HISTORY OF THE DAY RACE (24 HOURS)
Man has been running since before recorded history began
to see how far he could run in the cycle of the sun, or from
'sun' to 'sun' as it was called.
The first recorded feats of day running were almost 2,500
years ago, in 479 BC, when a runner ran from Planta to Delphi
and back, in ancient Greece. The return journey of 182 kms
was achieved within the day.
The first successful 24 hours' run, in something approaching
modern day terms, took place in the 15th or 16th Century.
These were by the "peichs' of the Turkish empire, normally
Persians, who ran from Constantinople (Istanbul) to Adrianople
(Edirne), a distance of approx. 200 kms.
The 24 hours race was born in 1806, in a match race at Newmarket,
England, between Abraham Wood and Robert Barclay Allardice
or Captain Barclay as he was better known. The race was an
anti climax because Wood withdrew at 22 miles (35 kms). Experts
predicted that Barclay, the great athletic figure of the 19th
Century, would have achieved 135 miles (216 kms) in the 24
hours.
Subsequently, in the summer of 1809, Barclay became the first
person to run/walk one mile in every consecutive hour for
every consecutive day for a total of 1,000 miles. This is
just 9 hours short of 6 weeks. Refer
"The Celebrated Captain Barclay" by Peter Radford,
first published by Headline Book Publishing in 2001.
In 1823, Russell, a young Irishman, achieved 204 kms in 24
hours.
It wasn't until the 1870's, which saw the emergence of 6
day races, that better 24 hours marks were established. Edward
Payson Weston, an American, covered 500 miles (804 kms) in
6 days and, in so doing, would frequently cover 180 kms and
more in the first 24 hours.
Then Charles Rowell, an Englishman, took the 24 hours marks
to 241 kms in the first day of the 6 day races, in the 1880's.
It wasn't until April,1931 that these marks were bettered.
A South African, Arthur Newton, who had won 5 Comrades marathons
plus a second placing, from 1922 to 1927, staged a 24 hours
race at an indoors location in Hamilton Ontario. He achieved
245.113 kms in the race which, for a large part, was led by
Australian Mike McNamara who achieved the first 100 miles
in a little over 14 hours.
Arthur Newton moved to Britain permanently after the Second
World War and persuaded the Road Runners Club to stage a 24
hours race, which took place at Motspur Park in November 1953.
The winner of the race was the great Wally Hayward also a
5 times winner of the Comrades marathon (1930, 1950, 1951,
1953 and 1954), who achieved 256.400 kms, a new world best.
It was not until 1973 that this mark was bettered. This time
by Ron Bentley, a 41 year old Tipton miner, who managed 259.603
kms. Interest in the 24 hours event was confined to Britain,
Italy and South Africa. Then, after Tom Roden ran 251 kms
at Crystal Palace in London in 1977, interest began to appear
in many other countries.
In November, 1979 the great French runner, Jean-Gilles Boussiquet,
a former soccer player, tackled the event. He managed 257
kms. Then, he travelled to Britain where, in October, 1980
he ran the 24 hours event with a distance of 264.108 kms on
the track. A month later he ran at Niort, France and achieved
a new road best of 255 kms.
Lausanne in Switzerland hosted the first major international
24 hours' race in 1981. Boussiquet surpassed all other contenders
and took the world best to new heights, achieving 272.624
kms.
1981 was perhaps the year that saw the event become of age.
Three different runners surpassed 269 kms.
Enter Yiannis Kouros - In 1984, Yiannis Kouros entered
the 6 day race in New York. In his first ultra track race,
he covered 262km/163 miles the first day, 165km/103 miles
the second, and 146.4km/91 miles the third. The knowledgeable
members of the ultrarunning world waited for his inevitable
retirement, but it did not happen. Yiannis Kouros shattered
George Littlewood's 96 year old 6 day record by 12 miles/20km!
Kouros returned to the United States later that year to compete
in a 24 hour road race at Queens, New York. He went through
100 km in 6:54:43 and 100 miles in 11:46:37, and achieved
a finishing total of 284 km/177 miles, this despite taking
a very leisurely 27:50 over his final mile. Kouros had added
six miles/10km to the 24 hours road best!
The following year the French Montauban 48 hour was endorsed
as a championship event. Kouros was invited since he had broken
the 48 hours record en route in his 6 day run in New York.
He did not make any concessions to the fact that he had a
second day to run. In 23 hours, he covered 283.6 km/176 miles
388 yards. He then stopped for an hour's rest, having easily
broken the world track best. He then continued to complete
281 miles /452 km to set a new world 48 hour best.
Tougher opposition faced him later in the year when he returned
to New York and encountered Hurricane Gloria. The Queens 24 hour one-mile
loop was battered by five hours of 60 mph/100kmph winds, driving
rain, and falling debris. In order to surpass his previous
road best set on the same course, Kouros was forced to use
the whole 24 hours. His final total was 178 miles /286.463
km, another world best.
Fierce Female Rivalry - Eleanor Adams had a great race
against Hilary Walker on an indoor track at Milton Keynes
in 1981. They were only 10 minutes apart at 100 kms but Walker
was forced to slow with a back injury. Adams pushed on to
achieve 227.261 kms.
In August 1988, Hilary Walker took the world best on the
road to new heights with a road best performance of 236.452
at Preston, GBR. Then, in Melbourne, Australia in 1989, Adams
achieved 240.169 kms for a new world best and her greatest
ever performance.
International Championships - In 1990 the first International
Championship was held at Milton Keynes in Britain on an 890
metres loop indoors around the shopping mall. The Milton Keynes
venue offered protection from the vagaries of the weather,
but its merciless marble surface was very hard on the feet
and legs. Perhaps the greatest 24 hours' field assembled up
until that point contested the race. Don Ritchie was among
these runners. He was widely regarded as one of the great
100 km runners, but had a poor record at 24 hours. That was
to change. He ran away from the rest of the field, passing
100 miles in 12:56:13 and 200 km in 16:31:08, achieving a
final distance of 166 miles 429 yards /267.543 km, a new indoor
best. Eleanor Adams made a similar impact on the women's race.
She reached the 200km in 19:00:31, the fastest yet on any
surface, and her final distance of 147 miles 1408 yards /237.861
km was second only to her own track record.
Kouros Returns To Set His Greatest Mark - At Surgeres,
France in 1995, after a brief retirement, Yiannis Kouros returned
to the ultra scene, this time as an Australian. He set a new
world track best of 285.363km/ 177miles 555yds in the first day of
the 48 hour. The following year, feeling in excellent form,
he moved the world best onwards at the Coburg track in Australia
to greater heights with 294.104km/182m1316y
Kouros' long stated aim had been to run 300 km in 24 hours.
He was thwarted in this ambition in his next 24 hour by the
very wet weather conditions in Canberra in March 1997, but
still managed to set another world track best of 295.030 kilometers/183.3
miles. Still intent on 300km, and on hearing of the possibility
of better weather conditions for the Coburg race six weeks
later, he made another attempt.
Until the 200km mark he was moving well, but was then affected
by back and knee injuries and forced to settle for a final
total of 266.180 kilometers.
He returned to Surgeres in France for another attempt on
the 48 hours best but this was also hampered by injury. Sensibly
he now took the time to fully recover from his injuries, staying
in Europe during the summer. By October Kouros felt he was
as ready as he would ever be. He entered the annual Sri Chinmoy
24 hour event in Adelaide.
He was to there achieve his masterpiece - 303.506km/188m
1308 yards. After the race Kouros stated emphatically that
he expected his world mark to last for centuries and that
he would never race over 24 hours on the track again.
His mark stands at 10% better than the next best runner and
would appear to be next to impossible to better. His performance
represents a truly remarkable average pace of 4 mins 45 secs
per km for a whole 24 hours!
He could be right about his record lasting for centuries.
His new world record is 17 miles/27.3 km greater than the
next best 24 hour distance on record, a dominance perhaps
matched only in athletics by Tomoe Abe's 6:33:11 in the 100
kms event.
Siderenkova, Lomsky and Reutovich - The women's 24
hour had been developing meanwhile. Sigrid Lomsky, a former
stalwart of the German 100km team, set a new world road best
of 151m706y/ 243.657km at Basle in 1993 to win the European
Challenge at the age of 51. Her mark was to be the undisputed
world absolute best until Elena Siderenkova ran 248.901km/
154. 6 miles in an indoor race at Podolsk in Russia in 1996.
However this latter mark cannot be ratified.
In 1998 another Russian woman, Irina Reutovich, surpassed
the world track best with 242.624km/150m1336y in the national
championships in Moscow in May. Reutovich established herself
as the dominant female performer at the turn of the millennium.
Edit Berces - Then, in September 2002, Edit Berces
from Hungary achieved the new world best of 250.106 kms in
Verona, Italy. This performance establishes a new goal for
aspiring female runners.
Summary - Since the first amateur 24 hours race back
in 1953, the event has come a long way, from a test of survival
to a test of self-knowledge, tactics, and experience.
However, the 24 hours event remains a knife-edge run; as
modern ultra runners strain to achieve their optimal speed,
whilst risking the ever-present possibility of the crash into
the abyss of fatigue, injury, and exhaustion.
This is the fascination and the attraction of the 24 hours'
race.
Compiled by Ian Cornelius from information supplied by Ultra
Running Historian and Statistician, Andy Milroy.
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