Magazines : Trail Running – Runner’s World


Trail Running

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Runner’s World


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Womens Running


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Men’s Running



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Sports Illustrated Magazine February 12, 2018, Philly Special, Philadelphia Eagles, Super Bowl LII Champion

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Outdoor Fitness

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Runner’s World South Africa

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Athletics Weekly



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National Geographic Traveler



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Health


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Car and Driver



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Men’s Health


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Travel + Leisure Magazine


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Arrowhead Ultra 135 -Jan 28th to 30th, 2019

The 15th annual AH135 will be Jan 28th to 30th, 2019. We will take race veteran apps starting 9-1-18 and rookie apps 10-1-18. Please make sure you have a qualifying race – see below. Our roster is limited to ~150 racers and fills quickly.

Gear check will be Jan 26th/27th. Please ensure you meet or exceed the qualifications listed below if you plan to race.

Completing one of the below accomplishments would typically qualify an entrant for this year’s Arrowhead Winter Ultra;

however, entry is not guaranteed. The race directors reserve the right to change the rules in the interest of safety and sportsmanship or for any reason deemed appropriate by the race officials. The race directors reserve the right to select entrants based on other important considerations, as well as due to the requirements of insurers, sponsors, the Minnesota State DNR and other regulatory
agencies.
Basically, we look for both endurance and cold weather experience. Below are general guidelines.
Qualifying activities for runners:
Completing a prior Arrowhead 135, Tuscobia 160 or similar race.
Finishing 100 mile foot race or completed multi-sport event, including a 100 mile run. A race in winter conditions improves your odds of being selected and surviving.
Qualifying activities for bikers:
Complete a prior Arrowhead 135, Tuscobia 160, Susitna, or similar race.
Finishing 24 hour bike race, with minimum of 100 miles completed for off-road, or 200 miles on road. A race in winter conditions improves your odds of being selected and surviving.
Qualifying activities for skiers:
Complete a prior Arrowhead 135, Tuscobia 160, or similar race.
Finishing a 24 hour ski race with a minimum of 100 miles completed.

There are lots of articles, stories, and photo albums from racers, reporters, and volunteers. Go read them all.

READ MORE IN: http://www.arrowheadultra.com/

Magazine

Sports Illustrated Magazine February 12, 2018, Philly Special, Philadelphia Eagles, Super Bowl LII Champion

READ MORE -Sports Illustrated Magazine February 12, 2018, Philly Special, Philadelphia Eagles, Super Bowl LII Champion

National Geographic Traveler



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Health


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Car and Driver



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Men’s Health


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Travel + Leisure Magazine


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33rd MARATHON DES SABLES – 06 to 16 April 2018 in southern Morocco

ART. 1 : ORGANIZATION

The 33rd MARATHON DES SABLES is organized by ATLANTIDE ORGANISATION Internationale and will take place from 06 to 16 April 2018 in southern Morocco. This 33rd annual event will take place under the aegis of the MOROCCAN MINISTRY OF TOURISM and will bring together around 1 300 French and foreign participants.

 

ART. 2 : DEFINITION OF THE COMPETITION

The 33rd MARATHON DES SABLES is a foot race, open to runners and walkers, with several stages, free style, and with food self-sufficiency over a distance of about 250 Km. Each participant must carry his/her own backpack containing food, sleeping gear and other material.

 

ART. 3 : GENERAL CONDITIONS

The 33rd MARATHON DES SABLES will be administered according to the general race regulations and their amendments (road book,…), to which all participants agree when they register.

 

ART. 4 : CONDITIONS OF ADMISSION FOR PARTICIPANTS

Anyone meeting the following conditions will be accepted: over 18, any citizenship. Competitors must hold a medical certificate issued by the organization stating their ability to participate and a resting ECG report.
Teenagers over 16 may participate in the 33rd MARATHON DES SABLES subject to prior consent from ATLANTIDE ORGANISATION Internationale and written permission from a parent or guardian. They will have to meet the same requirements as adults.

 

ART. 5 : CATEGORIES OF PARTICIPANTS

CATEGORY A : INDIVIDUAL

CATEGORY B : TEAM PARTICIPANT

CATEGORY A :Every entrant will be ranked. In addition to the general ranking, there will be placing for :

• females,
• veteran M1 (aged 40 – 49),
• veteran M2 (aged 50 – 59),
• veteran M3 (aged 60 – 69),
• veteran M4 (aged 70 – 79),
• veteran W1 (aged 40 to 49),
• veteran W2 (aged 50 to 59),
• veteran W3 (aged 60 to 69),
• veteran W4 (aged 70 to 79).

Classification is based on year of birth.

CATEGORY B : TEAM PARTICIPANT
A team is made up of at least three runners. To remain in the race, all three members of the team must complete the race. However each member is recorded as an individual in the general ranking.

 

ART. 6 : PROGRAM OF THE RACE

06 April: Departure for Morocco*, arrival, transfer bivouac.
07 April: Technical, administrative and medical formalities.
08 to 13 April: Timed stages with food self-sufficiency.
14 April: Timed, “Solidarity” stage with food self-sufficiency
15 April: Free day
16 April: Return to France.*

*Competitors not using the Paris flight may have to arrive a day earlier and return a day later depending on flight connections.

ATLANTIDE ORGANISATION Internationale reserves the right to modify:

• the regulations of the 33rd MARATHON DES SABLES,
• the aspect of the course (see ART. 21),
• the place and destination in case of forces beyond our control: weather, cataclysm, armed conflict, invasion in any form, lock-out…

 

ART. 7 : TECHNICAL, ADMINISTRATIVE AND MEDICAL VERIFICATIONS

These will take place on 07 April 2018.
Participants must present themselves to the race administrators and medical team responsible for carrying out these verifications. He or she must imperatively have fulfilled his or her technical, administrative and medical obligations (see ART. 24, 25, 27 & 28) before departure. At the control point, an exact list of each participant’s equipment must be established (i.e., compulsory items, personal belongings, food and caloric value, etc.). The race stewards are authorized at any time to check and supervise the participants’ backpacks. Individual items of the participant’s equipment as referred to in the above list is strictly personal. Any items missing from the list, whether thrown away, lost or stolen, shall be penalized. All competitors are responsible for their own equipment and they must therefore inform the organization of any missing item, failing which penalities could be levied (see ART. 27 and 28). Any found objects that remain unclaimed after 24 hours shall be disposed of, except for telephones, cameras and batteries. Each competitor is responsible for his/her own equipment.
During the race, none of the items in your backpack will be looked after by the organization.

 

ART. 8 : IDENTIFICATION MARKS RESERVED BY THE ORGANIZATION

During the administrative and technical registration, the organisation will provide each participant with:

• 2 breast plates bearing a number, approx. 18 cm x 16 cm
– one for upper part of the chest
– one for the back,to be attached to the backpack,
• a check-in card
• WAA ChronoTag (3)
• a distress beacon SPOT

These ID marks must be worn by the participants throughout the race and positioned according to the organization’s indications, failing which penalties will be issued. The race stewards may carry out checks at any time. It is formally forbidden to cover the organization’s race numbers with any other lettering. Each participant must ensure his/her ID marking is clear, entirely visible, in good condition and in the proper place, under pain of penalty (see ART. 27 and 28).The organization will provide competitors with spare tags in case of damage or loss. The distress beacon must be handed in at the end of the race. The loss of the distress beacon will incur a fine of 100 euro (see ART. 27 and 28).
Each participant agrees to adhere strictly to this rule, subject to serious penalty in the case of violation (see ART. 27 and 28).

SOURCE AND READ MORE IN : http://www.marathondessables.com/en

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Erie Marathon Sunday, September 9, 2018

PARTICIPANT AMENITIES
+ Historically, more than 30% of all Erie Marathon finishers qualify for the Boston Marathon.
+ Aid stations with GuBrew (drink) located approximately every mile.
+ Race premium and medal guaranteed to all participants.
+ Timing system by Runners High – bib has integrated chip timing.
+ Energy gels will be available on the course.
+ Bag check available at start/finish area.
+ Erie Marathon medals are available to all finishers at the finish line.
+ Erie Marathon personalized certificates of completion are available at RunSignUp after the race results are finalized. To access your free certificate of completion, you will need to access your RunSignUp account.
+ Post-race activities sponsored in part by Subway.
+ Professional medical staff at the Beach One/Erie Runners Club Pavilion along with volunteers patrolling the course on bicycles to assist with minor injuries. Ham radio personnel every mile if further assistance is needed.
+ Professional photo service, TSC Graphics, will take photos of all finishers and make them available for purchase at www.RunPhotos.com a few days following race day.
+ Five year age group awards with result posted on site with online results available post-race.
+ Please note: Final race results will be posted and sent to Boston.
+ The course is USATF certified and can be used for other event qualifying standards such as the Boston Marathon.

Read More in: http://eriemarathon.org/

History of the New York City Marathon – 04/11/2018

The first New York City Marathon, organized in 1970 by Fred Lebow and Vince Chiappetta, was held entirely in Central Park. Of 127 entrants, only 55 men finished; the sole female entrant dropped out due to illness. Winners were given inexpensive wristwatches and recycled baseball and bowling trophies. The entry fee was $1 and the total event budget was $1,000.

In 1976, Lebow and 2,090 entrants took the New York City Marathon to the streets of the five boroughs in a moving celebration of sport and diversity. The course included five bridges, and winners Bill Rodgers and Miki Gorman shattered the event records.

Two years later, at the 1978 New York City Marathon, Grete Waitz of Norway, a track Olympian who’d never run farther than 12 miles, won the race in a world-record 2:32:30. Rodgers overcame 75-degree temperatures to become the race’s first three-time winner, and he added a fourth the next year, when Waitz broke her own world record.

In 1980, NCAA track champion Alberto Salazar boldly predicted that he would run sub-2:10 in his first marathon. He made good on his promise by winning in 2:09:41, the fastest-ever debut by an American, while Waitz captured her third straight victory and set another world record. Salazar won again in both 1981 and 1982.

The 1992 race produced perhaps the most poignant moment in New York City Marathon history when Lebow, in remission from brain cancer, crossed the line in 5:32:34 with Waitz by his side.

Shortly before the race’s 25th anniversary in 1994, Fred Lebow succumbed to cancer and Allan Steinfeld became race director. Gérman Silva of Mexico famously took a wrong turn into Central Park in the 26th mile and came back to win. Women’s champ Tegla Loroupe, a Kenyan, became the first female African winner of a major marathon.

The marathon has always been an exercise in community spirit, and that was especially true in November 2001, less than two months after the September 11 terrorist attacks. The race became a symbol of hope and renewal for participants, spectators, and all New Yorkers. Patriotism ran high as Deena Drossin (later Kastor) ran 2:26:58, the fastest debut by an American woman, to win the national title.

ING, a global financial services company, became the marathon’s first title sponsor in 2003 and joined with NYRR to initiate grassroots running and fitness programs among the city’s youth. Margaret Okayo of Kenya broke her own course record, running 2:22:31.

In 2004, world record-holder Paula Radcliffe of Great Britain won the women’s race by three seconds over Kenya’s Susan Chepkemei in the closest women’s finish in race history. Edith Hunkeler of Switzerland set a women’s wheelchair course record by six minutes.

The 2005 race saw yet another close finish as world record-holder Paul Tergat of Kenya edged defending champion Hendrick Ramaala of South Africa by a mere three-tenths of a second. Ernst Van Dyk of South Africa set a course record of 1:31:11 in winning the men24’s wheelchair race, but it was smashed the next year by Kurt Fearnley of Australia, who set the current record of 1:29:22.


Martin Lel of Kenya won a second laurel wreath in 2007, the day after Ryan Hall ran 2:09:02 to win the U.S. Olympic Team Trials, hosted by NYRR in Central Park. In a front-running tour de force, Radcliffe led from the start and finally dropped Ethiopia’s Gete Wami with 400 meters remaining. In the women’s wheelchair race, Hunkeler smashed her own 2004 course record.

In 2008, Marilson Gomes dos Santos of Brazil won his second title (he’d been a surprise winner in 2006), and defending champion Radcliffe again took the lead from the gun and held on to win her third title; only Grete Waitz has more. Kara Goucher, in third, set an American marathon debut record of 2:25:53.

In 2009, the marathon’s 40th running, Meb Keflezighi became the first American winner since Alberto Salazar’s third win in 1982.

Still more records were set in 2011. Geoffrey Mutai of Kenya blasted away from the fastest field in race history and sliced two minutes and 31 seconds from Tesfaye Jifar’s 2001 record. Amanda McGrory cut two minutes and 14 seconds from Edith Wolf Hunkeler’s women’s wheelchair course mark with her 1:50:24, and Masazumi Soejima became the event’s first-ever Japanese champion when he took the men’s wheelchair race in 1:31:41. The total of 47,340 finishers was a new record, too.

The 2012 New York City Marathon was cancelled due to the effects of Superstorm Sandy. On Sunday, November 4, thousands of runners joined together to run in Central Park, and many others traveled to Staten Island and elsewhere in and around NYC to support recovery efforts. Marathoners were able to choose either a refund of their 2012 entry fee or a guaranteed entry to the 2013, 2014, or 2015 marathon or the 2013 NYC Half.

The 2013 New York City Marathon returned the event to its place as New York City’s best day. 50,266 runners finished the race, a new record.

The 2014 TCS New York City Marathon again had a record number of finishers: 50,530. The event also saw a reimagining of the major urban marathon as a result of the new year-round premier partnership between NYRR and title sponsor Tata Consultancy Services (TCS). The 2015 TCS New York City Marathon had 49,595 finishers, again making it the largest marathon in the world that year.

The 2016 TCS New York City Marathon had a record number of finishers, 51,394, setting a new mark as the world’s largest marathon. Ghirmay Ghebreslassie of Eritrea became the youngest male winner in race history; Mary Keitany of Kenya won the women’s race for the third consecutive time. Wheelchair champions were Marcel Hug of Switzerland and Tatyana McFadden of the United States (winning the marathon grand slam for the fourth time).

At the 2017 TCS New York City Marathon on Sunday, November 5, 2017, Shalane Flanagan was the first American woman open-division champion in 40 years, crossing the finish line in 2:26:53. Geoffrey Kamworor of Kenya scored his first marathon victory in a time of 2:10:53. Wheelchair champions were Marcel Hug and Manuela Schär, both of Switzerland. The race had 50,773 finishers.

READ MORE IN: https://www.tcsnycmarathon.org/

A Few Degrees from Hell: White Hot Tales from the Badwater Ultramarathon


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World Marathon Majors

The Abbott World Marathon Majors is a series of six of the largest and most renowned marathons in the world: Tokyo Marathon, Boston Marathon, Virgin Money London Marathon, BMW BERLIN-MARATHON, Bank of America Chicago Marathon and TCS New York City Marathon.

The organizers of these events are united in their effort to advance the sport, raise awareness of its elite athletes, and increase the level of interest in elite racing among running enthusiasts.

SERIES XI RACES
The races in Abbott World Marathon Majors Series XI take place on the following dates:

Virgin Money London Marathon: Sunday April 23 2017
IAAF World Championships Marathon: Sunday August 6 2017
BMW-BERLIN MARATHON: Sunday September 24 2017
Bank of America Chicago Marathon: Sunday October 8 2017
TCS New York City Marathon: Sunday November 5 2017
Tokyo Marathon: Sunday February 25 2018
Boston Marathon: Monday April 16 2018
Virgin Money London Marathon: Sunday April 22 2018

READ MORE: https://www.worldmarathonmajors.com/

Trail Running



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Runner’s World


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Womens Running


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Men’s Running



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How to Hike the Appalachian Trail: A Comprehensive Guide to Plan and Prepare for a Successful Thru-Hike

How to Hike the Appalachian Trail: A Comprehensive Guide to Plan and Prepare for a Successful Thru-Hike

Planning an Appalachian Trail thru-hike is overwhelming. I know. I spent months researching every question I could think of before starting the 6 month journey.

Even after all of that research, there were countless mistakes I made. This book is everything I wish I would have known before starting. Inside is a step-by-step guide to efficiently plan for a successful thru-hike. Complete with personal tips and experiences.

The goal of this guide is to help you complete the 2,185 mile long adventure, feel confident in your preparation and have a great time every step of the way.

Learn how to budget wisely, save money and not waste cash.
Know how to carve out 6 months from your family, job and home.
Master a massive gear guide on everything from your spork to your tent.
Understand clothing, layering and materials.
Hear about what life is really like on the trail.
Know which direction to go, when and why.
Familiarize yourself with a state by state breakdown of the trail.
Learn how to mentally prepare for the “I-wanna-quit-days”
Understand the physical demands and methods to prevent injury.
Prepare for the nutritional needs with favorite meals and food ideas.
Know the real dangers on the AT.
(Ladies) hear from AT record-holder Heather Anderson on “Female Needs”.

READ MORE -How to Hike the Appalachian Trail: A Comprehensive Guide to Plan and Prepare for a Successful Thru-Hike

46° edition Florence –100 KM DEL PASSATORE Mai, 26-27, 2018


Name – “100 Km del Passatore”
Organization – Associazione Sportiva Dilettantistica 100 Km del Passatore – Via Cavour, 7 – 48018 FAENZA (RA)
Affiliations – IAAF / IAU / EAA / FIDAL
Meeting point for Athletes – Firenze, Piazza Degli Strozzi – Mai 26, 2018 – 10,30 -14,00
organized by ADMO Faenza and CSEN Faenza
Start – Florence, Via Calzaiuoli (m.t. 52 s.l.m.) Saturday, May 26, 2018 15:00
Finish – Faenza, Piazza del Popolo (m.t. 35 s.l.m.) Maximun Time – 20 ore
set up by the Civil Protection Faenza and The Society of Passatore
Gates Timetables – closing time Km 32 – Borgo San Lorenzo – time 21:15 (maximum time 6:15) Km 48 – Passo della Colla di Casaglia – time 1:20 (maximum time 10:20) Km 65 – Marradi – time 4:30 (maximum time 13:30) Km 88 – Brisighella – time 9:30 (maximum time 18:30)
Maximum height difference – Passo della Colla di Casaglia (m.t. 913 s.l.m.)
Reception Service Passo della Colla di Casaglia and Radio connection: Intercommunal civil protection Centre Mugello
Record of men – 2011 Giorgio Calcattera (ITA) tempo 06:25:46
Record of women – 2017 Nikolina Sustic (CRO) tempo 07:34:36

Read More in: www.100kmdelpassatore.it



ALL participants in the 2018 Old Mutual Two Oceans Marathon are required to run a qualifying marathon and submit their results to their online entry profile by 5pm on 28 February 2018.



Ultra Marathon Qualifier Requirement

OMTOM Ultra entrants will be required to submit a qualifying marathon (or longer distance) result obtained between 1 July 2017 and 28 February 2018. All standard marathons and races longer than 42.2km count as qualifying races, provided that they are held under the auspices of the IAAF.

Qualifier results must be submitted by 5pm (GMT +2, SA time) on 28 February 2018. Entrants who miss this deadline will forfeit their entry.

In order to qualify for the OMTOM Ultra Marathon, runners’ qualifier results must meet the following criteria:

  • 42.2km / 26.2 miles – sub 5:00
  • 50km / 31 miles – sub 6:30
  • 56km / 34.7 miles – sub 7:00
  • 90km / 55.9 miles – sub 12:00
  • 100km / 62.1 miles – sub 13:30

Please contact info@twooceansmarathon.org.za if you:

  • cannot find your qualifying marathon on the dropdown;
  • are an International / African entrant who would like to query this new rule;
  • are a Blue Number holder who did not have a qualifier requirement in the past.

Read More in: http://www.twooceansmarathon.org.za/news/important-qualifying-reminder-ultra-marathon-entrants




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