82-year-old female powerlifter fights off intruder. 'I was whaling on that man.'

Marcia Greenwood
Democrat and Chronicle

Last Thursday around 11 p.m., a man broke into 82-year-old Willie Murphy’s Rochester home.

But she’s not pressing charges.

“I already sent him to the hospital,” she said Monday, following a workout at her home away from home, the Maplewood YMCA at 25 Driving Park Ave.

Murphy, who is barely 5-feet tall and weighs 105 pounds, beat the intruder so hard with a small table that it broke. Then while the man was on the floor, dazed, she poured shampoo in his eyes. Then, while he screamed at her — calling her “everything but the mother of God!” — she jumped on him. And then Murphy — who admitted to uttering a few four-letter words herself — grabbed a broom (the one she uses to clear snow off her car) and repeatedly jabbed him “with all my force,” she said.

Her force is a lot.

'If it’s my time to go to hell, I’m taking him with me'

Willie Murphy, wearing a shirt of her own design, at the Maplewood YMCA.

Murphy can deadlift 225 pounds — more than twice her weight.

She’s a 2018 World Natural Powerlifting Federation Upstate New York champ. She was the organization’s Lifter of the Year in 2014. She can do one-handed pull-ups, one-handed pushups, fingertip pushups, and the pushups where you put your fingers in diamond formation and press your nose all the way to the floor.

From 2014: Willie Murphy, 77, can lift more than you

So, really, the man who broke through her front door — after initially trying to get Murphy to open it by lying about being shot and needing help — didn’t stand a chance.

In fact, he needed help after tangling with Murphy in her living room, there by the glow of the TV.

“I was whaling on that man,” Murphy recalled. “’Cause I said to myself, ‘If it’s my time to go to hell, I’m taking him with me!’”

Instead, when it was over, he was taken away by ambulance. Murphy was fine. And the four Rochester police officers who showed up just as she was delivering her final blows with the broom — they asked to take selfies with her.

'A strong, beautiful woman'

From 2018: Willie Murphy in action at the Maplewood YMCA.

In the days that have followed she’s been inundated with interview requests from local, national and international media outlets, including the BBC.

“I’ve got 37 messages on my answering machine,” she said, which is hooked up to her "old-fashioned telephone. It's not one of those that everybody has now."

And while some people might bask in the glory of their story going viral, Murphy said what means the most to her are the hugs, smiles and support she’s gotten from her friends at the Maplewood Y. Among those folks is Michelle LeBoo, program coordinator at the Y’s Caroline “Lily” Lobozzo Aging Resource Center, which is operated by Lifespan of Greater Rochester.

Having known Murphy for eight years, LeBoo will tell you, Murphy is “a strong, beautiful woman" who is loyal to her Y friends and does things "for the benefit of others." Plus, "She really helps dispel the myths of aging.”

You can say that again.

MGREENWO@Gannett.com