Thursday, June 30, 2011

LA-NY Footrace 1929 - THE BUNION DERBY

Black and white silent documentary about the race from LA to NY:
"Cash" Pyle sets off 76 runners on 3,500 mile cross-country run to Los Angeles. New York, America (USA, U.S.A.). C/U of Pyle's face, he shouts through a megaphone. L/S of runners moving along while people crowd round. M/S of all the people. M/S of competitors making their way down...read more and see more here

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Monday, June 20, 2011

Going accross - What a dream!

Today I came across this interesting web site..Just wanted to share. Click HERE to go there (:



Transcontinental Run - Trans USA Run - Run Across America - Trans-America - Transcon
Solo - Unsupported - Double - Stilts - Supported - Hands - Journey - Crutches - Hike - Walk - Run - Race

Trans-USA Crossers: The List 
A compilation of all 249 documented crossings by 221 individuals. 
Congrats newest crossers: Mycle Brandy (2010), Croix Sather, Tony Mangan, 
Jeffrey Grabosky, John Price, Dean Karnazes, & Zoe Romano! 
(revised 6/15/2011)
Email me with any additions or updates.


2011 Crossers:

Milton Miller, 4/29
Zoe Romano, 5/7
Dean Karnazes, 5/10
John Price, 5/12
Jeffrey Grabosky, 5/20
Tony Mangan, 5/21
Croix Sather, 6/5

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Kawauchi Taken to Hospital After Suffering Heat Stroke Near End of 50 km Ultra

http://www.fnn-news.com/news/headlines/articles/CONN00201759.html

translated and edited by Brett Larner


Click photo to enlarge.

2011 World Championships marathon team member Yuki Kawauchi (24, Saitama Pref.) was taken to the hospital after collapsing just before the finish of the Okinoshima 50 km ultramarathon in Shimane prefecture on June 19.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Mount Everest

I read this today and felt I wanna share. It is very true for a lot of my countryman living in USA today..And everybody else anyways (: :


"The first question which you will ask and which I must try to answer
is this, ‘What is the use of climbing Mount Everest?’ and my answer
must at once be, ‘It is no use.’ There is not the slightest prospect
of any gain whatsoever. Oh, we may learn a little about the behavior
of the human body at high altitudes, and possibly medical men may turn
our observation to some account for the purposes of aviation. But
otherwise nothing will come of it. We shall not bring back a single
bit of gold or silver, not a gem, nor any coal or iron. We shall not
find a single foot of earth that can be planted with crops to raise
food. It’s no use. So, if you cannot understand that there is
something in man which responds to the challenge of this mountain and
goes out to meet it, that the struggle is the struggle of life itself
upward and forever upward, then you won’t see why we go. What we get
from this adventure is just sheer joy. And joy is, after all, the end
of life. We do not live to eat and make money. We eat and make money
to be able to enjoy life. That is what life means and what life is
for."

--George Mallory, 1922

Yuki Kawauchi Building Up for World Championships With 50 km Ultra This Sunday


by Brett Larner

Yuki Kawauchi (Saitama Pref.) became an international name when he finished 3rd at February's Tokyo Marathon, qualifying for the Daegu World Championships marathon with a time of 2:08:37 which made him the top man on the Japanese team despite an existence completely outside the corporate running leagues. At the recent Nittai Time Trials meet Kawauchi ran his last track race of the season before getting into the brunt of his marathon training, running 14:10.32 for 7th in the 5000 m in the midst of a typhoon. Before the race Kawauchi sat down with JRN to talk about his planned World Championships preparations. First up on his schedule is the Okinoshima 50 km ultramarathon this Sunday, June 19.
After Tokyo you said that you need to improve your race between 30 and 35 km. At the press conference announcing the World Championships team you indicated that you are planning to run a 50 km ultra in June. Are you doing the 50 km in order to work on your stamina after 30 km?
Read more here:
http://japanrunningnews.blogspot.com/2011/06/yuki-kawauchi-building-up-for-world.html

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Small report about Pat Farmer, Australian 'Forrest Gump,'!




Here is a small report about  Pat Farmer, Australian who sold everything he has to run from North to South Pole and raise $100 000 000 on the way, but nothing for himself.
GOOO PAAT ((((((:
WWW.POLETOPOLERUN.COM



Tuesday, June 14, 2011

NEWS!! Anton Krupicka - Bad Injury :(((((



"Bit Of A Break - by Anton Krupicka"












HERE IS WHAT HE SAYS ABOUT HIS INJURY:
"On my run Saturday morning I'd just descended Green Mountain and was about to leave the
Chautauqua meadows dirt for the mile-long paved jog back to my apartment when--on an
embarrassingly benign stretch of smooth trail--I caught my left toe on something and
instead of just faceplanting (and merely scraping/bruising my forearms) like I usually
do, my right leg came through to catch my fall, which would've been fine except that
my right knee then hyperextended violently with an audible crack and I fell to the ground.
As this happened I had a few involuntary screams owing to the fact that I'd just
ripped my hamstring and IT band off the fibular head, along with a sizeable chunk
of bone."
READ MORE AT ANTON KRUPICKA'S BLOG : 

http://antonkrupicka.blogspot.com/

Beat the Post-race Blues


Beat the Post-race Blues

Use post-event time to do things you wanted to do but sacrificed for your training
You did it. You ran the race you always dreamed about, setting an incredible personal record. You'd set this goal almost a year before. During the previous winter you designed a training program for the long months to come. You logged each and every run, maintained respectable mileage even during the cruelest weeks of January and February.

Finally spring arrived and you gradually built up to high mileage with a long run each week. Then you began speedwork and ran occasional races to quicken your pace and accustom yourself once again to the rigors and challenges of competition. You monitored yourself carefully and rested when it was needed. You did everything right and ran your best ever.
So you should be feeling terrific, on top of the world. Maybe you felt some brief elation, but then in a few days there is a feeling of emptiness, apathy, perhaps even mild depression. What went wrong?
Letdown Not Limited to Athletes
Many runners and other athletes have been puzzled by this common experience that often follows a major event, independent of whether they have performed well or poorly. Athletes are not unique in this post event letdown. The feelings are reported by politicians after a major election-win or lose; by students after earning a hard-won degree; by mountain climbers after climbing the highest peak. Although the experience seems to contradict common sense, it is common among achievement oriented people.
We have been taught that the attainment of the goal is the reward. Now the goal is attained and you are puzzled by your unanticipated unhappiness. The goal has turned out to be an illusion. The joy was in the dream and the process of moving towards your goal, in mobilizing your physical and mental potentials to their fullest. Once the goal was accomplished, the dream died. The joy ended. And now it's time to regroup and start over again.
Be Prepared
Some of the disappointment of the post-event letdown can be alleviated by knowing that it's normal and to expect it. For months, your life has been organized around this singular goal. Now, suddenly it's over and the disciplined, intensive efforts are no longer required.
This is the time to pause, reflect, and enjoy other aspects of life that may have been neglected during intensive training. Sleep late; spend more time with family and friends. Do things you wanted to do but sacrificed for your training. Plan ahead so that when the big event is over, you don't face a vacuum of too much time.
After this pause and re-balancing, carefully select a new, realistic challenge, a new long-term goal. This may be in running, another sport, or something altogether different. You need a new dream to fill with passion and energy and get your juices flowing again.
Jack Lesyk, Ph.D., is a clinical and sports psychologist and the Director of the Ohio Center for Sport Psychology in Beachwood, Ohio. He may be contacted directly via e-mail at jjlesyk@sportpsych.org .

American Running Association, empowering adults to get America's youth moving. For more information or to join ARA, please visit 
www.americanrunning.org .

Monday, June 13, 2011

The 2011 Self-Transcendence 3100 Mile Race




The 2011 Self-Transcendence 3100 Mile Race

The 3100 Mile Race is the longest certified foot race in the world (Certificate Code: NY97024PR). The competitors seek to complete 5649 laps of a .5488 mile course (883 meters) in a timespan of 52 days. This year's 3100 Mile Race will start on June 12. Runners to the start!
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Sri Chinmoy

Founder of the 3100 Mile Race, a keen athlete who promoted sport as a means to practise self transcendence in daily life.
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About the 3100 Mile Race.

The current record holder for the 3100  Race is Madhupran Wolfgang Schwerk (left) of Germany. In 2006 Madhupran completed the race in 41 days 8 hours, averaging a staggering 75 miles per day!
about us

In the news

Newspaper and video stories, as well as testimonials Read more...

Videos



Watch the start of the 3100 Mile Race in this 3 minute video clip by Mridanga Spencer, Anglia Productions. 10 runners from seven different countries embark on this epic journey. How many will make it in the 52 day cutoff?
Rupantar’s V-logs:
Race Director Rupantar LaRusso catches the innermost feeling of the runners, their highs and lows, their sorrows and joys, in these revealing 30 second video clips.


 

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Meet the Runners

10 runners will participate in the 2011 race.

Perfection-Journey Daily Race Diary.

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The 3100 Mile race is an epic journey. These posts by Utpal Marshall give insight into the runners, organizers and supporters who make this unique running challenge a reality.

CIMG3781[1].JPGRace Blogs by the race directors, helpers and supporters offer a candid  view of this amazing race. (Blogs will be active in June.)

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Photo Gallery

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Race Results.
Results from Past Editions

Home

2011 Cool Moon 100 Mile/24 Hour/12 Hour Day/12 Hour Night/10K Runs



Sunday, June 12, 2011

Anton Krupicka: Interview By JERRY ARMSTRONG



Anton “Tony” Krupicka
Age: 27
Ht/Wt: 6ft, 154lbs
Birth State: Nebraska

Sponsors: New Balance, GU, Udo’s Oil

Q: Mr. Krupicka. Thank you so much for not running for a few minutes so I could talk with you. Among the ultrarunners I know, discussions about you or your race performances seem to always start with an agreement that nobody really knows how to pronounce your last name. Once that is agreed upon, we then discuss how you obliterated everyone else in "that" race. Do you prefer Anton or Tony?

A: Well, my last name is pronounced “crew-pitch-kuh”. It’s Czech. My name is Anton—it was my great grandfather’s, and I like to preserve the family heritage—but most of my close friends call me Tony.


Q: Height and Racing Weight?

“The only times I can remember weighing myself in the last few years is at 100 mile races. I was 154 at both pre-race check-ins for Western States and Leadville last year. I remember I was 142 at the finish line of Western, though. I’m guessing that scale was a bit off.”

Any Other Sports or Training?

“not really.”

Years training/competing in running?

“ I’ve been running and competing since 1995. I’ve been running predominantly mountain races since 2006.” 

What's your preferred race distance?
“I don’t really have one, but I guess I’m best at 50 and 100 mile mountain races.”

Shoe Model or Type?

New Balance MT110. It’s the update to the MT101 and will be out in early 2012, I believe. Best shoe I’ve ever worn.

Favorite Local Training Area?

I really like running from my doorstep, and I really like running to a summit, so most of my running takes place on the 8000’+ peaks on the western outskirts of Boulder, CO—Green Mt, Bear Peak, and South Boulder Peak. In the summer, though, the Indian Peaks (13,000+’) are only a 30min drive to the west. I 
also really like running on the trails of the Pikes Peak region.

Favorite training or recovery food?

I’m not quite sure what that means. In training, if I eat anything, it’s GU gels. For recovery, I generally eat whatever I can find in the kitchen. Baked goods, fruit, big salads.”

Weekly Training Mileage during season?

140-180 miles per week. “150 mountain miles is kinda the sweet spot for me.”

 What's your longest training run in miles or hours?
68 miles/10:16 back in November 2010. I did a solo circumnavigation of Pikes Peak on the ‘Ring The Peak’ trail but got off-route a couple of times (I think it would be ~64 miles if one ran the intended route the whole way).




Do you have a favorite race?

I enjoy any event with solid competition up front and several big climbs. Western States, Leadville, Miwok and White River have all been a lot of fun. Of the races I’ve done (which isn’t that many), I guess I’ve been most impressed with the White River 50’s course.

Q: Very few ultramarathon runners will ever cover mountain miles with the speed and efficiency that you do. Do feel that you have an athletic gift or more so, that you have trained your body and mind for endurance?

A: Hmmm. I think it’s more that I’ve trained my body and mind. I’m a very very mediocre sub-marathon distance runner. My pure running talent is objectively not very great. However, long races in the mountains are all about comfort and proficiency on that mountainous terrain and in that unpredictable, variable environment and I am very comfortable in the mountains. This is a result of having a huge passion for the land and of spending a lot of time every day running over mountainous terrain. There are probably thousands of athletes, who—if they decided to train the way I do—would make me look silly in any long distance mountain race. However, beyond an inherent passion for the mountains, there aren’t many incentives for a gifted runner to prepare for these races. So, I guess I have that passion, but I don’t really see that as “talent” or an “athletic gift”.
Q: What about "racing". It's a fact that a very small percentage of athletes toe the starting line of a 100k or 100 mile ultra with intentions of racing the other athletes. If we could see inside your mind, would we see you are concentrated on the clock, split times, the other front runners...or perhaps you are making decisions about effort purely on internal physiology? Can you provide some insight on that subject?



A: Sure. I race because it provides a community of like-minded individuals that I’m able to identify with. I think any non-sociopathic human is looking for that in one way or another. Racing is a satisfying and often joyful celebration of this running/mountain lifestyle that I’ve chosen. I also race to feed my ego. No doubt. I’m competitive as all get out; I like to beat other people. But, inside my mind in a race, the primary goal has become to just win races. As recently as a couple of years ago I was oftentimes too focused on time during races, but the competitive depth of the fields has risen enough—and I’ve failed enough times at chasing time goals—that I now enter any race with the primary intention being to win. This means I’m obviously paying attention to other runners, but for me to get the most out of my body I also have to be very internally-focused during a race paying attention to what my body needs and what it’s telling me it can do. However, in any long race—typically in the last quarter—continuing at a hard pace becomes a rigorous mental game. Basically, you have to will yourself to continue to endure a lot of pain, care more about the final result than the next guy, and just not give up.

Q: What do you do in preparation for a foreign event. Specifically, do you spend a lot of time researching course maps or watching videos to become familiar with a course you have never run? What things help you mentally prepare for competition in an unfamiliar location like that?

A: I don’t really do much. I usually make sure to look at a course profile to get an idea of where the major climbs are and I’ll also look at the course map to have a general feel for where the race is going. Usually I’m just excited to race on new-to-me trails.

Q: Who or what inspires you to train harder or work toward seemingly impossible goals?

A: The mountains themselves are without a doubt my greatest inspiration. There’s nothing more satisfying than the primal feeling of being able to move quickly and proficiently through a rugged, natural landscape. So, just the feeling that comes with being at peak fitness annually is definitely inspiring. Additionally, I’m inspired by people that I feel appreciate the land and interact with it in the right way and are clearly pursuing a type of personal growth through these interactions. This list of people would include a lot of my close friends and fellow competitors at the top of the sport, but I’m definitely inspired by all kinds of people who I see as embodying the attitude and ethic that I strive for in my own mountain running and life. This includes successful climbers like Ueli Steck, Dean Potter, Reinhold Messner, and Steve House, but it also includes faceless, largely nameless other folks in backcountry skiing, surfing, slacklining, sport-climbing, bouldering, etc. Basically, anyone who is earnestly interacting with their chosen environment with sincerity, purity, and the minimum of material trappings.

Q: A close friend told me he climbed to the summit of a 14,000' mountain here in Colorado...and prior to reaching the top, looked back to see a mythical mountain man running uphill at a ridiculous pace way above the tree line. That man carried no fluid, no food, and didn't even wear a shirt. For a few minutes, he thought you were running without breathing. Please tell me you get dehydrated during a jaunt like that....

A: I mean, I suppose I certainly do get dehydrated, but for me a mountain run isn’t about trying to feel as comfortable as possible the whole time. If I wanted to do that, I would just stay on the couch. But it certainly isn’t necessarily about arbitrarily enduring suffering, either. If I wanted to do that, I can think of all sorts of things to do to self-inflict physical pain. Rather, I like getting out in the mountains and stripping away distractions and traveling the most aesthetic routes and doing so on the mountain’s terms as much as is reasonable. Most of the time, for me, this means a pair of shoes and a pair of shorts and GO! I don’t like carrying stuff when I run and I enjoy the satisfying feeling of finishing a run slightly depleted and feeling like I just ran up and down a mountain with very little between me and the mountain, so I certainly don’t mind finishing my daily 2-3hr mountain run slightly dehydrated and bonking.

Q: What does Anton Krupicka eat when he's not running? Do you use recovery nutrition after your runs? Tell us generally, how you eat from day to day...and what nutritional selections work well in your busy life?


A: I have almost nothing interesting to say on this topic. I try to keep things simple, eating fresh, whole foods, but I’m not terribly rigid about it and eat plenty of baked goods and probably way too much sugar. I don’t like the idea of having strict requirements and not being willing or able to adapt, but at the same time I definitely try to eat a fairly healthy spectrum of simple foods. Breakfast/lunch is typically some form of baked good and fruit, usually apples. Dinner varies wildly but will often include some kind of greens/veggie salad and/or a vegetable and cheese sandwich or pasta with veggies, etc, etc. Last night it was hot so I had a fruit smoothie with banana, strawberries, acai, almond milk, blueberries and Udo’s Oil and a tomato and cheese quesadilla. It’s 4 o’clock right now and so far today I’ve had a couple pieces of toast, about half a dozen apples, and a couple cans of diet root beer. I have no idea what I’ll have for dinner.

Q: What goals can you share with us? Are there races, course records, or performance-based goals that you have set-aside for the near or distant future? What is to come from Anton Krupicka in the next couple years?

A: I am interested in racing the top athletes in the sport. I’m also interested in seeking out events that are a celebration and an embodiment of the history, community, and aesthetic of bipedal mountain travel. There are several good events here in the United States, but more and more it seems that those values are best exemplified in the mountain racing culture in Europe. Races over there are insanely steep and technical, picking the most aesthetic routes over the terrain and the local community and culture get very excited about endurance events in a way that is only seen in the United States when it comes to the nauseating antics of professional team sports played in stadium arenas. In Europe, it seems there is a popular and well-expressed appreciation for the mountains as sporting arena whether it be exemplified in the enthusiasm for events like the Tour de France, mountaineering in the Alps, or the Skyrunning Series. I don’t know if I’ll make it over there for more than just the Ultra Trail du Mont Blanc in Chamonix, but I’d like to at some point. The Le Grand Raid Diagonal de Fous on Reunion Island also interests me. At the same time, I am very inspired by the classic long distance mountain races here in the US, such as the Pikes Peak Marathon, Hardrock, Angeles Crest, Western States, and Wasatch. So, who knows.


Q: Where might we see you race in the next few years? While mountains seem to be your strong-suit, what about Badwater or world-level 100k competition? Do you foresee any competition outside of mountain trails?

A: I currently have very little interest in non-mountain events, but I do admit that at some point I’d like to see what I’m capable of in a road 100k. I respect versatility in running and like the comparisons that can occur through a standardized event like a road 100k. However, the mountains are what inspire me the most, so that’s likely where future competitive efforts will continue to be focused.

Q: Anton, you are an inspiration to me and many other athletes. You run to the physiological breaking point and display human performance at an incredible level. Do you have any words of wisdom for the athletes who will read this?


A: I get asked this sort of thing a lot and really the keys to success in ultra distance mountain racing are devastatingly simple: pile on the miles, be CONSISTENT with your daily running, run lots of vertical on rugged terrain. Period. The hard parts of that are 

A) truly being consistent. I think not missing days is extremely important and am surprised at how variable a lot of folks running will be. I missed 12 days total in 2010, four of which were recovery from 100 mile races and another four of which were the result of some crazy flu-like illness. I know this consistency was a huge part of my success last year.

B) not getting injured. I’ve been injured for the past 4 months, and it has reinforced the fact that running training, at it’s core, is an injury-prevention game. If you can stay uninjured and consistent, you will improve.



Tony, thank you for your time. You are a humble, gifted athlete, who runs beyond the physical...thank you for your inspiration and best of luck in your upcoming races.

-Interview by: Jerry Armstrong; Boulder, CO
special thanks to Rob O'Dea Photography
More Reading: http://www.antonkrupicka.blogspot.com/

Saturday, June 11, 2011

SD 100

You can follow the action via twitter on http://www.ultralive.net

Hash tag: #sd100

Big Dog Backyard Ultra


Toughen your feet!

Toughen your feet by going barefoot as much as possible and by running without
socks for those times when you do wear shoes. For the race, wear soft, flexible
racing flats.

 -- Matt Mahoney, 

Friday, June 10, 2011

10 Ultramarathon - Marathon commandments

1. Expect a journey and a battle
2. Focus on the present and set intermediate goals
3. Don't dwell on the negative
4. Transcend the physical
5. Accept your fate
6. Have confidence you will succeed
7. Know that there will be an end
8. Suffering is OK
9. Be kind to yourself
10. Quitting is not an option


From the book "Running on Empty"

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Runkeeper comment ((:

This is what I do..(I am on an Ultra Marathon mailing list an been reading bunch of good stuff from experienced people..). On the rest days I am usually in the gym doing some strengthening , core, legs..I  have to, because of my latest surgery (ACL) but is recommended to avoid injury's as well.  I eat bunch of fruits every day. It is amazing how they help with my recovery! I am vegan and use very little fried or cooked , boiled foods..I don't know if that helps at all.. Now, when running I carry a 20 oz bicycle bottle filled with homemade sports drink: water, small pinch of salt and one magnesium tablet. I wish I had Success  (electrolyte) tablets but they are not available in Ukraine. They told me to drink water only prior to running and drink the sports drink during because I sweat oceans! If you don't sweat a lot water is fine..but only for the first hour, afterwards they  should be mixed with electrolytes (salt, magnesium, vit. c.. If running over an hour I would have one date (dry) (high GI- Gluten Index) every 15-20 minutes. You should have gel or similar  to add some energy every 45 min during your run.  I also use Gu-s gels but rarely because Gu-s contain preservatives (all the gels do :(. Definitely "load" with water before the run. As one's preparing for the marathon their diet should be: aprox. 60% carbs, 30% protein and 10% fat ..something like that. I hope it helps (((:

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

LA-NY Footrace 2011

250 Marathons for Kids (((:!!



In the year Jan 1st to Dec 31st 2010, in Alberta, Canada, Martin Parnell will attempt to run 250 marathons. His goal is to raise $250,000 for Right To Play.
Right To Play is an international, humanitarian organization that uses sport and play programs to improve health, develop life skills, and foster peace for children and communities in some of the most disadvantaged areas of the world.
Right To Play also works in over 4,500 Canadian schools to inspire children and support their right to grow and learn, through physical activity.
Martin will run five marathons a week, with Fridays and Saturdays being recovery days, to cover a total distance of 10,550km (6550miles). An additional 12 days will be held in hand, in case of unforeseen circumstances.
The majority of the marathons will be run on the "Cochrane Foothills Marathon" course in Cochrane, Alberta. However, others will be run at official events such as the Boston Marathon (Apr 19th), Vancouver Marathon (May 2nd) and Calgary Marathon (May 30th), and other marathon opportunities (i.e. schools / events), within a reasonable distance from home.
Each marathon will be completely self-contained with no gelwrappers, water cups, banana skins or any other litter left alongthe route.