Running 100 Miles During COVID: Burning River 100 Miler 2020

Surprisingly, I had one lone race this year that did not get cancelled because of COVID: Burning River 100 Miler, set in the Akron and Cuyahoga Falls, OH area.

Granted, an ultramarathon is already quite socially distant, as racers are often all by themselves for hours on end, particularly as the race progresses towards the later stages. However, that “perk” of trail races (as compared to crowded road races) notwithstanding, other ultramarathons this year have still been cancelled because of COVID-19: e.g., Bigfoot 200 this year was cancelled.

After being cooped up in Baltimore for so many months and having countless races cancelled (B&A Trail Marathon, Delaware Marathon, Morgantown Marathon, and Brooklyn Marathon, just to name a few), it was a great respite and immensely refreshing to finally ‘race’ after ~six months of not being able to in person!

This race was overall quite well-organized and I have to give major kudos to the race directors, staff, and volunteers for putting on a smart, socially distant race.

Among the adaptations for COVID-19: a rolling wave start based on expected finish time (I thought I was going to be ~26 hours, so started around 5am; fastest [expected] runners started at 4am, slowest [expected] runners started around 6am), all aid station volunteers wore masks (and runners entering an aid station had to put one on), no spectators, and no after-race celebration.

To make a long story / run short: I finished in 29:27:22 — just under the 30 hour cutoff.

Heat (~90F), long exposed sections, coupled with enough rolling hills on trails to make the race decided not flat, made this race deceptively difficult: only 84 finishers out of ~203 starts (~59% DNF [Did Not Finish] rate).

My training for this race was OK, but not great: 164 miles of running in April, 140 miles in May, 100 miles in June, and 67 miles in July — coupled with rucking (30-40 lbs), some Peloton cycling, and yoga cross-training.

I slowed down significantly as time wore down, as the heat led to some major cumulative dehydration, tightness, and later discomfort in my left foot. [At least: I blame the heat! :) ]

Here were my 10-mile splits:

  • Mile 10: 1:57:07 — pace 11:42/mi; Estimated Finish Time: 19:35:15

  • Mile 20: 3:55:49 — pace 11:47/mi; Estimated Finish Time: 19:43:12

  • Mile 30: 6:18:05 — pace 12:36/mi; Estimated Finish Time: 21:04:41

  • Mile 40: 9:32:06 — pace 14:18/mi; Estimated Finish Time: 23:55:15

  • Mile 50: 12:50:23 — pace 15:24/mi; Estimated Finish Time: 25:46:09

  • Mile 60: 16:00:37 — pace 16:00/mi; Estimated Finish Time: 26:46:37

  • Mile 70: 19:37:36 — pace 16:49/mi; Estimated Finish Time: 28:08:10

  • Mile 80: 23:01:00 — pace 17:15/mi; Estimated Finish Time: 28:52:17

  • Mile 90: 26:16:02 — pace 17:30/mi; Estimated Finish Time: 29:17:16

  • Mile 100.2 (Finish): 29:27:22 — pace 17:38/mi

Finally, here’s a video I put together — enjoy!

Race Across the USA (Virtual 1000 Miler)

As an ultrarunner, I have a slight (read: heavy) addiction to stalking UltraSignup and constantly scoping out possible races and marathon/ultramarathon schedules…I discovered a few virtual ultramarathon races with Destination Trail Run — the fine organizers of 200+ mile races such as Bigfoot 200 (attempted in 2018! DNF at 133 miles), Tahoe 200, and Moab 240.

In particular, I noticed there was a “Race Across the USA” virtual run, in which entrants can either register to run 1000 miles or 2572 miles (distance from San Francisco to New York), either solo or as a team…over the time frame of June 1, 2020 to January 1, 2021.

Since I’m slightly behind on my Strava goal of running 1500 miles in 2020 (have run 416 miles thus far in 2020, as of May 31st), I figured signing to get a cool 1000 mile belt buckle would be a good incentive to sustain my needed mileage throughout the rest of the year — about 33 miles per week, to be exact.

Although I’m also attempting to maintain and gain a bit of strength through ring workouts in the park and weighted sandbag sessions (cleans, front squats, deadlifts), running ~30-35 miles a week shouldn’t preclude the ability to also keep some strength.

Look forward to receiving the unique buckle, as can be seen below, after running 1000 miles!

Run or bike across the USA — relay or solo (virtually); can cover 2572 mile or 1000 mile distance, from June 1, 2020 to January 1, 2021: register here!