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Wednesday, December 25, 2024

Japanese ultramarathoner breaks ladies’s 24-hour world file


It was a record-setting 24 hours on the 2023 IAU 24-Hour World Championships in Chinese language Taipei on Dec. 2, as Japan’s Miho Nakata broke the ladies’s world file by a mere 246 metres, recording 270.363 km (167.995 miles) within the interval.

Nakata averaged a tempo of 5 minutes and 20 seconds per kilometre (8:55/mile) through the race and solely beat the file by a little bit over half of a lap of the monitor, which comes down to simply over one minute. Nakata’s new mark surpasses the space set by Camille Herron of 270.116 km (167.842 miles) on the final version of the championship in 2019.

Nakata was out entrance for many of the race, holding a spot of six kilometres on a two-kilometre (1.24 miles) loop by way of 12 hours. As time progressed, Nakata’s hole saved rising, and she or he beat the remainder of the ladies’s discipline by 16 kilometres to win gold for Japan.

To place her new spectacular file in perspective, her distance was solely overwhelmed by 4 males and would have positioned her fifth general. Nakata smashed her earlier greatest over the space by 14 kilometres. That is her greatest end at an ultrarunning world championship, beforehand ending sixth on the 2022 IAU 100K World Championships.

Ukraine’s Olena Shevchenko took the silver with 254.463 km, whereas former ultrarunning world champion Patrycja Bereznowska of Poland took bronze (249.541 km).

Aleksandr Sorokin defends world title

Aleksandr Sorokin
Picture: Marek Janiak/UltraPark Weekend

Lithuanian ultrarunning star Aleksandr Sorokin efficiently defended his IAU 24-Hour World Championship title, profitable the lads’s race in 301.790 km. He was on a world file tempo by way of 18 hours however started to fall off the WR tempo with 5 hours to go.

Heading into the race, Sorokin was the favorite to win, however he went out extra conservatively than normal within the opening six hours. Sorokin took the lead after six hours and held on to win by greater than 9 kilometres, despite the fact that he walked the final hour of the race.

Fotios Zisimopoulos of Greece took second with 292.254 km, and Ukraine’s Andrii Tkachuk rounded out the rostrum with 284.540 km.

Sorokin holds the world file within the 24-hour self-discipline, setting the mark of 319.614 km on the 2022 IAU European Championships in Verona, Italy.



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