RIO DE JANEIRO: A group of athletes in Rio has found the secret to enhanced performance and it has nothing to do with doping.
It's called aging - a process by which athletes grow wiser, more focused and go on to win medals and hearts at the Olympics.
The elder set at the Rio Games is resetting the bar at these Olympics and turning over the hackneyed idea that high-level competition is a young man's or woman's game.
"For so long we have been told that we're finished at a certain age," said American cyclist Kristin Armstrong, who at 42 became the oldest woman to win Olympic cycling gold in the road individual time trial.
"Athletes are showing that this is not true."
While the average age of competitors at these Games is 26.97 years, up just slightly from 25.85 years 20 years ago in Atlanta, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) says it sees older athletes doing better at the Games, even in those sports thought to be the preserve of young, more supple competitors.
"We do see, particularly in endurance sports, older athletes coming through much more than in the past," said Mark Adams, IOC spokesman. "And that's great. It's to be welcomed. It gives us all hope."
In one of the toughest endurance races, the 10 km marathon open-water swim, 36-year-old Greek Spiros Gianniotis on Tuesday reached the finish line at the same time as 24-year-old Ferry Weertman, but was slow to hit the touch pad and took silver.
"After five Olympics and 36 years old, I think it is the best way to retire," said Gianniotis.
Argentinian Santiago Lange, 54, the oldest sailor at the Games, took gold in the mixed Nacra 17 catamaran class. Now a veteran of seven Games, he lost half a lung to cancer last year and is an inspiration to his crew mate, Cecilia Carranza Saroli.
"Every time I hear Santi speak I get emotional, he transmits the values of effort and perseverance," Carranza said.