but somehow didn’t make it happen.
At a race in 1995 he was recruited as
a brakeman by the Canadian National Bobsled Team as the
coaching staff felt his fast starts in speedskating
might be an asset with bobsled. Duff quickly proved
himself as a racer and eventually moved from brakemen to
driver as he showed an aptitude to compete and focus
(which is critical when driving a 650lbs bobsled down an
ice track at 90+ miles an hour with five times the force
of gravity acting on the body).
Duff had competed for Team Canada for
several years when I met him in Calgary and worked with
him as a training partner. He had this incredible
desire to race, improve and develop his abilities. I
have never seen another athlete work as hard as he did.
We would work with the medicine ball to develop power,
heavy weights for strength and mass, and conditioning
drills that made me vomit. I knew I worked hard with my
training until I met Duff and he killed me every
workout. It was such a great learning experience I have
incorporated aspects of those training sessions into
virtually all the training I do with clients.
While Duff was a really good athlete
and bobsledder he raced behind one of the best bobsled
drivers in the world, Pierre Lueders. After numerous
second place finished at the National Championships and
many moderately successful finished in international
competition Duff again switched from bobsled to Skeleton
(a sport where racers first accelerate a 33lbs sled as
quickly as possible then lye face down on the sled to
navigate the same rugged track used for bobsled and luge
competitions).

With skeleton Duff could use his fast
start abilities he developed from speedskating and
bobsled with his driving abilities he learned on the
bobsled track. Duff quickly moved up the ranks of this
fledgling sport with a sixth place world rankings
heading into the 2002 Salt Lake City Winter Olympics.
Unfortunately he finished a disappointing 10th.
At this point Duff has spent over 20 years working
towards being the very best in the world and his age of
35 was becoming an issue.
After a moderate 2003 season Duff
came back with a renewed hunger and won the 2004 World
Championships along with two other wins on the world cup
circuit. In 2005 he worked hard to prepare for another
shot at the Olympics where he ranked 10th in
the world cup standings just before the Olympics. He
held himself out of the final few world cup events
before the Turino Olympics to physically and mentally
prepare.
The result…a gold medal in the
skeleton competition at the 2006 Turino Winter
Olympics.

The impressive thing was that during
all the years of work, training, and competing Duff
never gave up. He earned his Bachelors and Masters
Degree in Exercise Physiology, while becoming a fireman
for the Calgary Fire Department.
Five sports, 20+ years of athletic
competition, two degrees, a full time job as a
firefighter and a 39 year old body that wouldn’t quit.
Finally he was able to add Olympic Champion to his
amazing resume of persistence!
Congrats Duff!
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