Sunday, December 31, 2023

Sparathlon 2023: γένεση (genesis, part 1 of 4)

At last… A month has passed, then two and now almost three, I’m so torn between the great memories of finishing this beast and the delay in recollecting my thoughts and journey related to this major accomplishment of my 2023 season. Let me try to get at least one part of it out in the same year. All this time I had kept 2 or so dozens of tabs opened in Chrome to get prepare for the big endeavor and, yesterday, I got a major crash and that corrupted my browser. I ended up losing 420 tabs out of the 560 I has still opened after recently closing 200. I know, that’s erring on the ultra multi-tasking side…


After taking a week off for Spartathlon, not to mention months of preparation, I had a lot to catch up and focus on, including finding another role in IBM in a challenging and stressful setup. Plus the family, friends, more racing and training, a few trips, several major milestones in my volunteering gigs (USATF and AFAM) and key home maintenance projects.

Yet, as a pro procrastinator multi-tasker, I never stopped thinking of this project. First, I thought I’d wait for the official race pictures, and that took 3 weeks in October. Then I was waiting to receive David Crokett’s book in which he covers the history of Sparathlon. Then, the intimidation of the sheer size of recounting such an experience. Then, as mentioned above, all the rest…

As the saying goes, and not just about Big Blue, the best way to eat an elephant is bit by bit, one bite at the time. Before the race, I came up with the idea of splitting my race report into 4 parts. And since I studied Greek for 2 years in middle school and loved it so much thanks to an amazing teacher, Mr. Goudet, who also taught us about Greek and Roman history and mythology, picking 4 Greek words as themes (I can still read Greek, but that doesn't help understanding modern Greek though):

1. The history of the race, or γένεση (genesis);
2. The preparation phase, or προπαρασκευή;
3. The race itself, or αγώνας (which doesn’t mean agony but race!);
4. The post-race phase, or επίλογος (epilogue).

Interestingly or oddly enough, the timespans covered by each part are really different: a few centuries for part 1, almost 9 months for the second, less than 2 days for the race itself, and weeks or now months for part 4.

A few centuries, that’s going to take time, right? I have to confess I’m really not great at history, one of the many topics my dad was mastering with his encyclopedic culture, but I really love it, that so much experience is made available for us to leverage and learn from. As a matter of fact, that is one thing which exasperates or depresses me these days, to see how stupid our world remains by still fighting wars, like we don’t know how bad they are and how much they hurt short and long term. Especially in this digital age in which we have access to so much information in real time, or artificial intelligence, really? But I digress...

The Pheidippides and Marathon myths

Well, speaking of conflicts, that’s of course one major historical connection to Sparathlon, with the battle of Marathon. That battle is certainly not a myth: in 490 before Christ, the Persians (from today’s Iran) were sailing toward the coast of Greece to invade the country as they had done through the middle east already. Despite their overwhelming numbers, the Persians got defeated by the Greeks, or more precisely the Athenanians, and that battle became a pivotal moment, leading to 200 bright and dominating years for the Greek civilization in particular.

Now, let’s talk about running. First, the historical and geographical facts. Yes, there are about 40 kilometers separating Marathon and Athens. Yes, Athens and Sparta were the dominating cities of Greece. Yes, Athenians and Spartans weren’t really friends, they actually had their own army. Yet, it seems very legit for the Athenians to send a messenger to Sparta to ask for help, given the frightening danger of the Persian invasion and the size of their army and fleet. And, yes, the modern marathon distance is 42.195 km after the addition of a 2-kilometer detour at the London Olympics so the King of England could see the race from his castle.

But what about the story about Pheidippides racing to Athens after the Marathon victory and dying after announcing the joyful news? Which is of course what everybody knows about the origin of our mythical marathon race format, right? (By Luc-Olivier Merson - [1], Public Domain.)


While the Marathon messenger seems to have existed, and even died after the rush, it was most likely NOT Pheidippides. Although Pheidippides was indeed a messenger who more likely was sent to Sparta a few days before the battle, to ask the Spartans for help. The Spartans argued that they could come when their ongoing religious festival was over, and also waiting for the full moon. With that, even if you might be disappointed by learning Pheidippides wasn’t the one running from Marathon, he still covered the distance of 6 marathons, reportedly reaching Sparta before the dawn of the second day, then returning by foot and over the famous Mount Parthenion, where Pheidippides was instructed by the god Pan to let the Athenians know he would help them if they were to worship him again. Myths and legends are sure to make and keep Sparathlon mythical!

I have to say that, after 25 years of intense and competitive running, I find surprising to have to enter the Sparathlon in order to figure all this out. Even the Wikipedia page is still ambiguous about all these myths, despite what seems to be enough historical evidence available today…

Fast forward 2,500 years, the demystification experiment

There is hopefully much more clarity in the roots of today’s Spartathlon. In addition to what you can find on the web, ultra historian Davy Crockett recently published the book “Classic Ultramarathon Beginnings” in which he covers Sparathlon over 39 pages in chapter 9. A great read full of details about John Foden in particular (some details also available on Davy's remarkable Ultrarunning History website).

In line with the weaving of history by conflicts, John was in the Royal Air Force when he formed the dream to check if it was indeed possible to run from Athens to Sparta in 36 hours or less. He was joined by 4 other British military men and a crew of 6 composed by an eclectic mix of British and local teachers and students. They started their experimental journey on October 8, 1982. While Foden missed the 36-hour goal, he still managed to finish in 37:37, despite being the oldest at 56. John McCarthy finished in 39 hours. John Scholtens actually claimed a 34:30 finish but, later, Foden stated that Scholtens must have had taken a 10-mile shortcut, off the planned course. Still, they were delighted to have demonstrated the feasibility of Pheidippides’ legendary run and thus was born a new mythical race!

41 years later

Thanks to the entrepreneurship spirit of local Michael Callaghan, the first official race was held a year later on September 30, 1983. It had 45 starters from 12 countries, 44 men and 1 woman. 16 finished and the winner was no other than the ultra famous Yiannis Kouros, already setting the bar super high at 21:53! He will lower that already mind blowing mark at 20:25 (make a note for this year’s edition). He would end up winning the race 2more times in 1986 (21:57) and 1990 (20:29). The ultra king, or god…

Our own Scott Jurek would end up winning 3 consecutive times in 2006, 2007 and 2008, with times ranging between 22:20 and 23:12.

Last year, the 40th anniversary run had 182 finishers.


What else to know

The race format

Of course, poor Pheidippides didn’t have a paved road to follow between Athens and Sparta! Nor aid stations, nor running shoes, nor energy gels, chews, sun glasses, anti-chaffing lube, crew, all the support we now get.

Today’s course is 153 miles or 246 kilometers, all on pavement except for 3 miles of rocky trails over Mount Parthenion. If asphalt looks better than trail from a running performance standpoint, most roads are open to traffic and half of these roads are actually busy highways. That is one part of the experience which I was not looking forward to, although I did many miles of training on such roads in Europe and the US, to help prepare.

Here is how the course looks on a map of Greece:


The run is so long that you can see it on a whole map of the Mediterranean sea!


The elevation isn't terrible, my Coros watch measured a gain of 9,800 and loss of 9,500 feet, with Mount Parthenion culmunating at 4,000 feet (1,215 meters).


Beyond the intimidating distance, one which I had never covered in one shot with my longest being 133 miles at the 2014 24-hour Nationals, there is also the pressure of a 36-hour cut-off. And to make the matter worst, not just one cut-off but 75 of them as you can get pulled at each of the 75 checkpoints along the way. And to make the matter even worst, the pace isn’t even linear, not just to take into account the course profile but also to factor in the fact that you will likely slow down. Although it is highly NOT recommended, you still have to start at a faster pace to make these cut-offs early on. While the overall pace corresponding to the whole 36 hours don't seem outrageous at 14:08 min/mile, the first part should be run at close to 10 min/mile, you have to keep moving!

How to get in

Between the myth, the international format, and the 40-year history, you’d think the entire planet would want to enter that race. In an interesting dilemma, the organization committee wants to keep the event both open to as many as possible, internationally, but without making a big fuzz out of it. 

First, the qualification criteria which I include below for your perusal. Note the lack of generosity for women for whom the minima are really close to men’s. I used to easily meet criteria a to e a few years ago, it was time to put my name in the hat with a couple of “b” qualifiers.

INTERNATIONAL RACES
a) Cover a 120 km (men) or 110 km distance (women) within 12-hours.
b) Finish a 100-mile race in 21:00 hours (men) or 22:00 hours (women).
c) Finish Western States 100-Mile Endurance Run, within 24:00 hours (men) or 25:00 hours (women).
d) Cover at least 180 km (men) or 170 km (women) in a 24-hour race.
e) Finish a non-stop 200-220 km race within 29:00 hours (men) or 30:00 hours (women).
f) Finish UltraBalaton (221 km) in 31:00 hours (men) or 32:00 hours (women)
g) Finish a longer than 220 km non-stop race within 36:00 hours (men) or 37:00 hours (women).
h) Finish Badwater race within 39:00 hours (men) or 40:00 hours (women).
i) Finish Grand Union Canal Race within 34:00 hours (men) or 35:00 hours (women).
j) Finish Sakura Michi 250-km race in 36:00 hours
k) Finish Yamaguchi 100 Hagi-O-Kan Maranic 250-km race within 42:00 hours (men) or 43:00 hours (women).
l) Cover a distance of at least 280 km (men) or 260 km (women) in a 48-hour race.

RACES IN GREECE
a) Finish Spartathlon race within 36:00 hours.
<And a few other local races>

Second, the field remains limited to 390, not far from the Western States Endurance Run quota of 369. But it’s actually more complex than just a single number: to maximize international representation, the organizers limit to 25 the number of runners from each country, just keeping 50 aside for the Greeks. They also reserve the right to invite a dozen or so elites.

Besides, runners meeting the pre-requisite marks by 25% or more are auto qualified, meaning they don’t have to go through the lottery. Depending on the size of the country, and the popularity of Spartathlon within that country, the odds vary a lot. For instance, there was only one entrant representing the 1.4 billion Indians! Conversely, and thanks especially to Bob Hearn’s advertising of the event in our local circles, we had quite a few Americans on the wait list this year. Including Bob himself, victim of his own marketing efforts to advertise for Spartahlon. Bob was trying to enter for the 6th time, for a 5th finish.

But... why did I get in?

That's a question I got quite frequently through 2023. Primarily, I felt that, one year before turning 60, it was about time I give it a try. I had thought of entering before but it felt way too intimidating, between the international reputation, the distance and the international logistic. Beyond the athletic challenge and must-do nature, I was also attracted by the mythological and historical connections. As I mentioned, I loved that subject in middle school thanks to the communicative passion of our teacher.

I felt important to give you in that initial part some background so you can put some perspective on the unique nature of the event. Which Davy Crockett labels himself as: "one of the most prestigious ultramarathon in the world." In the next part, I'll cover the 9 months leading to the race. A kind of pregnancy...

Monday, December 25, 2023

Last and 35th ultra of the year: on familiar grounds!

After the 4 years it took my hamstring injury to heal, 2023 has been a much better year, finally! There is still so many muscle fibers to rebuild, quite a hefty challenge with age, in order to regain pre-injury speed but at least the pain is gone. A good setting to get back to higher mileage although I had made a resolution not to reach again the 3,100-miles/5,000-kilometers levels I had reached for the 8 years leading to that injury (when I slipped in full stride extension on a wet crosswalk at the 2018 Turkey Trot 10K). But... I dared to put my name in the Spartathlon lottery and got picked on my first run and that required a very special preparation, including higher mileage, oops! Long story short, I ended up logging 4,001 miles in 2023!

4,000 miles never seemed to be a reasonable goal to me and, sure enough, I'm finishing the year quite exhausted. But if you think that's an impossible goal, know that others put even more miles in! For instance, the fastest woman on the ultra scene today, Camille Herron, just closed her 12th year above 5,000 miles, with 4 more years above 4,000 miles before that when she was still focusing on the marathon distance. And she isn't slowing down in her earlier Masters years! In contrast, Kilian Jornet has quite a different philosophy has he is mixing with more activities, exemplifying the power of cross-training: while his running mileage seems low at 3,200 kilometers (2,000 miles), he boasts mind boggling numbers in other dimensions such as 584,270 meters of vertical (yes, that's almost 2 million feet)! Lot of food and scattered data points for thoughts on what best to do in 2024...

The day before Christmas was open and I decided to go for one last ultra to close on that elusive 4K-mile goal. We had a project to fly to Africa for the holidays but had to reschedule for next year, ended up at home. And with home goes the familiar ground. While this isn't making up the carbon footprint of my air travels, I don't like to take the car to drive somewhere to run long, I much prefer running from home. I have a few familiar long run courses from home:
  1. For a marathon distance: the entrance of the Palo Alto Baylands park at the end of San Antonio Road, in Mountain View.
  2. For 50K, continue on through Byxbee Bridge Park, to the ex/historical/defuncted Palo Alto Yacht Club.
  3. For 50 miles, keep going along the Palo Alto airport on the Bay Trail, across the Dumbarton Bridge and turning back at the Pump House of the Don Edwards Wildlife Refuge.
  4. Alternatively, for some vertical, up to Black Mountain on Montebello Road with variations ranging from 22 to 28 miles, or more with additional loops on Bellavista and Indian Creek Trails.

This Saturday, to build on the familiar and family theme, Greg joined me to run the first 11 miles together.



We also ran into Agnès and Max at Shoreline who hiked there before stopping by the Google visitor center for a short visit.


Every time I run through Shoreline, I wonder if I'm going to see Jean-François (Maitrot) training there and, sure enough, we crossed him just after seeing Agnès and Max. Jean-François was on his way toward Microsoft but changed his plan to join me for the next 2 miles. Which, after a leisurely 8:20 min/mil average pace turned into a 7:20 min/mile tempo, all while chatting to catch-up about our respective racing, training tips, shoe trends, and the way too typical running topic, injuries. Jean-François is on a great quest of famous marathons: after qualifying and running Boston, he has run Amsterdam, ran Berlin after being picked in the lottery and is going to run Tokyo next! 13 marathons out of a goal of 26. Or maybe 42 after all, crazy runner moving goals... ;-)


After Jean-François turned back before the Bowl, I continued to my own turnaround and returned toward Cupertino. A few pictures and one Relive flyover (click on first picture below):







Back to my starting point, with now 3,998 year mile, I kept going with one of my local, and very familiar, 5K look around the neighborhood, to round up and close the year with 4,001 miles. With only one week left in the year, not really in time to indulge the 3 rest weeks recommended by Scott Jurek, an advice I followed for many years but at least I'm taking the last day of 2023 off, phew!

In this other Facebook post, Kilian shares how he switches his training to skiing and indoor cycling in winter and how that makes him a better runner. I don't have snowy mountains nearby but I already had in mind to at least integrate much needed strength training, fo a big change. I'm at least very happy to close the year healthy, it's easy to take good health for granted...

Sending peaceful vibes to all over these year end holidays, thinking of the many drawn into conflicts around the world. To a better and smarter 2024 hopefully!


Saturday, December 9, 2023

And the PA MUT Oscars should go to... Help: please nominate your nominees!

This message is for my fellow USATF Pacific Association members: your help is much needed in identifying who should be nominated for our MUT (Mountain, Ultra, Trail) 2023 season awards!


3 categories:

  1. Female MUT Runner of the Year
  2. Male MUT Runner of the Year
  3. MUT Volunteer of the Year
Let me start with the Volunteer category, VoY, which is not an easy one: while a good number of volunteers may come to mind as we see them helping us at aid stations or they help behind the scene to make races happen, there is another key criteria: be a Pacific Association member in good standing. Needless to say, you don't have to be a member to volunteer so many of our most resourceful volunteers aren't eligible for such a recognition. That still leaves us with 7,600 names in our Association directory, please share your ideas, adding who you would like to be considered in this online form.

The membership requirement is also key for the RoY eligibility. Beyond that one, I identified 6 dimensions to bring more objectivity to the process when I took over the leadership of our Grand Prix and MUT Sub-Committee, which I shared in that 2020 post. They are:

  1. Body of Work (MUT): 0-No race result; 3-significant MUT achievements; 5-5 or more significant MUT achievements
  2. International / National: 0-No result in international or national competitions; 3-Significant results at international or national level(*); 5-Podium at international competition
  3. Pacific Association MUT GP focus: 0-0 PA race/result; 3: 4 or more PA GP results; 5-7 or more PA GP results
  4. Performance range: 0-Single distance / format; 3-Significant results in two distinct formats / distance ranges; 5-Significant results across sub-ultra trail, and 1.0, 1.5 and 2.0 ultras
  5. Historical performance (CR, AGCR, ITRA>800): 0-No CR setting; 3-Some CR setting, or CR-worth/close performances, A few notable ITRA scores (>800 for Men, >700 for Women); 5-Consistent setting of CR / AGCR across body of work, Several high ITRA scores (>850 for Men, >750 for Women)
  6. Age graded performance: 0-Too young for age being a factor (20-35); 3-Rocking the Masters division; 5-Still killing it enough to make the podium or top 10
There are still some subjectivity but that framework brings some structure to compare our best local athletes before deciding on this very coveted recognition.

Calling for help because the scouting for nominees is quite a task so let's share the burden with some crowd sourcing. That requires to scan local, national and international results, then cross check with our PA member database. Some of you participating in the Grand Prix reach out from time to time, asking how you can help, here is one opportunity! From the comfort of your couch and keyboard!

Should I add that this is urgent as our award banquet celebration is planned for January 27 and plaques have to be ordered by December 18? Setting the deadline to this Wednesday December 13, but the best time is now!

Ready, set, nominate! Looking forward to receiving your nominations through this online form!