Tag: 100 Mile

  • Calculated Pacing: An Interview With Sarah Webster on Her 24-Hour World Record

    Calculated Pacing: An Interview With Sarah Webster on Her 24-Hour World Record

    The post Calculated Pacing: An Interview With Sarah Webster on Her 24-Hour World Record appeared first on iRunFar.

    When Great Britain’s Sarah Webster surpassed the women’s 24-hour world record at the 2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships in Albi, France, on October 19, she still had a full hour left to race and add mileage to the previous mark. She would end up running 278.622 kilometers (173.127 miles), breaking the previous record held by Japan’s Miho Nakata by 8.259 kilometers (5.131 miles), set in 2023.

    In only her second 24-hour race ever, Webster executed exceptional pacing throughout the event. Averaging 5:11 minutes per kilometer (8:19 minutes per mile), including any breaks needed over the 24-hour period, her pace remained incredibly consistent throughout the event, only slowing in the final hours. As she describes in the following interview, it was all part of her plan.

    Webster, who is 46 years old and not a professional runner, was third at both the 2024 IAU 100k World Championships and the 2023 IAU 50k World Championships. She qualified to represent Great Britain at this year’s 24-hour world championships by running 243.393 kilometers (151.237 miles) in 24 hours at the qualifying event this past April, and had to work her training around a dislocated shoulder leading up to the event.

    Learn more about how her race played out in this transcribed interview, and read our 2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships results article and our news article about her world record to learn more about this year’s race and Sarah’s performance.

    Sarah Webster - 2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships - running
    Sarah during the 2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships. Photo: John O’Regan

    [Editor’s Note: This interview has been lightly edited for clarity.]

    iRunFar: Congratulations. What an enormous thing that you’ve just done. How do you feel?

    Sarah Webster: I don’t think it’s quite sunk in. Yeah, just feeling very tired generally. And obviously, legs are still a little bit sore. But yeah, I can’t quite get my head around it all.

    iRunFar: I imagine it’ll take a while. How’s your body feeling?

    Webster: Better today. I can now sit down and stand up without thinking too hard about it, so that’s good. But getting down on the floor and getting back up again is still quite hard.

    iRunFar: Before we talk about the race, I just wanted to ask a bit about your history with running, where you started out, and what brought you to doing the 24 hours now?

    Webster: I ran as a junior, just did club running, mostly track, cross country, because I had to. I did the very occasional road race, but mostly on the track. Then I gave it all up in my final year at university and concentrated on getting my degree. I didn’t go back to running until my daughter was four and she was going to school, and I had time on my hands. My husband was like, “I think you should start running again.” I was like, “Really? You really don’t know what you are asking.” He’s like, “No, it’s fine. I’ll support you.” And yeah, he had no idea what it was going to involve. I did a half marathon, and then I was like, “Oh, actually, I think I’ll go back and do some track.” So I did some track and I represented the Isle of Man in the Ireland Games in the 1,500 and 5,000 meters.

    Then I was like, “No, this is too hard. I can’t do this anymore. I’m getting too old.” I went back on the road, did some more half marathons, then I moved up to a marathon, and that was really good. Really started enjoying doing marathons. And then somebody posted, “Oh, the standard for getting a GB [Team Great Britain] vest for the IAU 50k World Championships, you only have to have run a marathon.” And it was 2:45, which is what I had. I was like, “Oh wow, a GB vest. That would be a dream come true.” I didn’t get it then, there were better runners ahead of me, but the fact that I could was what started me thinking about it.

    Then everything got a bit delayed because COVID-19 hit. And then I was trying to qualify for the Commonwealth Games Marathon for the Isle of Man, so that delayed the process. Otherwise, I probably would’ve done a 50k sooner. But then I saw that I could get an England vest with my marathon time for the 100k. So I naively applied for 100k place on the England team, and naively informed them that I was going to try and break the British record, and actually exceeded my expectations of the race, and decided that 100ks were quite good fun. I had to do a 50k fairly soon after that, because I had to qualify if I wanted a GB vest for the IAU 50k World Championships, which I managed to do.

    So yeah, 50k and then back up to the 100k. I looked at the plan, and the IAU 50k World Championships was back in India. And having run twice in India, France definitely had more appeal. So I thought, “Well, I’ll try and qualify for the IAU 24-Hour World Championships, and if I don’t or I don’t enjoy it, it doesn’t matter, I can go back and try and qualify for the 50k.” So then having qualified for 24 hours, it was like, “Oh, now you’ve got to actually run the championships.”

    Sarah Webster running collage
    Left: Sarah running at the 50k world champs 2023. Photo: Archie Jenkins
    Right: Sarah at a local Isle of Man race a few years ago. Photo courtesy of Sarah Webster.

    iRunFar: And that was just this year, wasn’t it? Your first-ever 24-hour race. And at that point, you broke the British record?

    Webster: Yeah. Well, broke the British track record. The overall record, Britain distinguishes between track and road. So I didn’t have the road one until Albi, but I broke the British track record, which yeah, that was the aim, and that included walking for four hours. I was utterly determined that I could do better this time.

    iRunFar: I suppose with the experience, you were able to plan differently, plan better.

    Webster: Yeah. I mean, the aim for the qualifying race was just to still be running after 24 hours. I’d basically still be out on the track unless I was unconscious or the medics had pulled me off. It was an absolute determination just to finish the race. And then this time it was like, “Ok, that’s fine, but that’s not good enough for the championships. You’re going to have to run the race now.” So yeah, that was the sole aim was just to basically run pretty much the whole time.

    iRunFar: And just to check in, so your marathon, did you compete in the Commonwealth Games?

    Webster: I did. I had a very bad run. I had COVID-19 about two weeks before, and I was still testing positive two days before the race. So yeah, it was an absolute nightmare, slowest marathon I’ve done. So yes, I’ve got unfinished business with the Commonwealth Games, but I’ll never have to go back there because obviously they don’t have one. And now, because I don’t live on the Isle of Man, I won’t be able to represent them anymore, unfortunately.

    iRunFar: That was 2022.

    Webster: Yeah.

    iRunFar: So going properly onto your race now, what was going through your head? Did you separate the race into different phases? Did you have a change of mindset throughout?

    Webster: Yeah, the first four hours were pretty horrible. It was like, “Oh God, this is going so slowly. How could I be this knackered while I’m running this slowly?” And then after four hours, it kind of just slipped into place. I got into a rhythm. The rest of the day and night, that was fine. I just carried on going round, and then the last three or four hours were really, really hard. But by that point, I knew all I had to do was keep going even slower than I was already doing, but certainly at the pace I was doing, and I was going to do it.

    Sarah Webster - 2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships - women's champion running
    Sarah Webster on her final lap at the 2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships. Photo: iRunFar/Deki Fourcin

    iRunFar: At what point did you realize that the world record was going to be obtainable?

    Webster: I think it was with about three hours to go, because I kept trying to work out the laps, and I was thinking, “Well, I’ve got 30k to do, and so long as I keep running at 10k an hour,” which was slower than what I was doing, it was fine. I was going to do it. Then I was more worried that the other two girls were going to catch me because I knew full well they potentially would come through a lot faster in their last few hours. That was more the worry of, yes, I could get the record, but were they going to catch me? I knew after I’d got the record, I couldn’t afford to stop because they were going to catch me. And they were catching me at the end. They were doing very well.

    iRunFar: I was standing there just at the point where you came through when there were the announcements, “Ok, next time we see Sarah, she’s going to have beaten the world record.” And I saw you come through, and the whole team, they were so excited, they were there waiting for you.

    Webster: They were amazing. Really, really amazing support from everybody. It was absolutely incredible. I couldn’t have done it without them.

    iRunFar: I thought maybe you’d slow down, stop for a minute, but you looked so determined, you grabbed the flag and went.

    Webster: Thank you. Yeah, I couldn’t put it around me. I dislocated my shoulder six weeks ago, so any movement in my shoulder beyond the basics, that’s why I wasn’t wearing a neck bandana or anything to keep me cool, because I just couldn’t put it around my neck and move my arm properly. So I just had to carry the flag.

    iRunFar: Did you have a strategy beforehand that you put in place during the race?

    Webster: The idea was I absolutely was not allowed to go off any faster than roughly 7:30 per lap, which worked out at eight-minute mile-ing or five minutes per kilometer. If it was any faster than that for more than a lap, then my team had to tell me to slow down because I knew if I kept that pace up, there was a chance that I would break the world record. Whereas if I went out faster than that, I wasn’t going to break it, I’d have blown up. That was the aim. Didn’t mind if I went slower than that, I just wasn’t allowed to go any faster than that until four hours to go. I hoped I’d have something left for four hours to go and go faster. But no, that was the consistency. Then the idea was just to have a break every four, roughly four to five hours and have a reset, which should have involved me doing some squats, with the team holding me.

    iRunFar: I saw that at the end.

    Webster: Yeah. That worked really well until about the last hour. Then I was pretty much doing them every lap because I knew my crew weren’t going to allow me to sit down, so it was like, you’re going to have to support me while I do these squats because at least my legs are in a different position, and then yeah, you give me a kick and get me going again. It seemed to help, because my quads were just screaming for the last three, four hours.

    My team wanted me to speed up with about three hours to go. I think they wanted me to break the outright British record, but I realized by that point, I was so dizzy and my legs were so knackered that if I’d fallen and re-dislocated my shoulder, the race was going to be over. I couldn’t. So it was like, I can’t actually speed up. I’m just going to have to just keep going at this pace. There’s nothing I can do because to fall and to lose the race because I’d fallen would’ve just been absolutely gutting.

    Sarah Webster - 2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships - women's champion
    Sarah Webster of Great Britain setting a new world record at the 2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships. Photo: iRunFar/Deki Fourcin

    iRunFar: It seemed like a fine balance of knowing how much to push at certain points and not sacrifice everything that you’d previously worked for.

    Webster: Right.

    iRunFar: I just wanted to know, how did you train for it? How do you juggle? Because you work as well, you’re not a professional.

    Webster: Yeah, I work about 30 hours a week, so training generally fits around that. This time’s a bit different. I put a lot more double days into it, and I think that really helped. So even if it meant I did an hour and a half in the morning and finished at work and then got back in the afternoon, run home from work, for instance. Because I dislocated my shoulder, I couldn’t drive for three weeks, so that actually made things a lot better because I had to run to work, I had to run to the gym, so I was ending up doing four runs a day, but doing them a lot slower. So it would be like four miles to work, four miles home, four miles to the gym, four miles back.

    But it broke the mileage up a lot, which I think really, really helped rather than concentrating on the more faster runs, which is what I would do for 100k. So I think my mileage already had been about 100 miles a week. And then for about four weeks, it was about 130 miles a week. So yeah, it was a massive jump, but they were a lot slower miles because I had still had a sling on at that point in time, and the dog had to come to work with me. And she doesn’t do quick running, She does 10-minute miles. But yeah, so she made me slow down.

    iRunFar: What do you have plans for next?

    Webster: I don’t know is the honest answer. I sort of had a plan, but it depends on what championships are available next year, I think, and what I have to do to qualify for them, if you see what I mean, and I’d like to be brave enough to do a bit of off-road running.

    I did a 50k trail run and I loved it, but the only reason I did that one was because it was basically home territory. So I was able to recce the course multiple times. Still went wrong, so I’ve got to find a course that I can recce at least some of, or have somebody who knows where they’re going to pace me some of the time, or be extremely well sign-posted. And I’m not really very good at mud either. So yeah, it’s definitely going to have to be a very easy trail run. But I do like getting off-road as well as the on-road stuff, so yeah, it’s less pressure.

    iRunFar: You don’t look at your pace all the time and like that.

    Webster: No, and if you need to walk up a hill, my general rule with the hills is, well, if I can walk faster than I can run, then I’ll walk up the hill. That’s the basic answer. But I’m not very good at downhill either, so yeah.

    iRunFar: That’d be exciting to try out.

    Webster: Yeah, yeah. Just more have a bit of fun.

    iRunFar: Congratulations and thanks very much for taking the time.

    Webster: Thank you!

    Calculated Pacing: An Interview With Sarah Webster on Her 24-Hour World Record by Deki Fourcin.


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  • Best Lightweight Trail Running Shoes of 2025

    Best Lightweight Trail Running Shoes of 2025

    The post Best Lightweight Trail Running Shoes of 2025 appeared first on iRunFar.

    Best Lightweight Trail Running Shoes - Hoka Tecton X2 Alli
    An iRunFar tester running fast in a pair of lightweight Hokas. Photo: iRunFar/Eszter Horanyi

    When finding the best lightweight trail running shoes, you want one that strikes a balance between being nimble, durable, and cushioned enough to be comfortable but light enough to let you fly. This guide shares the best lightweight trail shoes with an aim to keep the weight for a U.S. men’s 9 under 9 ounces, although two pairs snuck in just over that weight. Because the shoes here are very light, generally narrow, and with low-volume midsoles, many — but not all(!) — are not well suited for ultramarathon distances but are perfect for zooming up, down, and across everything from buttery singletrack to buttressed mountains.

    We tested the shoes across various conditions and distances to determine which were best when speed was of the essence.

    You can also learn more about finding the right lightweight trail shoes by jumping to our how-to-choose section.

    Check out our best trail running shoes guide for more generalist trail shoes.

    Best Lightweight Trail Running Shoes

    Best Lightweight Trail Running Shoes - Nadir Maguet 2021-Limone-Skyrace-Extreme-champion-feature
    Lightweight shoes can make a big difference in short and steep races. Photo: Skyrunning/Maurizio Torri

    Best Overall Lightweight Trail Running Shoe: The North Face Vectiv Sky 2 ($200)

    best lightweight trail running shoe - The North Face Summit Vectiv Sky 2
    The North Face Summit Vectiv Sky 2.

    Actual Weight (U.S. men’s 9): 8.4 oz (238 g) | Stack Height: 28/22 mm heel/toe | Drop: 6 mm

    Pros:

    • Soft but poppy midsole
    • “Just enough” lug pattern provides great ground feel while descending

    Cons:

    • Midfoot lockdown could be improved
    • Ridiculously long laces

    Though it launched with less fanfare than the hyper-stacked, super-shoe counterpart Vectiv Pro 3 ($250), The North Face Vectiv Sky 2 ($200) is arguably the stronger all-around trail racing shoe between the brand’s two premium options at the moment. That’s a bit ironic, considering the Pro line has historically been the more enjoyable option, while the original Sky fell short of expectations.

    With the Sky 2, The North Face made two major changes to the upper. The tongue system has been improved and replaced with a thinner, more traditional gusseted tongue, resulting in a more secure and comfortable fit. The midsole also feels faster and more forgiving, elevating the ride quality compared to the first version.

    The Sky 2’s midsole is constructed entirely from Dream foam, a nitrogen-infused TPU that delivers a smooth, propulsive sensation underfoot. It softens the ride noticeably while also reducing weight compared to the original. The shoe also features a forked Vectiv 3.0 carbon plate with three prongs that run independently along the left, center, and right through the forefoot. These prongs merge at the midfoot and extend as a single plate through the heel. The left and right arms even wrap slightly upward, forming stabilizing “wings” along the medial and lateral sides.

    With a 6-millimeter drop (28 millimeter heel/22 millimeter forefoot stack height), the Sky 2 avoids the stability issues that plague higher-stacked models like the Vectiv Pro 3, which sits on a 40 millimeter heel. Despite being lighter than the original, the Sky 2 actually gained traction with deeper outsole lugs — now 5 millimeters, up from 3.5 millimeters — and a redesigned Surface Control rubber compound.

    This shoe stands out from the pack for one simple reason — it’s fun, extremely fast, and highly effective to run in.

    The midsole foam delivers an energetic ride, while the overall weight remains impressively competitive. Add in a remarkably capable outsole, and you’ve got a combination that makes this model hard to beat. A U.S. men’s 9 in the The North Face Vectiv Sky 2 has an actual weight of just 8.4 ounces (238 gram).

    Watch out for our forthcoming full review of The North Face Vectic Sky 2.

    Shop the The North Face Vectiv Sky 2 – Unisex

    Best Lightweight Trail Running Shoe for Short Distance: Brooks Catamount Agil ($180)

    best lightweight trail running shoe - Brooks Catamount Agil
    The Brooks Catamount Agil.

    Actual Weight (U.S. men’s 9): 8.0 oz (226 g) | Stack Height: 16/10 mm heel/toe | Drop: 6 mm

    Pros:

    • Great close-to-ground feeling while descending
    • Substantial lugs for a low-profile shoe

    Cons:

    • Forefoot too narrow for some runners
    • Midsole unforgiving for distances over a half marathon

    According to its maker, the Brooks Catamount Agil is its “fastest trail shoe, ever,” and after testing it on short, technical courses with steep climbs and descents, we couldn’t agree more. This isn’t a Caldera built for 100-mile ultras — it simply doesn’t have the weight or cushioning to protect your legs for that kind of pounding. But for shorter, punchy trail races where speed and agility matter most, it’s one of the best options out there.

    What sets the Catamount Agil apart right away is how low it sits to the ground. With a stack height of just 16 millimeters in the heel and 10 millimeters in the forefoot — making for a 6 millimeter drop — it offers exceptional trail feel.

    Instead of the familiar SkyVault carbon plate found in the Catamount 3, Brooks opted for a Pebax SpeedVault Trail Plate paired with their nitrogen-infused DNA FLASH v2 foam. This combination delivers a lively, propulsive ride with a surprising level of forgiveness for a plated shoe. Pebax, a polymer derived from castor beans, is lighter and more supportive than carbon, offering a smoother, more comfortable experience without sacrificing responsiveness.

    Brooks also made a bold choice with the outsole. The Catamount Agil features 4.5-millimeter deep lugs — deeper than many lightweight trail shoes. While you might feel a slight rocking sensation standing still, once you’re moving downhill, those lugs provide exceptional grip and confidence. This outsole design gives it a major advantage over rivals like the Salomon S/Lab Pulsar 2, which skimps on traction in the name of weight savings.

    Another reason the Catamount Agil excels in short-distance racing is its agility. Unlike many rigid-plated shoes that feel locked in one direction, the Agil naturally flexes and bends with quick side-to-side movements, perfect for technical trails with tight switchbacks or root-filled sections.

    Fit-wise, the Agil strikes a great balance. The one-piece mesh upper wraps the foot precisely without being restrictive, and the lacing system locks in securely. For wide feet, the upper accommodates without feeling tight, though I’d recommend sizing up if you’re between sizes, as the overall fit leans narrow. Unfortunately, Brooks doesn’t offer this shoe in the half size between 12 and 13. Still, if in doubt, size up.

    We have raced the Catamount Agil in trail races up to 12 kilometers, and it truly shines when the course is shorter but elevation gain and technical challenge are high — think vertical kilometers or fast trail half marathons. We often joke about low-stack, low-weight trail racing shoes that are like track spikes with lugs (remember the original Arc’teryx Norvan SL?). Well, in this guide, the Catamount Agil is that shoe. It would take an extremely nimble runner to use these comfortably on anything longer than 20- to 30-kilometer races.

    Shop Brooks Catamount Agil – Unisex

    Most Comfortable Lightweight Trail Running Shoe: Norda 005 ($325)

    best lightweight trail running shoe - Norda 005
    The Norda 005.

    Actual Weight (U.S. men’s 9.5): 8.1 o (230 g) | Stack Height: 28.5/21.5 mm heel/toe | Drop: 7 mm

    Pros:

    • Midsole might be the most comfortable of any current trail shoe, lightweight or not!
    • Vibram Megagrip Elite, currently exclusive to this shoe, is great on dirt roads

    Cons:

    • So damn expensive
    • Less nimble descender than some other shoes in this guide

    The Norda 005 ($325) is a standout in the lightweight trail racing category because it blends comfort, durability, and speed like few others. Unlike most super shoes, the 005 skips the carbon plate and opts for innovative materials that deliver a smooth, cushy ride without sacrificing responsiveness.

    The key to its comfort is the midsole’s Arnitel TPEE foam, which offers great energy return while staying softer and more forgiving than typical trail super shoe foams. This creates a plush yet lively platform that cushions your feet on technical terrain and long efforts without feeling harsh or dead underfoot.

    The shoe’s stack height is moderate — 28 millimeters in the heel and 21 millimeters in the forefoot for a 7-millimeter drop — which strikes the right balance between protection and ground feel. Unlike many bulky trail super shoes that feel unstable on descents, the Norda 005 stays nimble and confident on rocky, rooty downhills.

    Up top, the Dyneema bio-based upper is both ultralight and incredibly durable. It’s breathable, sheds water well, and offers a glove-like fit that keeps your foot secure but comfortable. This combination of a protective upper and plush midsole makes the 005 a shoe you can wear all day, whether racing or training.

    Outsole traction is another highlight. Vibram’s Megagrip Elite rubber, with a Tetris-like lug pattern, provides sticky, reliable grip across varied terrain, from fast fire roads to technical singletrack. The lugs are deep enough to bite but not so aggressive that they punish your calves on longer runs.

    For runners who prioritize comfort without sacrificing weight or performance, the Norda 005 is an exceptional choice. It’s durable, supportive, and cushioned enough to tackle tough terrain with confidence, all while weighing less than many traditional trail shoes. The step-in feel is unlike any shoe in this guide, the perfect plushness with efficiency.

    Watch or read our full Norda 005 review.

    Shop the Men’s Norda 005Shop the Women’s Norda 005

    Best Lightweight Trail Running Shoe for Technical Terrain: VJ Lightspeed ($200)

    best lightweight trail running shoe - VJ Lightspeed
    The VJ Lightspeed.

    Actual Weight (U.S. men’s 9): 8.4 oz (238 g) | Stack Height: 29/23 mm heel/toe | Drop: 6 mm

    Pros:

    • Perfect midsole mix of foam and plate makes for a very propulsive ride
    • Excellent lockdown

    Cons:

    • Requires more skill to descend confidently (even with great grip)
    • Narrow upper for some runners

    The VJ Lightspeed ($200) is one of the lightest trail shoes available for runners who like very technical terrain. The underfoot sensations are light, bouncy, and fast — and at just 8.4 ounces (238 grams) for a U.S. men’s size 9, the weight backs up that feeling. But like most of the shoes in this guide, the Lightspeed demands keen proprioceptive awareness and strong ankle and foot control to maximize the experience. It is a very narrow shoe designed for mid-to-forefoot runners who aim for quick and minimal ground contact time.

    What really sets the Lightspeed apart on technical trails is its exceptional outsole traction. VJ’s proprietary butyl-rubber outsole delivers some of the stickiest grip you’ll find on any trail shoe, holding firm on wet rocks, loose gravel, and roots. The 3.5-millimeter square lugs are a smart balance — not overly aggressive but enough to bite into loose and uneven surfaces without packing mud. Narrow outsole slits provide natural flexibility, allowing the shoe to adapt to quick directional changes and maintain contact with the trail.

    Underfoot, the shoe combines a nitrogen-infused SuperFOAMance midsole with a Y-shaped Pebax propulsion plate. This setup offers a springy ride with the right mix of cushioning and stability. The plate adds torsional support, helping your foot stay steady and responsive. Together, they promote the fast and agile footwork needed for fast running on technical terrain.

    The fit is another critical factor. The snug upper is made of a thick Kevlar-based material that wraps the foot very securely. The FitLock midsole wrap enhances midfoot lockdown, preventing unwanted foot movement during sharp turns or sudden balance shifts.

    In races, we’ve noticed the shoe’s superior grip and responsive support allow you to attack technical descents confidently. For experienced trail runners seeking a lightweight, precise racer that thrives on technical terrain, the VJ Lightspeed is hard to beat. Overall, the Lightspeed offers an exceptional blend of speed and control for runners with the foot strength and skill to maximize its technical running potential.

    Read our full VJ Lightspeed review.

    Shop VJ Lightspeed – Unisex

    Best Lightweight Trail Running Shoe for Up to 50k Distances: La Sportiva Prodigio Pro ($225)

    best lightweight trail running shoe - La Sportiva Prodigio Pro
    The La Sportiva Prodigio Pro.

    Actual Weight (U.S. men’s 9.5): 9.4 oz (267 g) | Stack Height: 34/28 mm heel/toe | Drop: 6 mm

    Pros:

    • Similar but more stable ride than carbon-plated shoes
    • Great rockered design

    Cons:

    • Bulkier and heavier than other shoes in this guide

    Longtime La Sportiva acolytes were caught off guard with the launch of the original Prodigio and even more so by the La Sportiva Prodigio Pro. Never before has La Sportiva offered such a soft midsole foam, an exaggerated rocker, and its signature sticky rubber in the same package. And on top of all that, the fit was even a bit forgiving, offering non-narrow-footed folks a chance to slip into its glove-like upper without consternation.

    This shoe really hits a sweet spot between cushioning, responsiveness, and durability — while still feeling light enough to keep you quick and agile on technical terrain.

    Alongside the Hoka Tecton X 3, the Prodigio Pro is about as “maximal” as things get in this guide. With a 34-millimeter stack height under the heel and 28 millimeters at the toe for a 6-millimeter drop, it’s got more stack and a burlier build than most of the svelte racers out there, which makes it all the more surprising that it tips the scales at just 9.4 ounces actual weight for a U.S. men’s 9.5 (equivalent in size to our standard U.S. men’s 9). You wouldn’t immediately peg it as a lightweight option, but it absolutely belongs in that conversation. While it can hang on steep, technical courses, the Prodigio Pro really comes alive on smooth, rolling trails where the rocker geometry lets you flow. And thanks to the FriXion XF 2.0 outsole, you still get that signature La Sportiva bite over pretty much any surface.

    The midsole is where things get really interesting. At the heart of the Prodigio Pro is La Sportiva’s XFlow Speed, which ditches the usual carbon plate in favor of a nitrogen-infused TPU core wrapped in an EVA+NITRO cage. The result is a ride that feels springy and propulsive but without the stiffness or instability you sometimes get in plated shoes. It’s responsive enough to race fast, yet forgiving enough to keep your legs intact deep into a 50k.

    Up top, the Power Wire knit-looking upper locks your foot down securely, while the knit collar adds both ankle comfort and debris protection. The fit stays snug and supportive, but — rare for La Sportiva — the toebox gives you room to splay out and swell a bit on longer days.

    The Prodigio Pro has been described as feeling like a “super shoe” without the plate. It delivers real energy return and protection without beating you up. True to La Sportiva form, durability is a strength: This is a shoe built to last through many racing seasons.

    Read our full La Sportiva Prodigio Pro review.

    Shop the Men’s La Sportiva Prodigio ProShop the Women’s La Sportiva Prodigio Pro

    Best Lightweight Trail Running Shoe for Smooth Singletrack: Hoka Tecton X 3 ($275)

    best lightweight trail running shoe - Hoka Tecton X 3
    The Hoka Tecton X 3.

    Actual Weight (U.S. men’s 9): 9.3 oz (265 g) | Stack Height: 40/35 mm heel/toe | Drop: 5 mm

    Pros:

    • Enjoyable midsole bounce at speed
    • Deep Vibram lugs provide great grip over many conditions

    Cons:

    • Built-in gaiter can be a deal breaker for many runners
    • Midsole provides the tippiest ride of any shoe in the guide

    The Hoka Tecton X 3 is built for speed on smooth, flowing singletrack, offering the rare combination of light weight, plush cushioning, and reliable protection. Now in its third version, the shoe benefits from refinements shaped by elite athlete feedback, and it feels more polished and versatile than ever.

    With an actual weight of 9.3 ounces for a U.S. men’s 9, the Tecton X 3 balances a 5-millimeter drop and generous 40-millimeter heel stack height and 35-millimeter forefoot stack with surprising agility. The PEBA midsole layers provide a cushioned, energetic feel, while two parallel carbon plates add a snappy, propulsive response. Unlike many plated shoes that can feel overly stiff or unstable, the plates here flex independently, giving the shoe both drive and stability when the trails get uneven. It feels powerful without being demanding, and smooth without being dull — a rare balance in the plated trail category.

    The biggest update is the Matryx upper, which now includes a knit gaiter that wraps around the ankle and tongue. This detail keeps grit and pebbles out, a small but meaningful improvement for anyone who’s had to stop mid-run to shake out debris, although any integrated gaiter is a drawback for some users. The upper offers a snug and secure fit through the midfoot while leaving enough room for comfort on longer days. Some testers found it a touch less precise on highly technical terrain, but on its intended surface — smooth, rolling singletrack — it hits the mark.

    Traction comes from a Vibram Megagrip Litebase outsole with redesigned 4-millimeter lugs. The pattern provides confident grip on both wet and dry trails, with better braking on descents compared to earlier versions, yet never feels overly aggressive on firm ground.

    Over the long term, the Tecton X 3 feels fast, springy, and stable — an ideal combination for runners who want to push the pace without sacrificing comfort over long distances. It’s equally at home in race scenarios and long training runs, offering the durability to handle heavy mileage while still feeling like a true performance shoe. For smooth singletrack where speed is the goal, this is Hoka at its best.

    Our full review of the Hoka Tecton X 3 is on its way.

    Shop the Men’s Hoka Tecton X 3Shop the Women’s Hoka Tecton X 3

    Comparing the Best Lightweight Trail Running Shoes

    SHOE PRICE WEIGHT DROP
    The North Face Vectiv Sky 2 $200 8.4 ounces 6 millimeters
    Brooks Catamount Agil $180 8.0 ounces 6 millimeters
    Norda 005 $325 8.1 ounces 7 millimeters
    VJ Lightspeed $200 8.4 ounces 6 millimeters
    La Sportiva Prodigio Pro $225 9.4 ounces 6 millimeters
    Hoka Tecton X 3 $275 9.3 ounces 5 millimeters

     

    Ragna Debats - Transvulcania
    Ragna Debats racing the Transvulcania Ultramarathon. Photo: iRunFar/Meghan Hicks

    Why and How to Choose a Lightweight Trail Racing Shoe

    The shoes in this guide are best for shorter trail runs and races, such as vertical kilometers, half marathons, marathons, 50-kilometer races, and most skyrunning-style races where speed is more important than comfort. Stack height and heel-to-toe drop in lightweight shoes tend to be lower since ground feel is very important for moving fast over technical trails. The innovations that have poured over into trail running shoes from its cousins on the road — like super foams and carbon plates — can work in lightweight trail racing shoes, but there are fairly limited standouts to date.

    For some of these shoes, their relative lack of comfort and cushion limits them to particular course lengths and types of terrain. Know your shoe’s characteristics and the race course terrain, and choose accordingly. A shoe like the Brooks Catamount Agil would provide quite a beating if worn for distances longer than a marathon or 50k.

    Also, remember that these lightweight trail shoes aren’t just for races! For those of us whose daily run doesn’t often exceed 10 miles, you could log many or even most of your runs in these shoes. Even if you are not looking for the best trail racing shoes, consider the shoes in this guide perfect for daily training runs when you prefer faster-feeling shoes with a more streamlined design. For example, you would be hard pressed to find a more fun and faster shoe for virtually any run than the Norda 005, though its extremely high cost may have you from saving it just for race day. Testers found the Hoka Tecton X 3 comfortable enough for day-to-day running.

    If you’re looking for more information on trail running shoes that provide more comfort and are better suited to everyday running, check out our Best Trail Running Shoes guide. If you’re looking for even more comfort, take a look at our Best Cushioned Trail Running Shoes guide for shoes that will put plenty of bounce in your step.

    Weight

    How low should you go when choosing the best lightweight trail running shoes for your feet? All the shoes in this guide are 9.5 ounces or less, but their degrees of lightness vary greatly. If the average ultrarunning shoe is around 10 ounces, then the eight-ounce Brooks Catamount Agil will feel like an entirely different shoe class.

    While all the shoes in this guide are very light, they have different enough characteristics to make them feel significantly different. You might opt for a slightly heavier shoe, such as the La Sportiva Prodigio Pro, because of preferences for the midsole or the more aggressive outsole, or you might opt for the very lightest option because that’s what’s important to you.

    A weight limit is a good benchmark when selecting a lightweight trail racing shoe, but there are many more elements to consider, and we chose a good cross-section of shoes with multiple features besides being light.

    Some of the shoes in this guide are almost 50% lighter than normal trail running shoes. Does that make the best lightweight trail shoes minimalist? Not at all. These lightweight trail running shoes are indeed light, but that’s where the minimalist comparisons end. Many of these shoes are cushioned, grippy, durable, and robust. In fact, the Hoka Tecton X 3 and La Sportiva Prodigio Pro are fully maximal shoes at fairly minimal weights.

    Comfort

    Are any of these shoes actually comfortable? Unfortunately, many of this guide’s best lightweight trail running shoes will not win a “most comfortable” competition if you compare them to shoes made for going super long, whether in ultramarathons or all-day adventure runs.

    Most of these shoes are narrow and wide-footed runners, or those with bunions, may question which is least uncomfortable rather than choosing something particularly enjoyable to wear. The shoes here aren’t minimalist in the vein of barefoot trail running shoes, and many are actually very neutral in gait, but all are generally narrow and tough on runners with wide feet and feet prone to swelling during a long run. This is more of an issue regarding the upper and shape of these shoes rather than the midsole feel, the latter of which is fairly outstanding in all the shoes in this guide.

    All that being said, The North Face Vectiv Sky 2 is a reasonably comfortable shoe, especially for a lightweight one, and the La Sportiva Prodigio Pro has a wider and more comfortable fit than many other shoes from the brand.

    Durability

    While durability for short trail races and quick training isn’t as important as for a 100-mile race, it is still something to consider. All the shoes tested proved nearly as durable as their heavier counterparts.

    The real innovation here is that so many brands can merge cushy midsoles into lightweight shoes. To our delight, the shoes in this guide maintained the midsole ride as much as heavier shoes we’ve tested.

    In general, upper durability is not as important as the midsole and outsole when choosing the best lightweight trail running shoes, but it is still a factor. The uppers of these shoes are excellent, and we didn’t find any to wear excessively quickly. Still, because they are lightweight shoes, most of the uppers will wear out more quickly than your normal running shoes, save for the Dyneema upper on the Norda 005, as Dyneema is purportedly one of the most durable modern textiles for the weight. The updated upper of the Hoka Tecton X 3 is made of Matryx mesh and held up well on trails, and the VJ Lightspeed, even with its propensity for technical trail running and the inevitable damage that brings, has proven to be highly abrasion-resistant in rough terrain.

    Best Lightweight Trail Running Shoes - Andreu Blanes 2022 World Mountain Running Championships Up and Down race
    Andreu Blanes wears lightweight shoes during the 2022 World Mountain Running Championships Up and Down race. Photo: iRunFar/Meghan Hicks

    Outsole and Midsole Characteristics

    The type of trail race you’re running or the terrain you train on will likely influence the type of outsole and midsole you want.

    The outsole on the Hoka Tecton X 3 is fairly low profile, but the midsole stack height is too extreme to move with reliable stability over technical terrain. The North Face Vectiv Sky 2 has an aggressive lug pattern and is excellent for descending on all terrain, but the low stack and midsole may leave you hurting after a 1,000-foot descent.

    The solution is to choose a shoe with outsole and midsole characteristics that match the course you’re running. When selecting a shoe, pay attention to the midsole density, midsole stack height, lug pattern, and the type of outsole rubber compound.

    Why You Should Trust Us

    Don’t worry; despite creating this guide for the best lightweight trail running shoes that are more appropriate for sub-ultramarathon-distance racing, we haven’t changed our name to iRunShort! Even if we are named iRunFar, we have years of experience on trails and in races of every distance.

    Many runners can and will push these shoes beyond a marathon or 50-kilometer distance, but we wanted to test shoes that would be most inviting for short and steep trail running and mountain running. This is like wearing a pair of road shoes versus spikes at a track workout — different tools for different running.

    We zeroed in on lightweight shoes that are more well-rounded for all kinds of trail running, instead of some shoes made traditionally just for running in mud or fell running. We left these out mainly because they are a category unto themselves.

    To create this guide, we researched hundreds of shoes in the trail running space, narrowed our potential shoes to those weighing 9.5 ounces or less, and took a couple of dozen shoes into the field. We tested these shoes across the U.S.’s mountain west, primarily in Boulder and Silverton, Colorado, and Bend, Oregon.

    Please note that product models are routinely discontinued in the running world, while new ones frequently come to market. At the same time, we here at iRunFar often keep using our top picks in our daily running they’re our top picks, after all! Sometimes, that continued use results in uncovering product failures. With all this — product discontinuations, product introductions, and product failures — in mind, we routinely update our buyer’s guides based on past and ongoing testing and research by our authors and editorial team. While these updates can appear to be us pushing the newest product, it’s anything but that. Most products will likely remain the same when we update any buyer’s guide. That matches our goal: to get you in the best gear you’ll use for a long time.

    Speedland SL:PDX - running outside
    Craig Randall testing trail running shoes outside Boulder, Colorado. Photo: Christin Randall

    Call for Comments

    • What are your favorite lightweight trail shoes?
    • When do you pull out your lightweight trail shoes?

    Back to Our Top Lightweight Trail Running Shoes Picks

    Best Lightweight Trail Running Shoes of 2025 by Craig Randall.


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  • The Translagorai Classic: A Return to Old-School Mountain Running

    The Translagorai Classic: A Return to Old-School Mountain Running

    The post The Translagorai Classic: A Return to Old-School Mountain Running appeared first on iRunFar.

    [Editor’s Note: This Community Voices article was written by Translagorai Classic organizer and ultrarunner Filippo Caon and translated by Ulla Pers.]

    In 2020, Francesco Gentilucci aka Paco told the history of Nolan’s 14 — a story that was hardly known at the time in Italy — in a well-known Italian running blog. It was the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, and after writing the article and with no races to run, Paco realized that the time had come to organize something in Italy that would bring back that intimate and essential dimension to our sport that he felt Nolan’s 14 embodied. And so he thought up the Translagorai Classic, a challenge to complete an 80-kilometer route traversing the Lagorai mountain range in Trentino in northern Italy in under 24 hours.

    Translagorai Classic - startline runners
    Runners head out from the start line arch of the Translagorai Classic. All photos courtesy of Filippo Caon.

    Inspiration for the Translagorai Classic

    For those not familiar with Nolan’s 14 history, in 1998, Fred Vance asked his friend Jim Nolan how many of the Colorado Fourteeners — mountains taller than 14,000 feet — he thought could be strung together in 100 miles. Nolan said 14. In 1999, Vance, along with his friends Blake Wood and Gordon Hardman attempted the crossing. While none of them finished that August, the following year they succeeded in organizing a start that was limited to a few participants and that had very few and simple rules: no pacers allowed, travel route alternating each year, a final cutoff of 60 hours. This was an informal event devoid of permissions that was eventually abandoned, and the route became a premier mountain route test piece with many individual fastest known time (FKT) attempts.

    Translagorai Classic - out on trail
    Much of the Translagorai Classic doesn’t have a clearly defined trail.

    Similar to Nolan’s 14, the Translagorai Classic crosses the Lagorai mountain range from east to west, from Rolle Pass to Panarotta, with more than 5,000 meters of elevation. Paco, alongside Luca Forti, who had run it solo the year before, decided to organize a collective start open to all in July of 2020. Like for Nolan’s, the rules were also very few: You have to be independent; if you decide to give up halfway through the route, you have to find yourself a vehicle, hitchhike, or return to the starting point on foot. Basically, you have to figure it out for yourself. There’s no mandatory gear; pacers are allowed; the direction changes each year — in even years it is Rolle to Panarotta, in odd years it is Panarotta to Rolle; and if you run it in less than 24 hours, we will send you a sticker at home. Don’t see it as a personal feat — there’s no heroism here. No one cares what you do; they’re only interested in the attitude with which you do it.

    Translagorai Classic - award sticker
    Those who complete the Translagorai Classic in under 24 hours receive a sticker.

    Growth of the Translagorai Classic

    In 2020, nine people left from Passo Rolle. The following year, there were 45 people, and the year after that, there were 65. Paco set up a website which records all attempts — successful and not — that are carried out both during the collective departure dates and at any other time of the year. Because the crossing has always existed and is always there, you can just go and try it any given year. In 2022, management of the collective departure passed to the Trento Running Club, an informal group of friends with whom we have also started organizing trail work activities, which are required in order to be able to participate in the collective crossing.

    Today, the Translagorai Classic is a popular route with regular FKT attempts. The men’s record is held by Nadir Maguet, set when he covered the route in 9 hours 57 minutes in 2024. Noor van der Veen also set the women’s record of 18 hours 35 minutes in 2024. The crossing takes place over very technical terrain; people really don’t grasp how slow it is until they find themselves in the thick of it. Two-thirds of the crossing is made up of endless expanses of porphyry without a defined path, where, in addition to knowing how to move, you also need to know how to orient yourself. It’s not dangerous, it’s not extreme, it’s just slow and exhausting. Not only that, but it is very isolated.

    Translagorai Classic - rocky trail
    Much of the terrain on the Translagorai Classic is slow and rocky.

    Although the Lagorai is a mountain range surrounded by the Dolomites, which are among the most anthropized mountains in the world, the Langorai have mostly managed to remain off the main tourist tracks. Since the inception of Translagorai Classic in 2020, the popularity of the area has grown. As so often happens in cases like this, precisely because no one was ever talking about the Lagorai, suddenly everyone started talking about it. To avoid the crossing becoming yet another tourist spot, over the years, together with the Translagorai Classic Board, we have tried to introduce some natural skimming systems, based not so much on luck — like a lottery — but rather on merit.

    Translagorai Classic - cowbell at finish line
    Spectators and racers at the Translagorai Classic.

    We started requiring mandatory hours of trail work, inviting participants to return each year not only to run again, but also to provide assistance — to volunteer, or simply to help. In just a few years, we have created a family around the race, one made up of people with first names and surnames who we know and see again year after year. Not only that, in recent years, precisely to preserve the size of the crossing, we have tried to keep communications low-key, using only a Facebook page and choosing not to open an Instagram profile. We have refused sponsorship from running gear companies because this would have diluted the vibrant spirit of the event, one that belongs first and foremost to the actual people who fuel it year after year. For this very reason, the experience is not for sale. We have produced a photography book which is published in a very limited edition, rejecting some offers from a couple of publishing houses.

    People who have never participated in this event might think this is our way of appearing exclusive, but it’s not like that at all. It’s simply the only way to preserve a small event from the effects of the growth of the sport. For the rest, as I wrote above, the crossing is always there. If one wants to, one need only go try it.

    Different Styles in Running

    I’ve worked on an Italian podcast this last year called “Pionieri” that covers the history of trail running in Italy from the 1980s to today. To make it happen, I spoke with many people, including athletes, race organizers, old glories, psychologists, skyrunners, and ultrarunners — all of very different ages and walks of life. I’ve spoken to the first Italians to have run 100-mile races and with the first skyrunners to have recorded 4,000-meter ascent records in the Alps. Naturally, while speaking with all these people, many different opinions emerged, some diametrically opposed, as did very different ways of perceiving the sport. It was a complicated panorama, one full of contradictions and facets, within which everyone seems to find their own space, their own corner, their own niche to follow — in short, their own style.

    Translagorai Classic - runners
    Runners head through a refreshment point at the Translagorai Classic.

    I’ve always had a very clear idea of what I wanted from this sport, and perhaps even more so of what I did not want. I’ve also always had a very precise idea of how an event should be organised, of what was right and what was wrong. Over the years, I have run very different races: skyraces and cross country, half marathons and 100 miles in the desert. I have participated in very large, commercial races and in very small ones, and I have never felt uncomfortable or out of place. Whether I found myself standing in the middle of a crowd in Place du Triangle de l’Amitié in Chamonix at UTMB or on 6th Street at the start of the Leadville 100 Mile, I’ve always felt good and very much at home.

    And so, doing those interviews for the podcast, I happened to agree with everyone — with the organizer of the big international race and equally with the solitary mountaineer, with the skyrunner, and with the amateur ultramarathon runner. I have asked myself if this was because I lack a personal opinion. Those who know me know that I have my ideas and I declare them without hesitation. So, I have come to the conclusion that if I am fascinated by all these very different souls that populate our sport, it must be precisely because they can all coexist together.

    A Blank Canvas

    For me, Translagorai is probably the thing that comes closest to the very essence of our sport. It is simultaneously logical and aesthetic. It can be tackled in a group or alone, with assistance or in total autonomy. It can be taken on discovering it one bit at a time or preparing meticulously, piece by piece, and then running, holding your breath, as fast as you can.

    Translagorai Classic - finisher
    A crowd greets a finisher at the Translagorai Classic.

    I think each race has its own style in which it must be tackled. I would never want a pacer at UTMB because it doesn’t belong to its history. I would run the Western States 100 with only two bottles at hand and the Lavaredo Ultra Trail in total self-sufficiency because those are the characteristics with which those races were born.

    The Translagorai Classic is a blank canvas open to the style of each person who runs it. It is open to each runner’s free initiative, to their individual style. For this very reason, we only publish photos of the arrivals, departures, and from the only two refreshment points. We show nothing of what lies in between. Because to show it, to speak of it, and to tell of it would deprive it of that even slightly mysterious charm that makes it what it is. This is why we are particularly harsh when a company or a large media outlet tries to speak about it, because by talking about it and gaining from it, they would take away from the people who come the right to discover it for themselves, as we all have done. And this I find to be unforgivable.

    The Lagorai mountain range provides a special place to run
    The Lagorai mountain range provides a special place to run.

    Translagorai Classic is a straight and logical line. And it’s beautiful, it’s really beautiful.

    Throughout my life, I’ve run several races that I could well consider to be a race par excellence. But at the end of the day, every year we find ourselves back in that same parking lot with one wooden arch, some friends, and a beer, doing something that feels very subversive — running a mountain crossing in 24 hours. Ultrarunning is many things, but for me, it all begins and ends right here.

    Call for Comments

    • Have you had a chance to participate in the Translagorai Classic or run in the Langorai mountain range?
    • What styles of events, routes, or running appeal to you?

    The Translagorai Classic: A Return to Old-School Mountain Running by Guest Writer.


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  • This Week In Running: October 20, 2025

    This Week In Running: October 20, 2025

    The post This Week In Running: October 20, 2025 appeared first on iRunFar.

    This Week in Running Justin Mock TWIRWorld championships, world records, and racing all over the world. There’s a lot to talk about!

    You can also check out our race coverage from earlier in the weekend:

    IAU 24-Hour World Championships – Albi, France

    The world’s best raced all day on a 1.5-kilometer (0.93 miles) loop. It was the 15th edition of the race and the first IAU 24-Hour World Championships since 2023.

    Men’s Race

    After a well-paced start that put him behind numerous competitors, Andrii Tkachuk (Ukraine) gained the lead some seven hours into the race and added to his advantage the rest of the way. Tkachuk totaled 294.3k (182.8 miles), nearly nine kilometers better than his closest chaser. He was third at the 2023 championships.

    On wildly different terrain, Tkachuk was 121st at the Trail World Championships Long Trail race just three weeks ago.

    Late passes pushed Jo Inge Norum (Norway) and Matti Jonkka (Finland) into the silver- and bronze-medal positions with 285.5k (177.4 miles) and 283.6k (176.2 miles), respectively.

    Matt Urbanski was the top U.S. finisher in 19th with 255.0k (158.4 miles).

    World-record holder Aleksandr Sorokin (Lithuania) did not start the race. His world record from 2022 stands at 319.6k (198.5 miles).

    Finland won the team race, with France and Poland second and third.

    Andrii Tkachuk - 2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships - men's champion
    Ukraine’s Andrii Tkachuk, 2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships men’s winner. Photo: iRunFar/Deki Fourcin

    Men’s Top 10

    1. Andrii Tkachuk (Ukraine) – 294.346k (182.898 miles)
    2. Jo Inge Norum (Norway) – 285.513k (177.409 miles)
    3. Matti Jonkka (Finland) – 283.699k (176.282 miles)
    4. Támas Bódis (Hungary) – 279.780k (173.847 miles)
    5. Emil Krog Ingerslev (Denmark) – 278.132k (172.823 miles)
    6. Andrzej Piotrowski (Poland) – 274.313k (170.450 miles)
    7. Radek Brunner (Czech Republic) – 271.182k (168.504 miles)
    8. Tomi Ronkainen (Finland) – 269.788k (167.638 miles)
    9. Diego Filiu (France) – 266.554k (165.628 miles)
    10. Geeno Antony (India) – 265.198k (164.786 miles)

    Women’s Race

    Only after nine hours did Sarah Webster (Great Britain) get into the top five, and only after 17 hours did she take the go-ahead lead. Webster went on to win with 278.6k (173.1 miles), and it was a new world record, surpassing the 2023 record by Japan’s Miho Nakata. Webster smashed Nakata’s old mark by over 8k (5 miles). She finished fifth overall, too.

    It really did take a world record to win the race. Webster led Holly Ranson (Australia) in second and Nakata herself in third, past Nakata’s old mark, too.

    Ranson was second with 274.1k (170.3 miles), and Nakata, the 2023 world champion and then-world-record holder, was third with 271.9k (169.0 miles).

    Marisa Lizak was the top American in seventh place with 247.1k (153.5 miles)

    Great Britain won the team competition ahead of Australia and Japan.

    Sarah Webster - 2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships - women's champion
    Sarah Webster of Great Britain setting a new world record at the 2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships. Photo: iRunFar/Deki Fourcin

    Women’s Top 10

    1. Sarah Webster (Great Britain) – 278.622k (173.127 miles)
    2. Holly Ranson (Australia) – 274.172k (170.362 miles)
    3. Miho Nakata (Japan) – 271.987k (169.004 miles)
    4. Kelsey Price (Great Britain) – 257.129k (159.772 miles)
    5. Patrycja Bereznowska (Poland) – 251.371k (156.194 miles)
    6. Carmen Maria Pérez (Spain) – 249.480k (155.019 miles)
    7. Marisa Lizak (U.S.) – 247.190k (153.596 miles)
    8. Corrine Gruffaz (France) – 245.359k (152.459 miles)
    9. Ida Slorafoss (Norway) – 241.467k (150.040 miles)
    10. Katarzyna Chojnacka (Poland) – 238.305k (148.075 miles)

    Full results.

    Diagonale des Fous – Réunion Island, France

    The 165-kilometer (102 miles) island traverse is one of the world’s classic and most difficult 100 milers. The course gained roughly 10,000 meters (32,800 feet) on mostly technical trails.

    Men

    French men took the first four finish spots, and Baptiste Chassagne took the win while working on short recovery. Chassagne won here in 23:31, and he led the entire race. Just three weeks ago, Chassagne was 11th at the Trail World Championships Long Trail race in Spain.

    Yannick Noël was second in 24:27, 2023 race winner Aurélien Dunand-Pallaz was third in 25:13, and Ludovic Pommeret was fourth in 25:30. It was Pommeret’s third big 100 miler of the year. He won the Hardrock 100 and was sixth at UTMB, all within the last three months.

    Baptiste Chassagne 2025 Diagonale des Fous - men's winner
    Baptiste Chassagne, the 2025 Diagonale des Fous men’s winner. Photo courtesy of the race.

    Women

    The women’s race wasn’t even close, and Blandine L’Hirondel (France) won by five hours with a time of 27:26.

    Marianne Hogan (Canada) chased but dropped 124k into the race while still in second place, and then there was no one close to L’Hirondel, whose time was five minutes better than Katie Schide’s winning time from the 2023 race.

    L’Hirondel was doubling back from a fourth-place run at August’s CCC race.

    Second- and third-place Manon Campano (France) and Anne Champagne (Canada) finished in 32:33 and 33:01, respectively.

    Full results.

    Blandine L'hirondel - 2025 Diagonale des Fous - women's winner
    Blandine L’hirondel, the 2025 Diagonale des Fous women’s winner. Photo courtesy of the race.

    Les Templiers – Millau, France

    Endurance Trail

    The long course 100k contest had Rémy Brassac (France) and Agathe Bes (France) in first at 9:37 and 11:13. There were nearly 1,300 finishers in this one.

    Grand Trail des Templiers

    There’s a lot of race distances at this event, but the 80k (50 miles) race stands as the premier race, and nearly 2,700 runners lined up at the start.

    The top five men all finished under seven hours, and Pierre Livache (France) scored a 40-second win over Juho Ylinen (Finland) for the win. Livache and Ylinen ran 6:45 and 6:46, and third-place Antoine Thiriat (France) was only minutes behind in third at 6:49.

    Caitlin Fielder (New Zealand) kept the host country from a sweep at the marquee distance. Fielder ran 7:53 to win the women’s race, six minutes better than second-place Marie Goncalves (France), who finished in 7:59. Adeline Martin (France) was further back in third at 8:11. Fielder won last year’s race in 7:42.

    Pierre Livache - 2025 Les Templiers 80k - men's winner
    Pierre Livache, the 2025 Grand Trail des Templiers men’s winner. Photo: Cyrille Quintard
    Caitlin Fielder - 2025 Les Templiers 80k - women's winner
    Caitlin Fielder, the 2025 Grand Trail des Templiers women’s winner. Photo: Guillaume Salem

    Boffi Fifty

    Clément Lalba (France) and Jessica Brazeau (U.S.) won the 47k race in 4:05 and 4:57, respectively.

    Marathon des Causses

    Ninth at the recent Trail World Championships Short Trail contest, Sylvain Cachard (France) came back to win the 34k race here in 2:35. Women’s winner Julie Lelong (France) did it in 3:06.

    Full results.

    Défi des Couleurs – Beaupré, Quebec, Canada

    The three-day event hosted the Canadian Mountain Running Championships for Vertical and Up and Down disciplines.

    MSA Vertical

    Saturday’s race went up 760 meters over 5k in distance. Meikael Beaudoin-Rousseau (U.S.) got to the top first in 28:06, and Canada’s Remi Leroux and Alexandre Ricard were second and third in 28:25 and 29:20.

    Canadians made up the top three women. Tenth at the World Mountain Running Championships Up and Down race three weekends ago, Élisa Morin won the women’s climb in 33:55. Catherine Cormier and Courtney Brohart were next to the top in 34:36 and 35:49.

    MSA Up and Down

    The next day 10.5k race ran up-down, up-down with two high points and 960 meters of elevation gain.

    Remi Leroux doubled back and won the race in 51:25, over two minutes better than David Sinclair (U.S.) and his 53:33 run. Sinclair was fourth in the Vertical race. Alexandre Ricard was third for the second straight day, finishing in 56:02.

    Canadian women again swept the podium. Élisa Morin scored victory again with a 64:07 run. Claudine Soucie and Courtney Brohart were second and third in 66:58 and 68:28. Brohart was also third for the second straight day.

    Full results.

    Big Dog’s Backyard World Championships – Bell Buckle, Tennessee

    They’ll be going for a while on the 4.16-mile loop. This year’s event was the individual world championships for the backyard discipline, and 75 runners from 40 different countries were expected at the start on Saturday morning local time.

    Backyard world-record holders Phil Gore (Australia) and Megan Eckert (U.S.) are still racing as of this article’s writing on Sunday evening, and so are former record holders Merijn Geerts (Belgium), Ivo Steyaert (Belgium), and Harvey Lewis (U.S.).

    Former world record-holder Łukasz Wróbel (Poland) missed the time cutoff after 17 hours, and Sam Harvey (New Zealand) is out too after 24 hours.

    Full results.

    Additional Races and Runs

    Fully Vertical Kilometer – Fully, Switzerland

    Just weeks after winning the World Mountain Running Championships Uphill race, Rémi Bonnet (Switzerland) scored a new vertical kilometer world record. Bonnet climbed 1,000 meters in 1.92 kilometers in 27:21. The climb averages 52% grade, so steep that helmets are required. Bonnet climbed with poles. Philip Götsch (Italy) set the previous world record at 28:53 on this same course in 2017. Axelle Mollaret (France) won the women’s race in 32:52, and that too was a new world record. Incredibly, Mollaret has now bested the women’s world record three times in the last couple months. Full results.

    Mount Kinabalu International Climbathon – Malaysia

    Both course records fell in the race’s 32nd year. The mountain run went for 26k with just over 2,500 meters of elevation, and it was part of the Skyrunner World Series. Italy swept the men’s podium with Gianluca GhianoWilliam Boffeli, and Luca Del Pero going one-two-three in 3:05, 3:06, and 3:15. Ghiano was 32 seconds better than Boffeli. The women’s race wasn’t nearly as close. Anastasia Rubtsova (Russia) crushed everyone else with a 3:46 winning time. Ainara Alcuaz (Spain) and Lina El Kott (Sweden) were second and third in 4:12 and 4:27. Full results.

    Gianluca Ghiano - Mount Kinabalu Climbathlon - men's winner
    Gianluca Ghiano, the 2025 Mount Kinabalu Climbathlon men’s winner. Photo: Skyrunner World Series
    Anastasia Rubtsova - Mount Kinabalu Climbathlon - women's winner
    Anastasia Rubtsova, the 2025 Mount Kinabalu Climbathlon women’s winner. Photo: Skyrunner World Series

    Ultra-Trail Ninghai – Ningbo, Zhejiang, China

    The event dates back to 2013 in mountainous eastern China and is held, in part, on a historic hiking trail running through mountains and bamboo forests. The long course went 64 miles and had over 16,000 feet of climbing. Ionel Manole (Romania, living in Spain) gained the lead near mile 30 and won in 10:37. He was the only non-Chinese man inside the top 10. Manole was fifth here a year ago also in 10:37. Ling-Jie Chi (China) scored an upset win over Fu-Zhao Xiang (China) in the women’s race. The two ran 11:34 and 11:48. The top 10 in the men’s 36-mile race was entirely Chinese, with Er-Qing Wu winning in 5:01. Ruth Croft (New Zealand) scored a women’s win over Hậu Hà (Vietnam) with 5:51 and 5:58 finishes. Full results.

    Cappadocia Ultra-Trail – Cappadocia, Türkiye

    Christian Meier (Canada) and Anastasiia Shpak (Russia) won the 63k race in 5:21 and 5:53. Full results.

    Trail de Bourbon – Réunion Island, France

    Held as part of the Grand Raid Réunion event alongside Diagonale des Fous, Jean-Charles Breton (France) and Clémentine Geoffray (France) won the 103k race in 13:38 and 15:23. Geoffray was sixth at the recent Trail World Championships Short Trail race. Full results.

    Rogue Gorge – Union Creek, Oregon

    The first-year point-to-point 50 miler had Edward Murphy and Pollee Brookings on top in 6:58 and 7:50. Matthew Guarino and Hana Morris won the 50k in 4:03 and 4:51. Full results.

    California Fall Classic – Healdsburg, California

    Kris Brown took the lead near mile 48 and there was no stopping him after that. Brown won the 100k race in 10:04, and women’s champ Dia Davis ran 11:47 for an hour-plus lead on second place. Jacob Banta and Joelle Vaught won the accompanying 55k race in 4:21 and 5:17. Full results.

    2025 2025 California Fall Classic 100k - mens podium
    The 2025 California Fall Classic 100k men’s podium (left to right): 2. Nick Reshetnikov, 1. Kris Brown, 3. Chris Wu. Photo: John Medinger
    Dia Davis - 2025 California Fall Classic 100k - women's winner
    Dia Davis, the 2025 California Fall Classic 100k women’s winner. Photo: John Medinger

    Blue Sky Trail Marathon – Fort Collins, Colorado

    Mitch Klomp and Dara Procell won in 3:14 and 4:05. Full results.

    NCAA Division I Pre-National Invitational – Columbia, Missouri

    Mountain runner Lukas Ehrle (Germany) ran 23:56 for 8k and 34th place. Ehrle competes for Ole Miss. Full results.

    Ghost Train 100 Mile – Brookline, New Hampshire

    Dirk Walther won the men’s race in 16:43, and Jennifer Kenty was the women’s champion in 18:17. Full results when available.

    Dirk Walther - 2025 Ghost Train 100 Mile - men's winner
    Dirk Walther (left), the 2025 Ghost Train 100 Mile men’s winner. Photo courtesy of the race.
    Jennifer Kenty - 2025 Ghost Train 100 Mile - women's winner
    Jennifer Kenty (right), the 2025 Ghost Train 100 Mile women’s winner. Photo courtesy of the race.

    Tecumseh 50k – Nashville, Indiana

    Men’s winner Joshua Horton ran 4:50, but Rachel Schack was the overall winner in 4:43. Full results.

    Pony Express Trail Run – West of Faust, Utah

    Andrea White won the 100 miler overall with a women’s course record time of 17:00. Daniel Woodbury won the men’s race in 20:54:05. In the 50 miler, Stephen Glod won the men’s race in 7:10:01. Davis Merrill was the women’s champion in 8:17:08. Full results when available.

    Stephen Glod - 2025 Pony Express Trail 50 Mile - men's winner_
    Stephen Glod, the 2025 Pony Express Trail 50 Mile men’s winner. Photo courtesy of the race.
    Davis Merrill - 2025 Pony Express Trail 50 Mile - women's winner
    Davis Merrill, the 2025 Pony Express Trail 50 Mile women’s winner. Photo courtesy of the race.

    Cranmore Mountain Race – North Conway, New Hampshire

    The race went 6.2 miles over two laps, and winners Lars Hogne and Kasie Enman did it in 43:09 and 47:33. Full results.

    Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence 3,100 Mile Race – Queens, New York

    The world’s longest road race started way back on August 30 on a 0.55-mile loop. Andrea Marcato (Italy) won the men’s race for the sixth straight year in 46 days, 16 hours, 19 minutes. Daniela Bojila (Italy) leads the women’s race and is expected to finish on the afternoon of October 20. Full results.

    Uwharrie 100 Mile – Mt. Gilead, North Carolina

    The race was held on a 20.5-mile multi-lap course. Chris Mershon and Tami Sari won in 22:21 and 31:43. Full results.

    Chris Mershon, the 2025 Uwharrie 100 Mile men's winner.
    Chris Mershon (center), the 2025 Uwharrie 100 Mile men’s winner. Photo courtesy of the race.
    Tami Sari - 2025 Uwharrie 100 Mile - women's winner
    Tami Sari, the 2025 Uwharrie 100 Mile women’s winner. Photo courtesy of the race.

    The Itch 50k – Ocala, Florida

    Yianni Babiolakis and Rebecca Connor did it the fastest in 5:02 and 5:21. Full results.

    Call for Comments

    I keep thinking that the world-class racing is going to quiet down, but there’s still a lot happening every week. What did you like from this past weekend, and what else can you add to this week’s excitement?

    This Week In Running: October 20, 2025 by Justin Mock.


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    → Aiper

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  • Science Is Not the Death of Art

    Science Is Not the Death of Art

    The post Science Is Not the Death of Art appeared first on iRunFar.

    Earlier this year, I stumbled upon an August 29 Instagram post by Sean Einhaus called “Optimized to Death.” A professional golfer and mental performance coach, he was pondering the loss of artistry in sports where science, training, and metrics were becoming more and more important. He worried that in the face of too much data, too much structure, sports could lose their soul.

    Zach Miller 2025 Trail World Championships Long Trail
    Zach Miller running with heart at the 2025 Trail World Championships Long Trail. Photo: iRunFar/Eszter Horanyi

    Sean seems an interesting guy: born in Germany, half Nepali, a professional golfer, a yogi, a man of both eastern and western ways of thought. This piece isn’t about Sean, though, yet perhaps a bit of context about his background is interesting, as this article is about the ideas in his post.

    And yes, it’s the internet, a space that has unfortunately become very hard to trust. Is Sean for real? Is he a man to be trusted, or is he just waxing poetic, fishing for dollars and clicks? That, I cannot tell you. What I can tell you is this: His words struck me. They hit a chord, and perhaps they hold some truths. I hope they are real. I know the feelings and thoughts they provoked in me are real.

    I recommend you go read his words in full, but I’ll share some of the post here:

    “Athletes aren’t fun anymore

    Everyone’s just
    Uptight. Dead serious.

    Trying to optimize every bit of their existence. Perfect recovery on Whoop. Crunching numbers like accountants. Turning practice into a science project. A team of 12 coaches dissecting every move like surgery. 3-D body scans, radar guns, and slow-mo cameras measuring the soul out of the game.

    Where’s the artistry?
    Where are the instincts.

    The game used to be a canvas.
    Now it’s a spreadsheet.

    It used to be about intuition, feel, and deep trust. Now it’s analysis, metrics, and performance models.

    The most important attributes can’t be measured:
    Passion. Joy. Hunger.
    Creativity. Presence. Flow.”

    Zach Miller Night shot
    Embracing the unmeasurable. Photo: Zach Miller

    Freedom of Trail Running

    For me, these words weren’t a single to first. They hit all the way home. The romantic in me sees eye to eye with Sean’s ideas. It grows leery of our obsession with stats. Stats are fun. They feel like points in a game of pinball. When used in the right way, they’re beneficial.

    I suppose what really concerns me is the soulless practice of sport that Sean depicts. That’s not a place I desire to be. Unfortunately, it’s an easy place to end up.

    My thoughts drift to high school and college, years filled with paved miles and left turns. As great as those years can be, I spent enough time in that space to know that they can also be quite challenging. In the world of track and cross country, it’s easy to become obsessed. Constantly chasing qualifying standards, PRs, and wins, college can quickly become the hunt for an ever-moving target. Goals are achieved, then replaced by new ones. The more you accomplish, the faster the hamster wheel spins. It’s no wonder so many people burn out.

    Leaving college, trail running was a breath of fresh air. It was still running, but in a different context. I couldn’t analyze things quite the same, and that was freeing. I like to think that I enjoyed more and judged less.

    Zach Miller - 2025 Hardrock 100 - Maggie Gulch
    Zach Miller descending into Maggie Gulch during the early stages of the 2025 Hardrock 100. Photo: iRunFar/Bryon Powell

    Fast forward to today, and it’s quite obvious that trail running is getting more and more dialed and scientific. We have coaches dishing out training plans, dietitians explaining what to consume and when, strength coaches, mobility routines, sleep aids, heat training chambers, and gadgets galore tracking all of the metrics, and then some. I’m sure there are still people going about it the old-fashioned way, doing workouts on feel at the click of an old Timex watch, but more and more, this seems to be the minority.

    Such trends raise some important questions: Are we taking the wildness out of the trail? Are we killing the sport by dialing it in? Are the dietitians, coaches, sports psychologists, apps, and gadgets robbing the sport of its soul? Are we making science instead of art?

    Zach Miller hugging Coach Bradley 2023 UTMB - feature photo
    Zach Miller and his coach share a moment at the finish line of the 2023 UTMB. Photo: Luke Webster

    In some cases, maybe, but I don’t think it’s a universal truth. The presence of these things does not necessarily drive a stake through the soul of the sport. Science is not the death of art. The death of art is a lack of expression. Science, running, and many other things in life can be dialed in, yet expressive. In other words, they can be art. Not because of what they are, but because of how they are done.

    So, as the sport of trail running continues to grow, let’s not forget to proceed with passion. We can hire the coaches, use the gadgets, and science the heck out of the training plans if we choose. There’s nothing wrong with that. Let’s just ensure that we do these things with heart, preferably a big one.

    Call for Comments

    • Do you worry that science is taking the soul out of trail running and ultrarunning?
    • What steps do you take to keep metrics from overtaking your running and life?

    Science Is Not the Death of Art by Zach Miller.


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    → Contabo

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  • “Crewing:” A Film About Showing Up For Each Other

    “Crewing:” A Film About Showing Up For Each Other

    The post “Crewing:” A Film About Showing Up For Each Other appeared first on iRunFar.

    From the outside, it may seem like ultrarunning is an individual sport, but anyone who has ever had someone crew them at a race — or has been part of a crew — knows it is actually a team sport.

    “Crewing” is a new film following professional runners and partners Martina Valmassoi and Dakota Jones as they swap roles between racing and then crewing for each other this past summer. It highlights just how important crews can be and offers sage advice for being a good crew member. The added fun of this film comes from the fact that Valmassoi and Jones are lighthearted, fun, and clearly able to enjoy their racing and their time with each other.

    [Editor’s Note: Click here to watch the film on YouTube.]

    Both sponsored runners who live together in the Dolomites of Italy, the pair shares insights into what it is like to crew and support each other, first as Valmassoi tackles the Lavaredo Ultra Trail, her hometown race, as Jones crews, and then as Jones runs the Val d’Aran 100k in the Pyrenees, as Valmassoi crews. As the two race and crew, the film walks us through eight “golden rules” of crewing, including those that anyone who has crewed can well relate to, like “survive the wait.” The cinematography keeps it personal and real while capturing the often hectic nature of crewing at big races.

    Jones, originally from the U.S., is no stranger to ultrarunning and broke onto the scene at the very young age of 17.  Throughout the film, he offers words of wisdom on how to manage your mood when things go sideways in a race — both as a racer and crew member. He’s more than happy to talk about how running mirrors life.

    Crewing film - Dakota Jones Martina Valmassoi - planning
    Dakota Jones and Martina Valmassoi plan their crewing strategy ahead of the races. All photos are screenshots from the film “Crewing.”

    Meanwhile, Valmassoi, originally from Pieve di Cadore, Italy, and an accomplished runner and ski mountaineer, gets playfully exasperated when he’s not listening to her. The interactions between Jones and Valmassoi are endearing and familiar. The two never seem to take themselves or life too seriously. Their vibe is refreshing, and they feel approachable and grounded. Maybe as the biggest lesson they can teach through this film, they tackle their less-than-ideal races with grace and stoicism.

    Much of the humor arrives in the preparation. As all good crew and runner combos do, they review their gear and plans for the race ahead. “My goal is 80, 90 grams of carbs an hour without shitting my pants,” states Valmassoi. Jones doesn’t bat an eyelash. This moment bridges the gap between the elite and average ultrarunner. Aren’t we all just out there trying not to soil our pants?

    Similarly, you can see the excitement and nerves in Jones’ eyes as Valmassoi heads off into the night at the start of the race. When Valmassoi’s race doesn’t go as planned, they move on, following another one of their golden rules: “respect red flags.”

    Crewing film - Dakota Jones Martina Valmassoi - planning
    Talking through the plan before Valmassoi heads out on the Lavaredo Ultra Trail.

    When it’s Jones’ turn to race, he says, “I think racing is just trusting in yourself, no matter what you are doing, whether you are racing well or poorly.” While neither of their races goes as hoped, the quirky and candid moments between the pair and their perspective and silliness provide the example of what it means to show up — or in this case, to crew — for your people.

    Their final golden rule might be the most important of all: “celebrate together.”

    Crewing film - Dakota Jones Martina Valmassoi - getting pizza
    Valmassoi celebrates getting pizza between races.

    Call for Comments

    • Do you have a favorite crewing experience?
    • Do you swap crewing and racing duties with your friends?

    “Crewing:” A Film About Showing Up For Each Other by Maggie Guterl.


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  • Compassion Over Competition at the 2025 Speedgoat 50k

    Compassion Over Competition at the 2025 Speedgoat 50k

    The post Compassion Over Competition at the 2025 Speedgoat 50k appeared first on iRunFar.

    It’s an ask made on the start line of many trail races: If you see someone in trouble, stop to help.

    This year, on the rugged backcountry trails of the 2025 Speedgoat 50k, a group of racers showed that caring for each other came before race results when they happened upon another runner lying motionless on the ground. It’s a nightmare scenario no one wishes to encounter — on or off a race course — but in this case, everyone involved quickly realized that their own races were now of secondary importance and helping the fallen runner was their top priority. One of the runners, Majell Backhausen, applied his wilderness first aid training to check for responsiveness and assess the runner’s possible injuries. After a few long seconds, the injured runner, Scott Klingonsmith, responded by lightly squeezing Backhausen’s hand. While others ran ahead to the next aid station to get help, Backhausen stayed with Klingonsmith, sacrificing any race goals for the day.

    While his evacuation was slow, Klingonsmith was eventually able to walk out, assisted by the race’s medical crew. The stories from that day provide hope that when things get serious, people are more than willing to put their personal goals aside in order to help others.

    Majell Backhausen striking a pose
    Majell Backhausen, a man of the mountains, used his wilderness first aid training to help a hurt runner, sacrificing his own race ambitions at the 2025 Speedgoat 50k. Photo courtesy of Majell Backhausen.

    A Fall on the Speedgoat 50k Trails

    The Speedgoat 50k takes place in Utah’s Wasatch Mountains in late July. Over two days, the event hosts three races that start and finish at Snowbird in Little Cottonwood Canyon, approximately 30 miles from downtown Salt Lake City. Sunday’s 50k premier event, which was started in 2008 by ultrarunning legend Karl Meltzer, is known for its more than 11,000 feet of vertical gain over 31 miles and is advertised as the toughest 50k in the U.S.

    About 14 miles into the race, Backhausen was descending from Hidden Peak on a rock-strewn trail. “The race was feeling tough on the first climb, but that’s Speedgoat, I guess, and I had found some more rhythm descending a very technical section of the course in its first major downhill,” recalls Backhausen. “Myself and a number of other runners were in close proximity descending this section, and the next moment, we just saw Scott lying on the ground, motionless.”

    Majell Backhausen Scott Klingonsmith - 2025 Speedgoat 50k - on ground
    Scott Klingonsmith wrapped in an emergency blanket while Majell Backhausen (orange shirt) manages the situation. Photo courtesy of Scott Klingonsmith.

    Backhausen said the group stopped to check on the unconscious runner, and to his relief, Klingonsmith stirred after a few moments. “The second big relief came when he slowly pressed pause on his watch,” Backhausen shared. “Like a true racer.”

    Both Backhausen and Klingonsmith are competitive athletes and experienced trail runners. Backhausen is an athlete for the Australia/New Zealand The North Face team and has been trail running and ultrarunning since 2012. He’s completed several 100 milers and notable races such as UTMB, the World Mountain and Trail Running Championships, Marathon des Sables, and the Skyrunning World Championships. Klingonsmith is 20 years old and started running four years ago as a high school cross-country and track athlete and had goals of finishing in the top 10 at Speedgoat. “Before my fall, I was doing well,” said Klingonsmith. “My fueling plan was going perfectly, and I was in a good place as we were about halfway into the race. I was excited to see what my body could rally in the second half of the race.”

    The Fall, Rescue, and Priorities

    Klingonsmith recalls running downhill fast, trying to make up ground on the runners ahead of him, when he fell: “I was in a good rhythm until my toe snagged on a rock and I fell hard on a rocky part of the trail. My knees took 90% of the weight of my fall as I landed on some sharp rocks I remember falling and closing my eyes after I came to a stop. I was lying down in the middle of the trail. From that point, I don’t remember much except that I started to gain consciousness when Majell came down the trail and had me squeeze his finger. I remember he kept feeding me the Precision gel I was carrying, as well as some of my liquid carbs.”

    Unfortunately, the competition came to a halt for both athletes, although Backhausen did eventually go on to finish the race. “As the seconds ticked by and [Scott’s] movement and awareness were slow but evident, it occurred to me that any sort of racing was well and truly finished for the day,” said Backhausen. “I think it was tough for us both to accept, but ultimately, I had to believe the words I told Scott, which were: ‘This is a blip on the radar of life, man; there will be many more opportunities to race and don’t sweat it. There are bigger things in life.’” For the next 40 minutes, Backhausen stayed with Klingonsmith as he slowly recovered and waited for medical attention.

    Majell Backhausen Scott Klingonsmith - 2025 Speedgoat 50k - walking out
    Scott Klingonsmith was eventually able to walk out with assistance from the race medical crew. Photo courtesy of Scott Klingonsmith.

    Meanwhile, about a mile and a half down the trail at the American Fork Canyon aid station, Ryan Cooper, part of the event’s operations team with medical training, started organizing a rescue as soon as he received reports of an injured runner. Cooper shared, “It’s a remote area between Snowbird and Midway, and takes two to three hours to get there on a gnarly, boulder-ridden 4×4 road.” He noted, “It’s not a good place to get hurt.”

    As Cooper was making his way up the trail with medical supplies, Backhausen and Klingonsmith, wrapped in an emergency blanket and with lacerations on his hands and legs, were slowly walking down. Cooper noted that he showed some signs of shock, but he was coherent and able to walk and talk. The group got Klingonsmith to the aid station, where he rested and hydrated while Cooper cleaned and bandaged his cuts. “He said he was able to hike out,” said Cooper, and Klingonsmith made it to the medical tent at the finish line by the time Backhausen ran the second half of the course and finished the race.

    The Selflessness of Trail Runners

    Since the incident, Klingonsmith has almost fully recovered. “I had a deep puncture wound on my left knee that required stitches, my right knee was swollen to the size of a grapefruit, but luckily had no internal fracture, my finger was broken, and my hands had a lot of cuts and scrapes,” Klingonsmith shared. Fortunately, he did not sustain a head injury. “Perhaps I had the wind knocked out of me,” he said. He is now running again — mostly pain-free — and he recently returned to racing by taking third at the 2025 Big Cottonwood Classic, a local race.

    Backhausen went on to compete at the 2025 TDS in August, part of the UTMB Mont Blanc festival.

    Majell Backhausen Scott Klingonsmith - 2025 Speedgoat 50k - together in medical tent after
    Majell Backhausen and Scott Klingonsmith reunite in the medical tent at the end of the 2025 Speedgoat 50k. Photo courtesy of Scott Klingonsmith.

    The two runners have kept in touch over social media. “We both got a new Instagram follower out of it, so I guess that is huge success in this sport,” said Backhausen with a laugh. “I’ll be watching his profile for the next race celebration.”

    Klingonsmith shared, “I have learned so many lessons from my experience at Speedgoat. The main one being that there are good people out there who are willing to stop what they’re doing and prioritize someone in need over themselves. I’ve learned that the trail running community has some of the most selfless people I’ve ever met. Every runner who ran down that trail as I was lying down in pain was willing to stop and help. Training months and months for a race only to throw it out the window to help a random person who fell, that’s a true act of selflessness and kindness. I experienced an immense amount of gratitude that day, for everyone who was involved.”

    Call for Comments

    • Have you ever encountered an injured runner on the trail who needed help or been in a situation where you needed assistance on the trail?

    Compassion Over Competition at the 2025 Speedgoat 50k by Alli Miles.


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  • 2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships Preview

    2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships Preview

    The post 2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships Preview appeared first on iRunFar.

    Fixed-time ultrarunning fans, get ready! The 2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships take place on Saturday, October 18, in Albi, France.

    The race starts at 10 a.m. local time and follows a 1.5-kilometer (0.93 miles) course looping in and around the Albi stadium. The Albi venue in southwest France is no stranger to hosting championships, having held the 2016 IAU 24-Hour European Championships and the 2019 IAU 24-Hour World Championships.

    With both 2023 champions — Aleksandr Sorokin (Lithuania) and Miho Nakata (Japan), who are also the world record holders — returning, the 15th edition of the generally biennial world championships promises a strong field in both the men’s and women’s races. And as long as weather conditions are favorable, the world records will likely be challenged.

    The current world records for the 24-hour distance are held by Sorokin, who ran 319.614k (198.599 miles) at the 2022 IAU 24-Hour European Championships in Italy, and Miho Nakata (Japan), who ran 270.363k (167.996 miles) at the last edition of this event in 2023.

    In this article, we take a quick look at the history of this world championships and a deeper look at who we expect to be at the front of the women’s and men’s races. A full entrants list is also available.

    Miho Nakata - 24 hour world record - 2023 IAU 24-Hour World Championships 2
    Japan’s Miho Nakata working hard during the final hour of her world-record-setting effort at the 2023 IAU 24-Hour World Championships, held in Taipei on December 1 and 2. Photo: International Association of Ultrarunners

    IAU 24-Hour World Championships History

    The inaugural IAU 24-Hour World Track Championships were first staged by the International Association of Ultrarunners (IAU) in 2001. The fact that it was held on a track limited the entries to 54 competitors. Two years later, the first IAU 24-Hour World Championships on a road loop took place, and 141 athletes participated. It was held in conjunction with the IAU 24-Hour European Championships. This 2025 edition has a record 397 entries, with 222 men and 175 women on the start lists from 47 national federations. This is way up from the last edition in 2023, where 245 entrants raced, with 138 men and 107 women.

    Although recent rankings always play a part in predicting leading contenders, the outcomes of these fixed-time world championships can be difficult to predict, as athletes may have run a qualifying distance as far back as 12 to 18 months, or more. So, although past performances and qualifications can be a guide, they do not always indicate an athlete’s current form.

    As with all IAU events, there are both individual and team events. The team result is calculated by adding the cumulative distances of a nation’s top three runners, with the highest cumulative distance winning. In 2023, Lithuania won the men’s event, with Poland and Great Britain placing second and third. Poland won the 2023 women’s team event, followed by Japan and the Czech Republic.

    To learn more, read our History and Evolution of the 24-Hour World Records article or check out our Data-Driven Primer on the IAU 24-Hour World Championships article, the latter of which was written before the 2023 event but is just as relevant today.

    Aleksandr Sorokin - 2023 IAU 24-Hour World Championships winner
    Lithuania’s Aleksandr Sorokin on his way to winning the 2023 IAU 24-Hour World Championships. Photo: International Association of Ultrarunners

    2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships Women to Watch

    Podium Potential Women

    The women’s world record has been broken at the last three world championships. In 2017, Poland’s Patrycja Bereznowska set a then-world record of 259.991k (161.551 miles). Two years later, in 2019, Camille Herron improved the record to 270.116k (167.842 miles). At the last event in 2023, Japan’s Miho Nakata pushed the mark up just a tiny bit further, to 270.363k (167.996 miles).

    All three of these athletes are entered and set to be on the start line, although it’s worth noting that Herron broke her wrist in a rollerblading accident in September, which could affect her ability to run. Nakata has also been working through health issues, but appears to be racing.

    In 2024, Herron ran 263.004k (163.423 miles) at the Soochow Track Invitational in Taipei and remains the only female athlete to have won IAU world titles in the 50k, 100k, and 24-hour events. Bereznowska ran 263.178k (163.531 miles) at the 2024 ABM Jędraszek UltraPark Weekend and, since winning the world title in Belfast in 2017, has been one of the most consistent 24-hour performers. Nakata ran 249.198k (154.844 miles) at the 2024 Hirosaki 24-Hour Run, and then 249.303k (154.909 miles) at the 2025 Jingu Gaien 24-Hour Challenge.

    All three, if running to previous standards, could end up on the podium, but there are plenty of others with the credentials to challenge them.

    2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships Preview
    Camille Herron on her way to setting a world record at the 2019 IAU 24-Hour World Championships. Photo: U.S. National 24 Hour Running Team

    Holly Ranson of Australia leads the 2025 rankings with 263.548k (163.761 miles) achieved at the Sri Chinmoy 24/48 Track Festival in her home country, in March. In doing so, she set an Australian 24-hour record, as well as an Australian 100-mile record.

    Great Britain’s Sarah Webster, the bronze medalist at last year’s IAU 100k World Championships, an event in which Nakata finished fourth just behind her, will also be one to watch. She made the step up to 24 hours in April this year, recording 243.393k (151.237 miles) off a 14:05 100-mile split, to qualify for the this race.

    Noora Honkala (Finland) has a best 24-hour distance of 246.496k (153.165 miles) from the 2022 Loutraki International Ultramarathon Festival, her last serious attempt at 24 hours. She ran close to Herron in the 2023 Spartathlon, placing second, and returned to win the race in 2024. She also placed eighth at the 2023 Comrades Marathon and 11th in 2025.

    Miho Nakata - 24 hour world record - 2023 IAU 24-Hour World Championships
    Japan’s Miho Nakata celebrates after setting a new women’s 24-hour world record at the 2023 IAU 24-Hour World Championships in Taipei on December 1 and 2. Photo: International Association of Ultrarunners

    Other Women to Watch and Their 24-Hour Personal Bests

    • Hanna Bergwall (Sweden) – 241.269k at the 2025 VXO Ultrafest
    • Therese Fredriksson (Sweden) – 241.658k at the 2025 VXO Ultrafest
    • Stéphanie Gicquel (France) – 253.580k at the 2022 IAU 24-Hour European Championships
    • Corinne Gruffaz (France) – 245.549k at the 2022 IAU 24-Hour European Championships
    • Lauren Jones (U.S.) – 247.923k at the 2024 Desert Solstice Track Invitational
    • Aiko Kanematsu (Japan) – 247.070k at the 2023 Jingu Gaien 24-Hour Challenge
    • Marisa Lizak (U.S) – 244.756k at the 2024 Desert Solstice Track Invitational
    • Olena Shevchenko (Ukraine) – 254.463k at the 2023 IAU 24-Hour World Championships
    • Anne Stephan (Germany) – 250.572k at the 2022 IAU 24-Hour European Championships
    • Daniela Tarnutzer (Switzerland) – 252.822k at the 2024 24-Stundenlauf Aare-Insel Brugg
    • Jo Zakrzewski (Great Britain) – 247.984k at the 2022 IAU 24-Hour European Championships

    [Editor’s Note: Jo Zakrzewski was disqualified from the 2023 Manchester To Liverpool Ultra 50 Mile for traveling in a car for a few miles of the race and then crossing the finish line. She received a one-year ban from U.K. Athletics.]

    2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships Men to Watch

    Podium Potential Men

    The top four finishers from the 2023 IAU 24-Hour World Championships are all on the start list.

    Aleksandr Sorokin from Lithuania is the defending champion from 2023, when he ran 301.790k (187.523 miles). He is the current men’s world record holder with 319.614k (198.598 miles), set when winning the 2022 IAU European 24-Hour Championships. Over the last five years, he has been impressive at both 24-hour and 100k events, having world records in both disciplines. He ran in the recent Adidas “Chasing 100” at the end of August, recording 6:04:10 for 100k, slightly faster than his official world record of 6:05:35, in an aided marketing event by the brand. The event was not run under World Athletics rules, and the times run are not record-eligible.

    Aleksandr Sorokin - 2022 IAU 24 Hour European Championships winner
    Aleksandr Sorokin, after winning the 2022 IAU 24-Hour European Championships, in a new world record. Image: Marius Antanaitis screen capture from race video

    Fotis Zisimopoulos (Greece) was the 2023 silver medalist, running 292.254k (181.598 miles), his personal best. He is a four-time winner of Greece’s classic Spartathlon and the current course record holder. He has run a few shorter events in the last 12 months but skipped this year’s Spartathlon.

    Fotis Zisimopoulos - 2023 Spartathlon winner
    Fotis Zisimopoulos (center) celebrates winning the 2023 Spartathlon. Photo: Sparta Photography Club/Flickr

    Andrii Tkachuk of Ukraine was third at the 2023 IAU 24-Hour World Championships with 284.540k (176.804 miles). He ran a personal best of 295.363k (183.530 miles) at the 2022 IAU 24-Hour European Championships. A string of strong results at shorter races in the past two years shows form.

    Francisco Mariano Martinez of Spain was fourth in the 2023 IAU 24-Hour World Championships with 282.061k (175.264 miles), which is his personal best to date.

    Andrzej Piotrowski was sixth in the 2023 IAU 24-Hour World Championships with 265.886k (165.213 miles). His personal best is 301.858k (187.565 miles), which he ran at the 2022 IAU 24-Hour European Championships when placing second behind Sorokin. He is one of only three men to have bettered 300k (186.411 miles). Sorokin and retired Greek ultra legend Yiannis Kouros are the other two.

    Elov Olsson of Sweden ran 284.669k (176.885 miles) at the 2025 VXO Ultrafest, splitting 100 miles in 12:50:31. He ran a 6:30:14 at the 2022 IAU 100k World Championships, where he placed seventh, and he also won the 2023 Tunnel Hill 100 Mile with 11:26:19.

    Other Men to Watch and Their 24-Hour Personal Bests

    • Robbie Britton (Great Britain) – 277.439k at the 2023 24 Hours of Torino
    • Matthew Field (Great Britain) – 281.303k at the 2024 Gloucester 24-Hour Track Race Invitational
    • Chris Kelly (Great Britain) – 273.375k at the 2024 24 Hours of Albi
    • Dan Lawson (Great Britain) – 273.003k at the 2022 IAU 24-Hour European Championships
    • Amar Singh Devanda (India) – 272.537k at the 2024 IAU 24-Hour Asia and Oceania Championships
    • Stijn Van Lokeren (Belgium) – 280.020k at the 2025 Belgian 24-Hour Championships
    • Luka Videtič (Slovenia) – 265.322k at the 2023 IAU 24-Hour World Championships
    • Marco Visintini (Italy) – 288.437k at the 2022 IAU 24-Hour European Championships
    Robbie Britton Valencia Marathon
    Robbie Britton running the 2021 Valencia Marathon. Photo: Zoe Salt

    Call for Comments

    The 24-hour event format is unique compared to many other styles of ultrarunning. There will always be emerging runners a little under the radar, waiting to make a breakthrough. Let us know if you think we have missed someone!

    2025 IAU 24-Hour World Championships Preview by Adrian Stott.


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  • The Fastest Shoes at the 2025 Chicago Marathon

    The Fastest Shoes at the 2025 Chicago Marathon

    The Fastest Shoes at the 2025 Chicago Marathon

    When it comes to the shoes that ruled the 2025 Chicago Marathon, the story was one of longevity versus novelty. On one end, the Nike Alphafly 3, now two years old, proved its staying power with Jacob Kiplimo’s commanding 2:02:23 victory and Conner Mantz’s new American record.

    On the other, Puma’s Fast-R Nitro Elite 3, the most aggressively styled and innovative super-shoe on the market, broke through with personal bests and top-10 finishes across the women’s field.

    Chicago became the meeting point of two design eras: the veteran still defining the standard, and the upstart rewriting the rules. The result wasn’t a passing of the torch, but a dead heat between the old guard and the new wave—a rare equilibrium in the super-shoe arms race.

    Below, we break down the fastest shoes at the 2025 Chicago Marathon, and what this balance between legacy and innovation says about where the super shoe arms race stands today.

    Jacob Kiplimo, Conner Mantz, and the Enduring Reign of the Alphafly 3

    Jacob Kiplimo from Uganda won the Chicago Marathon in the Nike Alphafly 3. He was among five of the top 10 athletes in the men's race to wear the shoes.
    Jacob Kiplimo from Uganda won the Chicago Marathon in the Nike Alphafly 3. He was among five of the top 10 athletes in the men’s race to wear the shoes. (Photo: Bank of America Chicago Marathon/Kevin Morris)

    Heading into the 2025 Chicago Marathon, all eyes were on John Korir—the defending champion and reigning Boston Marathon winner—who had boldly announced plans to chase a sub-2:01 finish. But Jacob Kiplimo from Uganda, the 24-year-old half-marathon world-record holder (56:42), proved that his world-class talent extends well beyond the 13.1-mile distance.

    Kiplimo took risks. While no runner plans to positive-split a marathon, his decision to press the pace early effectively disrupted Korir’s rhythm. He crossed the halfway mark in 1:00:16, putting him on pace for the late Kelvin Kiptum’s 2:00:35 world record set at Chicago in 2023. Near the 35km mark, Korir dropped out, and Kiplimo surged ahead uncontested, breaking the tape in 2:02:23, 91 seconds clear of Amos Kipruto (KEN, 2:03:54).

    It wasn’t just a statement win for Kiplimo—it was another major victory for the Nike Alphafly 3, the same shoe that has dominated marathon podiums for more than two years and was worn by Kiptum during his aforementioned world record.

    Kiplimo wasn’t the only Nike athlete making moves on the men’s leaderboard. Mantz, wearing the latest dev model of the Alphafly 3 (Nike Dev 16141), set a new American record that surpassed Khalid Khannouchi’s long-standing mark of 2:05:38, finishing in 2:04:43 and fourth overall. That matches his fourth-place finish in Boston earlier this year and underscores his dominance among Americans in the marathon distance.

    Conner Mantz set a new American record at the Chicago marathon wearing Nike Alphafly 3.
    Conner Mantz set a new American record at the Chicago marathon wearing Nike Alphafly 3. (Photo: Getty Images)

    All told, five of the top-10 men crossed the Chicago finish line in Alphafly 3s—including Huseydin Mohamed Esa (ETH, 2:04:50), Seifu Tura (ETH, 2:05:17), and Geoffrey Kamworor (KEN, 2:05:31)—further proof that even two years after launch, Nike’s flagship marathon racer remains the benchmark for performance.

    The Alphafly is no longer the lightest super-shoe on the market—that title now belongs to Asics’s new Metaspeed Ray—but its blend of propulsive foam, signature Zoom Air pods, and optimum stability often matter more than weighing a few less grams on the scale, and continues to make it one of the most trusted tools in elite racing (and favorite of many citizen marathoners too).

    Hawi Feysa and the Growing Legacy of the Adios Pro Evo Series

    Hawi Feysa of Ethiopia broke away after the halfway mark and never looked back, winning in the Adidas Adizero Adios Pro Evo 2 with a time of 2:14:56—delivering yet another major-marathon victory for Adidas’s Evo series, the ultra-minimal racer that also helped Tigst Assefa (ETH, 2:11:53) smash her own world record at this year’s London Marathon.

    Feysa—who, like Kiplimo, is just 24—secured a win that further cements Adidas’s role as a first-place contender in the marathon shoe wars, continuing to innovate at “Lightstrike” speed. Weighing just 138 grams (4.9 ounces), with a stiff carbon platform and aggressive rocker geometry, the Evo 2 stands as the second-lightest elite marathon shoe currently on the market—roughly 10g heavier than the recently debuted Asics Metaspeed Ray (129 g/4.5 oz).

    While Adidas claimed the crown, Nike, Asics, and Puma filled out the women’s leaderboard. Runner-up Megertu Alemu (ETH, 2:17:18) likely raced in Nike’s Vaporfly 3, while Loice Chemnung (KEN, 2:18:23) and Magdalena Shauri (TAN, 2:18:03) delivered podium-level performances for Asics, wearing the Metaspeed Ray and Metaspeed Sky Tokyo, respectively.

    And just as in the men’s field, Nike’s Alphafly 3 continued to make its presence known—under the feet of Mary Ngugi-Cooper (KEN, 2:19:25), Florencia Borelli (ARG, 2:24:23), and Gabriella Rooker (USA, 2:26:32)—proving that two years after its launch, the shoe remains a defining force across both sides of the elite podium.

    Puma’s Fast-R Nitro Elite 3 Makes An Even Bigger Splash

    Following its heavily promoted—but somewhat underwhelming—debut at this year’s Boston Marathon, the Puma Fast-R Nitro Elite 3 made a strong statement in Chicago, emerging as the second-most-popular shoe among the women’s top 10.

    Three athletes—Natosha Rogers (USA, 2:23:28) (top American finisher), Dakotah Popehn (USA, 2:24:21) (second American), and Melody Julien (FRA, 2:27:09)—all ran personal bests in the model, helping solidify Puma’s reemergence as a serious player in elite racing.

    Dakotah Popehn ran a personal best wearing Puma Fast-R Nitro Elite 3.
    Dakotah Popehn ran a personal best wearing Puma Fast-R Nitro Elite 3. (Photo: Getty Images)

    Puma’s lightweight, split-midsole design—with its ultra-soft-and-responsive A-TPU Nitro Elite foam and rigid carbon bridge—has officially moved beyond novelty status. With such a deep field choosing to lace up in it, the Fast-R Nitro Elite 3 cements Puma’s reputation as the comeback brand of the 2020s—a company once known for its sprinting heritage now carving out space in the marathon super-shoe conversation.

    The Other Super-Shoes in the Top 10

    With Nike’s Alphafly 3 and Adidas’s Adios Pro Evo 2 taking the wins and Puma taking up more space on the leaderboard, three other shoes made major statements in Chicago—each showcasing how diverse the marathon footwear landscape continues to become.

    The Asics Metaspeed Trifecta: Ray, Sky Tokyo & Edge Tokyo

    Apparently, one marathon super shoe wasn’t enough for Asics. Their current top-tier lineup has three different models. Loice Chemnung (KEN, 2:18:23) raced in the Metaspeed Ray, a featherweight design that now stands as the lightest in the field at 129 grams (4.5 ounces). And defending Chicago champ John Korir was aiming for an audacious sub-2:01 before he DNF’d, and chose to race in the Metaspeed Ray to help him get there.

    Meanwhile, Magdalena Shauri (TAN, 2:18:03) impressed in the Metaspeed Sky Tokyo, while Bashir Abdi (BEL, 2:07:08) represented the Metaspeed Edge Tokyo, both using Asics’s dual-foam system (FF Turbo + FF Leap) and full-length carbon plate to deliver a smooth, energetic ride.

    All three Metaspeed models share a 39.5 mm heel/34.5 mm forefoot stack and a 5 mm drop, but they’re tuned for different stride mechanics: the Ray for maximal energy return for forefoot runners, the Edge for higher cadence, and the Sky for maximal stride length. Together, they signal that Asics is no longer chasing the leaders—it’s running stride-for-stride with them.

    Hoka Cielo X1 3.0

    In one of the day’s biggest surprises, Alex Masai (KEN, 2:04:37) placed third wearing an unreleased prototype of Hoka’s Cielo X1 3.0. It is rumored to be slightly lower-stacked and lighter than its predecessor, and to refine Hoka’s signature rocker geometry with a stiffer carbon plate and more aggressive toe spring. While not yet available to the public, the Cielo X1 3.0’s debut on the Chicago podium cements Hoka’s return to the front of the super-shoe conversation.

    On Cloudboom Strike

    Although it didn’t appear on the podium, the On Cloudboom Strike continues to draw attention from pros and testers alike. Weighing 210 grams (7.4 ounces) with a 39.5 mm stack and 4 mm drop, it pairs Helion HF PEBA-based foam with a full-length carbon Speedboard for a firm yet efficient ride.

    The shoe’s Chicago appearance came courtesy of Ryan Ford (USA)—who had only just announced his new affiliation with On’s Boulder-based elite team on Saturday. His entry marked one of the first official marathon outings for On’s newest racer. Unlike the softer trend dominating other brands, the Cloudboom Strike favors responsiveness and ground feel, appealing to forefoot-striking athletes who value control and turnover over plushness.

    Men’s Results and Fastest Shoes at the 2025 Chicago Marathon

    The post The Fastest Shoes at the 2025 Chicago Marathon appeared first on RUN | Powered by Outside.


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  • “Katharina:” A Film on the Struggles and Triumphs of Katharina Hartmuth

    “Katharina:” A Film on the Struggles and Triumphs of Katharina Hartmuth

    The post “Katharina:” A Film on the Struggles and Triumphs of Katharina Hartmuth appeared first on iRunFar.

    There’s an often-quoted adage that says, “Be kind to everyone you meet, because you don’t know what they’re going through.” It asks us to acknowledge that life can be difficult for everyone, regardless of how happy or successful they seem on the surface.

    This is the theme that will resound in your head as you view “Katharina,” a raw, deeply honest, and awe-inspiring film following Katharina Hartmuth over an 12-month period starting in 2024. While the highlights of the period include a win at the 2024 Tor des Géants and third-place finishes at the 2024 and 2025 Hardrock 100, there were also seemingly endless injuries, a knee surgery, and mental health struggles.

    [Editor’s Note: Click here to watch the full film on YouTube.]

    This film is edited and directed by Ethan Newberry, often known as The Ginger Runner. Newberry is arguably one of the most prolific and talented trail running filmmakers in our sport right now. Besides editing and cinematography, the elegantly placed music in his films — including this one — elevates the experience and gives you all the feels.

    Katharina film - Katharina Hartmuth - 2024 Tor des Géants
    Katharina Hartmuth near the end of the 2024 Tor des Géants after overcoming a summer of injury. All photos are screenshots from the film “Katharina.”

    The opening scene immediately immerses us in Hartmuth’s world. The purposeful shots follow Hartmuth to the 2024 Hardrock 100 start line in Silverton, Colorado. She describes the mountains as her “happy place” and says that running in them is “almost like visiting friends.”

    Hartmuth, who is German but lives in Switzerland, is one of the most prolific runners on the global circuit. Her most recent accomplishment is a third-place finish at the 2025 UTMB, where this film made its world premiere. But for anyone who’s been following her career closely, it’s clear that her runs at UTMB and other events in the past two years have not come easily.

    Katharina film - Katharina Hartmuth - 2025 Hardrock 100 startline
    Katharina and others at the start of the 2025 Hardrock 100.

    Early on in the film, Hartmuth candidly reveals her struggles with mental health and her series of unfortunate and frustrating injuries. Her string of bad luck started with a knee injury after being hit by a car while riding her bike in the spring of 2024. The second was a bad fall while running just 2.5 weeks before the 2024 Hardrock 100 during which she injured her back. The way she speaks about these challenges is honest and relatable. She never begs for sympathy in her tone. Hartmuth exudes dignity and grit, and it is utterly inspiring. She lines up for the 2024 race even with less-than-ideal preparation and finishes third, despite additionally suffering from loss of vision, a condition well-documented during ultrarunning events. The way Hartmuth ultimately navigates the course with no vision, never wavering, will give you chills.

    Subsequently, we follow Hartmuth to her victorious finish at the 2024 Tor des Géants in September of that year. The scenery in the Italian Alps is spectacular and at times looks like a movie set. Despite the grueling nature of this 330-kilometer race, Hartmuth never stops smiling and never loses her patience. She struggles all the while with her lingering knee pain. Her success is achieved not without hardship, and her approach to mental health is both rational and mature.

    Katharina film - Katharina Hartmuth - 2024 Tor Des Géants
    Katharina in the Italian Alps during the 2024 Tor des Géants.

    Knee surgery in November 2024 and the subsequent rehabilitation marks the winter months between race seasons, and the movie concludes with its final chapter at the 2025 Hardrock 100. During this time, Hartmuth reminisces on her 2024 race and describes one of the most relatable situations in ultrarunning when she says, “I had so many problems during the race, but my back was never a problem.” It highlights what is often true both in life and running: In the end, it’s never the issues we are most worried about that become the concern.

    The film is an emotional roller coaster from the start to the final finish line of the film. Hartmuth is engaging and lovable, and you will become a fan if you weren’t already. Perhaps most importantly, it’s a reminder that many people are struggling, and it’s ok to reach out for help.

    Katharina film - Katharina Hartmuth - Overcome by emotion at the finish of the 2025 Hardrock 100
    Overcome by emotion at the finish of the 2025 Hardrock 100.

    Call for Comments

    • Have you had a chance to watch the film? What did you think?
    • Have you found yourself navigating mental health struggles while dealing with physical injuries as well?

    “Katharina:” A Film on the Struggles and Triumphs of Katharina Hartmuth by Maggie Guterl.


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