The Gear Molly Huddle Uses to Prep for Boston

Expert Essentials

The Gear Molly Huddle Uses to Prep for Boston

The tools that help her train for one of running’s biggest marathons

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Mar 15, 2018


Mar 15, 2018

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The tools that help her train for one of running’s biggest marathons

Holding the records for the fastest 10,000 meters and half marathon run by an American woman, Molly Huddle is no stranger to speed. At this year’s Boston Marathon, she has her eyes set on 2:20, the benchmark she believes she needs to hit in order to podium. Doing so will require Huddle to shave just over eight minutes from her personal best—no small feat for someone running in only her second marathon. That means she’s training hard, long, and fast and can’t afford any injuries. We caught up with Huddle, 33, at her winter training hub in Scottsdale, Arizona, to ask what gear she’s relying on for a strong and steady buildup.

Saucony Kinvara 9 ($109)

(Courtesy Saucony)

“This shoe has just the right level of cushioning for me. I live in a city half the year, and the Kinvaras are soft enough for running on concrete but still light and responsive. The cushioning is neutral and the drop is low, so you feel like you can run fast in it. I’ll put hundreds of miles on these shoes before Boston.”

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Polar M430 Watch ($199)

(Courtesy Polar)

“Of course this watch tracks my miles and pace, but what I love is the wrist-based heart rate sensor. This is my first full season with it, and having the heart rate data right there helps me monitor my workouts and keep them the right level, particularly on easy days. If my heart rate is higher than it should be, I’ll slow down. That’s huge for my recovery.”

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Believe Training Journal ($21)

(Courtesy VeloPress)

“I keep a log of the work I’m doing so I can see patterns in training and write down seasonal goals and race plans. I’ve kept training journals since high school, and I like having a hard copy. It’s easier to go back to read. This journal speaks to me, kind of literally; it has inspiring quotes that I’ll often flip through until I find the one that I need on that given week.”

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KT Tape ($9)

(Courtesy KT Tape)

“I’ve been finding new sore areas with the increase in mileage that comes with training for the marathon, so I use KT Tape to enhance recovery on my left calf and foot after runs. It lifts the skin away a bit and allows for better blood flow. It’s subtle, but at this level, it’s that final 1 percent that makes all the difference. I’ve started taping before workouts, too, for the involuntary muscular benefits. I’ll put it on my calf to engage the muscle, which helps me move efficiently during long runs.”

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Gatorade Endurance Gels ($35 for 21)

(Courtesy Gatorade)

“I’ve been loving these gels, particularly the Apple Pear flavor. They have a light taste that’s a little more natural, plus a thinner consistency that’s easier to eat quickly mid-workout. The taste is so good that I actually look forward to fueling now. It beats the heck out of frosting-like, sticky gels.”

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Saucony Impulse Bra Top ($42)

(Courtesy Saucony)

“This bra is cute and really comfortable. It has smooth seams, is breathable, and is cut in a way that doesn’t dig in anywhere. There’s also a cool crisscross strap design that’s unique, if for nothing more than to vary my tan lines!”

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Koala Clip Sports Bra Phone Holder ($26)

(Courtesy Koala Clip)

“I carry my phone more often than I ever thought I would: for safety, if I’m running alone or in a new place, but also for podcasts and music. I like the Koala’s thin pouch and soft outer fabric, because it’s not bulky and doesn’t chafe. It says to wear it on your back, but I tuck it in the front for easier access. It’s one of those little things that just makes your workout better.”

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Addaday Nonagon Roller ($35)

(Courtesy Addaday)

“This is the black belt level of foam rollers. It has a solid middle, so it’s firm, and a unique surface with bumps and edges that get into your muscles. I use it on my IT band, calf, and upper back before and after running.”

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This Is a Huge Moment for American Women Marathoners

Ahead of the Boston Marathon, three of pro running’s female giants discuss the country’s chances (they’re very good) of finally ending a 33-year dry spell

It’s not just hype. The U.S. women competing in the marathon right now are a collective force on the world stage. In August, Amy Cragg became the first American woman in 34 years to earn a medal at the world championships marathon. Three months later, Shalane Flanagan became the first U.S. woman in 40 years to break the tape at the New York City Marathon. Jordan Hasay has competed in just two marathons—Boston and Chicago—and placed third at each, while clocking the second-fastest time in the country’s history with a 2:20:57 in October.

On April 16, five of the top ten all-time fastest U.S. women to run 26.2 miles are set to compete at the Boston Marathon. It’s easy to see why the experts predict the 33-year dry spell for an American champion could end on Boylston Street next week.

To help us understand how we arrived at this moment, we asked three women who have participated in and intimately observed the sport from all angles: Mary Wittenberg, former CEO of New York Road Runners and the first female race director of a major international marathon; Kara Goucher, two-time Olympian and 2007 world championships silver medalist in the 10,000 meters; and Lisa Rainsberger, a current youth coach in Colorado Springs and the last American woman to win the Boston Marathon (in 1985).


OUTSIDE: It wasn’t long ago that we wouldn’t expect an American to contend for a win at any major marathon. What variables have aligned?

RAINSBERGER: It’s all about support—coaching support, monetary support, group training, and medical support. When you leave college, all of a sudden everything is gone. The coach is gone; the training room is gone. All of a sudden you’re out there on your own, hoping that a club or program will pick you up. It’s these training groups that can help support athletes. When we have those kinds of resources, you’ll see more women—and men, for that matter—well into their late twenties and early thirties continue to compete.

GOUCHER: Coaching has played a huge role. The coaches have been in the game a while now. They’re learning the sport and taking a longer-term approach. Also, we have more athletes living the lifestyle—they don’t have another job; running is it. Shalane is the perfect example of somebody who has lived this life for so long, with zero distractions, and has just really dedicated herself to it. A lot of that is financial opportunity, but all these women who have a chance to win Boston are solely focused on running. Also, the internet has made the marathon sexier. We’re seeing some more really gritty talent coming up. A lot of that is because the internet allows people to see how cool the marathon can be.

WITTENBERG: The internet has made a big difference at the feeder level. You can follow everybody so much more easily, and that continues to have a huge impact at the high school and college levels. It’s interesting at the high school level, because there are so many names of great athletes who now are well-known before they even get to college.

What are some other common denominators?

GOUCHER: I don’t want to be controversial at all, but I do think in the last year and a half, technology has helped some of our performances as well. Just a little bit, a nudge forward across the board. The research on the Nike Vaporfly 4% is there, and we’ve seen some really awesome performances—from people we’d expect those results from—but there has been a common denominator. And it’s been footwear. That’s just a reality.

RAINSBERGER: You know, I predate Gatorade. I think there have been a lot of technological advances. Footwear and clothing and the Breathe Right strip, if you buy into that, and the compression socks. There are so many little things that, if you add them all up, can enhance a performance. Technology is good as long as it’s available to everyone. It’s fun to see all the advancements in training.

Mary, you added an elite female-only start to the 2002 New York City Marathon, which gave women focused camera time instead of mixing in with the masses of men. What has that done for the sport?

WITTENBERG: Allan Steinfeld, the former New York City Marathon race director, hated that the women were always stuck behind the men. It affected the competitiveness of the field. It’s not as fair if the women can’t see each other and race each other. Lornah Kiplagat asked him once at the New York Mini 10K luncheon, ‘Why not put the women out front?’ Allan came over and said, ‘What do you think?’ I said, ‘Let’s do it.’ And that was it. Our only concern was that it’s a harder way to run, but the women are fully up to the challenge.

Kara, you’re one of the athletes to benefit from this strategy. Did it help?

GOUCHER: It’s changed my life. The biggest thrill of my career has been running through the crowds at the New York City Marathon when you’re the first runner they’re seeing. I’ve always loved running, but the marathon was just a completely different world, and it was a thousand times better than anything I had ever done before.

In 2014 in New York, I went out way too hard and died and then had to run 13 miles by myself in the wind. It’s hard when it goes wrong, but you know who you’re competing against, you can feel the race better. I love it. Sometimes I feel bad for the men that they don’t get to come through first, but then I’m like, no, I don’t really care.

Lisa, can you imagine if you had the opportunity to cross the finish line at Boston first?

RAINSBERGER: The year that I won, Saucony hired Dave McGillivray, now the Boston Marathon race director, to wear a microphone on his hat so he would run next to me and try to interview me throughout the race. I am not joking. They didn’t have cameras out on the course, just the lead truck focused on the lead men. So they got this harebrained idea that they were going to try to have a verbal interview throughout the race. Dave didn’t really train that hard, so he only lasted to mile eight, and then there was nothing.

It would have been nice to have that excitement as the crowd sees you come through. Looking back, I had my moments. But it’s certainly better now that the women are showcased independently.

WITTENBERG: And there’s been reciprocity. People responded to Kara and to the other women. It lifted the totality of the event. It was one of those decisions that we thought was for the athletes, but in the end, the sport and the event benefited most.

How has the effort to highlight women’s running translated financially for the athletes?

WITTENBERG: Prize money was always equal in New York. But with appearance fees, it’s about the marketability of the athlete and how much they bring to the table. How much will they engage with the fans and the youth programs? What’s the total package? Women are held in very high regard in what they bring, but at a lot of places, that’s where the pay discrepancy is. A lot has to do with the agents. They know the landscape, and if their athletes don’t know it, then the agents should be fighting for equality.

GOUCHER: I will say I was negotiating once with a race after I placed third at the New York City Marathon. And this other race offered me an appearance fee that seemed kind of low. But they said they didn’t have the kind of money I was asking for, and that “aside from this top American, you’re getting paid the same as everybody except for him.” And I couldn’t believe this was still happening. I said, “I have to be paid as much as him.” In the end, I actually still took less than him. So it does still happen, although that was close to ten years ago, so I’m sure it’s come a long way.

How much have international anti-doping measures opened the doors for U.S. women to shine at high-profile races?

RAINSBERGER: Clean sport has added the element of possibility for young Americans to say they compete on the world level now, because it is getting better. I hope. To a point, anyway.

GOUCHER: I still don’t trust the big international umbrella, but there are other people who are doing something about it. New York Road Runners is a good example. They really tried to make that 2017 New York City Marathon field as clean as it could be. That’s what’s going to make a difference. You can’t control what other federations do—we can keep expressing opinions and being vocal, but for events to say, “If you’ve had a ban, you can’t come here,” that propels the sport forward.

Shalane felt like she had an opportunity in New York because the invited field seemed level, so it gives athletes hope. When you’re in the depths of it and you think everybody is dirty, you think, “Why am I wasting my life?” There will always be people who cheat. That’s just unfortunately the way it is. But more people are demanding change, and the races are following suit.

WITTENBERG: At the governance level, there needs to be a more aggressive approach, because world championships and the Olympic Games matter to athletes. On the invitational level, like major marathons, it just starts with looking at facts and analysis. You can get blindsided, but people can see what makes sense in the progression of an athlete, and whether it’s a track meet or a marathon, you can control who gets in that field. Same thing with the people the athletes associate with, like agents. The athletes can vote with their feet in many ways by refusing to race in a field with known drug cheats.

RAINSBERGER: Years ago, it wasn’t the drug issue, but it was not uncommon for the men to get twice the amount of prize money as the women. There were races that would invite me where the women’s winner would get $5,000 and the men’s winner would get $10,000. So I stopped going to races where the prize money was not equal. Athletes should at some level make a statement that says, “This person has failed a drug test. She’s being invited to this race. I’m not gonna go.”

Kara, is that a viable option? Can an athlete just say, “No, thank you”?

GOUCHER: It would take all the athletes banding together. I would do that, but I’m almost 40 and I’m established. If I were 28 and it was an opportunity that could change my life, I probably wouldn’t say anything. I’d probably go run and try to beat them. That sounds defeatist, but it depends on your situation.

RAINSBERGER: If athletes say they’re not going to toe the line with somebody whose coach was found with a truckload of EPO, then maybe the organizers will rethink it.

Mary, you’ve been in the position to invite athletes to races. What do you think?

WITTENBERG: Perhaps an effective step we could take is more coaches, athletes, and agents informing anti-doping agencies when something isn’t right. Increasingly, fact-based circumstantial evidence is going to carry the day, because it does seem that the most famous cheats have beat the system every time. Holding coaches and agents accountable is key to this house of cards of doping really falling.

GOUCHER: I could not agree with that more. You punish the athlete, but the village continues. I would love to know the stats on how many athletes go to their coach or agent and say they want to dope versus how many athletes have that option presented to them. I’m sure it’s the coach or agent 99 percent of the time. Until they are held accountable—when that day happens, that’s when we’re truly going to see the change.

Kara, communities of women runners like the one created by your sponsor Oiselle result in bigger legions of fans. How do these groups fuel the growth of the sport at the top or change the mindset of how women support each other’s success?

GOUCHER: A huge reason that I really went for it at the 2016 Olympic Marathon Trials is because of the support that I had. I’m not talking about the financial support, but just so many people believing in me. And they honestly didn’t care what the result was. They just wanted to see me there having a fair shot. It helped me through a lot of dark times, and it continues to.

Watching Shalane win New York, I was sobbing. I knew how much she wanted it. I knew how long she had been waiting for it. I knew how much work she had put into it, and that’s a beautiful thing to witness. There’s power in that, in everybody getting excited for each other. I read something today that I found so interesting: “Another woman’s success is not your failure.” Maybe in the past we were a little bit that way; we could only have one star. Now it’s exploded. We can find inspiration from so many different people.

Shalane’s win in New York really sparked emotion for so many people, didn’t it?

WITTENBERG: I hope you felt a part of it, Kara, because when I saw Shalane going down that straightaway at the New York City finish line, I saw your footsteps and Molly’s and all the women who have had a part in paving the way. I’m curious if you felt that on the day, like it was a Team USA win?

GOUCHER: I just felt proud for Shalane. I know this woman. I trained with this woman. She is the epitome of a professional. She is one of the most successful Americans of all time; nobody is going to argue with that. It will be so fun to watch her run Boston now, because I think the one thing she thought was eluding her, to affirm her career, she got. Now she’s just running for the love of it. There’s no consequence. She gets third or fourth or tenth? Well that’s okay. She won New York. She’s in this cool place.

RAINSBERGER: I saw her training here in Colorado Springs…she’s training hard.

GOUCHER: Of course—that’s how she’s wired. But I also think she doesn’t have that internal pressure. She runs hard because she likes to run hard; she likes to see what she can get from herself. But now she’s running for the love of it.

RAINSBERGER: And [Olympic champion triathlete turned marathoner] Gwen Jorgensen was right with her.

GOUCHER: I love it. There aren’t any gaps in generations. We’re in this cool space where I feel like we’re forever going to have somebody fighting for a medal or be on the podium. I don’t think we’re going to have these long gaps anymore. Women’s marathon running in American is a cool, sexy event now. We have tons of talent, so I don’t think it’s going to end anytime soon.

Because success begets success?

RAINSBERGER: When we had one woman like Joanie Benoit Samuelson win the 1984 Olympic marathon, it opened up the possibility for young girls to say, “Hey, I want to do that.” That was certainly how it was for me. I could identify with these women. With the last four or five years of American women doing so well and winning medals and championship races, it just lets these young ladies coming out of college go, “I can do that. I can keep doing what I love, and there’s possibility.” The American women standing on the line at Boston are going to think, “If Shalane can do it, I can do it.” It is very infectious right now, and I don’t see it ending.

WITTENBERG: What’s so great with the access that social media provides, everybody’s personalities come out. Now everybody has favorites. At Boston, is it Desi or Shalane or Molly or Deena or Kellyn? I think it’s a really fun thing that this depth has provided so many people to cheer for. We used to dream of that.

Let’s get into the U.S. field at Boston. It’s cause for excitement, isn’t it?

RAINSBERGER: The fact that John Hancock elite coordinators are inviting our top runners and probably compensating them accordingly, that to me signals that they’re ready to invest in American women runners. I’m excited, because any one of five women could win the race this year.

WITTENBERG: I counted at least six. Maybe seven.

RAINSBERGER: Okay, seven. I won’t sell anyone short.

WITTENBERG: It just screams of the depth of American distance running today, especially because I saw the list and thought of all the people who weren’t there, which really tells you the total picture. From Kara to Steph Bruce to Amy Cragg and people coming along, like Gwen Jorgensen. What’s different from when we started is that they’re still taking the best athletes in the world, but a lot of them are Americans now. That’s the result of at least a decade and a half of progress—and athletes like Kara really paved the way.

GOUCHER: I think it’s an awesome field. I wish I was fit enough to join the women. I always liked to go to the races when I was at the top of my game and really try to win, but I always felt like if there were two or three more American women with me, it would have happened. You need to flood the races and not be afraid to race each other. It’s really cool to see everybody putting egos aside and going head-to-head. This is what it’s going to take to get someone to win. It’s going to be super exciting. I can’t imagine watching, because of how emotional it’s going to be, potentially. I do think it’s interesting to see how fast the human body can go, but I enjoy the competition and watching the athletes feel each other out and have to make moves during the race.

Lisa, did you ever think you’d hang on to this title for this long?

RAINSBERGER: Oh. My. God. No. At first I was a little greedy and kind of liked it. Now it’s ridiculous. It’s painful to think it’s been 33 years. That’s unacceptable. But it’s not because Americans aren’t capable. I hate that. One ignorant person might say that we’re just not built to win or insinuate that a different nationality has a better chance of being fast runners. I beg to differ. It takes all different body types to be a great marathoner. So, yeah. 33 years. It’s going down.

GOUCHER: It’s not because people haven’t tried or really wanted it. Desi has just been devastated a couple times about it. Shalane is similar. I know I was obsessed with it—I was unhealthily obsessed with winning it. And Deena. It’s crazy how many of us have been obsessed with winning this one title. It’s not like for 30 years, people were like, “Eh, I’m going to London instead.”

WITTENBERG: I’ll tell you what’s cool for all of us, being in this moment. I started at New York 20 years ago, and there was no chance anyone was going to do it. But you know what? It was even bigger when it happened after 40 years. So I hope it’s not another seven years. I hope this is the year in Boston, but man, as tough as it is not to get that win year after year, the importance of it just grows. I really see it as this progression and this team thing as to who’s going to be the one to crack through. We don’t know, because it does take so much on the day of, and the difference is that now the Americans are good enough. It’s just a matter of how the race plays out that day.

Okay, it’s time for predictions. What’s going to happen on April 16 in Boston?

GOUCHER: There are so many different ways it could go. Jordan has obviously proven to be a fast marathoner, and she ran very fast in Boston, so does she go and hammer from the beginning? Does Shalane do what she did in New York and hang back, then try to swoop in, which is not her typical style? It worked beautifully a few months ago. Molly Huddle is just the most thoroughbred out there with her track times. Desi probably knows the course better than anyone else—maybe tied with Shalane. Kellyn Taylor just been chipping away. And Deena—you never know. She could just go out there and run a 2:26. I don’t know. I’m so nervous for them, but in a good-energy way.

RAINSBERGER: They’re all equally trained and equally capable once the gun goes off, but it’s what happens afterward that determines the winner. She’ll read the course and the weather and the competition and the pace—those are all the fundamentals that are so hard to predict.

GOUCHER: That’s what’s so great about it this year. We’re not just hanging our hats on one person. There are so many different scenarios, but they all could result in an American winning.

Let’s talk about the future of women’s distance running in America. What are your hopes, and what do we need to work on?

RAINSBERGER: Since I have a daughter who is coming through the ranks right now, it’s close to home for me. I want her to not have the struggles of the sport not being clean. There’s also the gender ambiguity issue that’s going on right now. How are we going to address that as women runners, and how is the sport going to address that issue? It’s real and it’s up-and-coming and it’s prominent.

GOUCHER: I want to see a level playing field, whether it’s doping or technology. I want everybody to line up with a fair shot and have it come down to who’s done the work and who’s the most talented on that day, instead of who has an advantage here and there that was purchased or injected or whatever.

WITTENBERG: I want to see more diversity in the sport. It’s a great opportunity now with more girls coming up through youth programs and other sports—greater in ethnic and racial diversity, greater diversity in socioeconomic means.

I’m excited for more women coaches. SafeSport, the policies set by the U.S. Olympic Committee to protect athletes from sexual misconduct and physical and emotional abuse, is mightily important right now. I don’t think it must be on women to do this, but we can adapt coaching to better reflect that. Creating greater safety for athletes in all ways is going to be really important. We talk about women on the playing field, we talk about women in executive offices, but we don’t have enough women coaches. The diversity of thought and empathy and understanding that we’ll get from women coaches will be really good for the sport.

What about your personal contributions? What do you still hope to accomplish in this sport?

GOUCHER: I feel like I meet more runners every day, which makes me excited about the future of the sport, not just for elite running, but just running in general. It’s bringing women together and changing the conversation and helping us break down some walls we’ve had between each other. Running builds incredible communities and empowers people, and it’s just a good time for the sport.

WITTENBERG: The bigger picture here is exactly that. The sport is there for everybody, and it’s so cool. It’s a tribute to Meb and Kara and Shalane and others—you have an opportunity to connect back to the masses, and that is really powerful stuff. That’s why I believe in increased broadcasts and publicity and platforms for these athletes.

RAINSBERGER: I work with a youth club. Socioeconomically, it’s in an area that is not doing well, yet there have been several young people over the years who have worked with our program and become runners, now getting full-ride scholarships and assistance to go to college. In my cocoon, there’s no greater day than National Signing Day—that’s my podium now. When the kids in our community go on to get an education through the sport of running, that, to me, is like winning the Boston Marathon. I break down in tears. It’s a great feeling.

The Many Pitfalls of Cycling Fitness

Sometimes feeling too good on the bike can be your undoing

Common sense would have it that the biggest risk you face when cycling is that of injury, whether due to driver inattention, equipment failure, or coyote attack. But there’s another misfortune that can befall you that is in some ways ways equally as debilitating: Succumbing to a condition that is known as “getting fit.”

On the surface of it, this might seem like an absurd comparison. After all, an injury will keep you off your beloved bike, while being fit will allow you to ride that bike even more. However, such facile comparisons fail to account for the insidious nature of fitness, the difficulty in managing it, and the long-term problems both on and off the bike that are commonly associated with it.

Of course, there are cyclists who go out looking for fitness despite all the obvious warning signs (Google “Chris Froome shirtless” for examples of such warning signs), but for many of us, fitness is something we acquire quite by accident. It starts out innocently enough. Maybe you find yourself with some time off work, so you decide to do some binge riding, or maybe you sign up for a big cycling event that takes you a little bit outside your comfort zone, and your endorphins trick you into feeling like you’ve accomplished something. Afterwards, you’re a little more tired than usual, but all it takes is a little recovery ride for the husks to fall off your legs, and you emerge feeling lighter, stronger, and faster than you did before.

The sensation of riding the same distances you used to with less effort is an intoxicating one. It’s in pursuit of this sensation that people do things like buy $2,000 wheelsets and $200 digital tire pressure monitors—and, in certain circumstances, even add motors to their bikes. But while equipment won’t make you any faster (motors excluded), fitness is the real deal. And once you’ve got it, you don’t want to relinquish it. You’ll do anything to keep that buzz going.

First, you increase the time and duration of your rides. Then you start cramming them into holes in your schedule that you never noticed or considered before. If you’re a working person with a family, then sleep is often the first thing to go, because why squander time on one of your most essential and satisfying bodily functions when instead you could be doing pre-dawn hill repeats? Next, paradoxically, you start craving all that expensive equipment you no longer need anyway because you’re fast now. You go buy that $2,000 wheelset despite having already shaving two minutes off your local climb. Your increased training volume also means you’re using up equipment much faster now: you go through chains like you used to go through tires, and tires like you used to go through socks. So while you may in fact be going the same distance with less effort thanks to your fitness, you’re also buying more expensive equipment and using more of it, exponentially reducing the distance that your cycling dollar will go.

The poor judgment born of cycling fitness isn’t just limited to component upgrades either. It will also cause you to fall in with a bad crowd and make poor lifestyle decisions. “Who the hell has time to ride 200 miles in a single weekend?,” you used to wonder as you perused your Strava feed after sleeping in on a Sunday. Well now you do, because you’ve rearranged your life accordingly, which is why you’re out riding with them while the rest of your life happens without you. The rest of the time you’re suffering from a severe bike hangover, which causes you to engage in strange behavior such as driving your car to the gym.

Things really start getting dangerous when you start committing to future events based on the fitness you’re enjoying today. See, usually when you’re drinking and you hatch crazy plans with people based on how good you’re all feeling at that moment, everyone forgets all about it by morning. It’s different with bikes, because even if you do snap out of it and come to your senses, you’ve still got that registration to the Taint Krusher, and after riding 500 miles of gravel across three Midwestern states, you may very well wish you’d merely gotten drunk and woken up with a tattoo on your ass. Sure, arguably the more fit you are, the more fun you’ll have at a cycling event, but people also said you couldn’t appreciate a Grateful Dead show unless you were on acid, and it’s at least worth considering that when an event requires you to be in an altered state in order to enjoy it that it may not fundamentally be very good. A ride can be transcendent no matter how fit you are, and I don’t think anyone’s ever claimed you’ve got to be baked to dig Bach. (Though I do like the alliteration.)

Perhaps most dangerous of all is that, even though your fitness may adversely affect your relationships with your friends, family, and loved ones, it’s unlikely that any of them will ever try to help you. Alas, if your affliction were something simple like a drug problem they’d all get together and stage an intervention. However, there’s still a stigma in our society that pursuing physical fitness is healthy behavior, and so they’ll probably just let you keep doing it—or, worse still, enable you by coming to your events and working the feed zone.

None of this is to say that fitness is totally bad. Hey, some people are able to manage it and lead balanced lives, though they often need all sorts of apps and sensors to be able to do so. Nevertheless, it is crucial to bear in mind the many pitfalls along the way, and if you suspect you may be susceptible to fitness, you may want to consider taking preventative measures such as becoming a retro-grouch and riding only old steel bicycles.

Or you could always throw yourself off your bike and sustain an injury, whatever works for you.

Illustration by Taj Mihelich

Five Ten Resurrects the Five Tennie

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Back in 1985, Charles Cole, founder of the climbing and mountain-biking shoe company Five Ten, launched the brand by essentially inventing the approach-shoe category. It began with the (nearly) eponymous Five Tennie, which Cole made by slapping grippy rubber on the bottom of a tennis-shoe upper. The design quickly became a cult favorite for bridging the gap between climbing and hiking footwear.

Cole went on to develop Stealth, Five Ten’s trademark, über-sticky climbing-shoe rubber, and the company has since grown into a major player. (Cole died earlier this month.) But the Five Tennie dropped out of production in the late eighties, replaced by the Guide Tennie and others. That changes next spring, when Five Ten brings the seminal shoe back.

The new Five Tennie includes a few modern updates, of course, some courtesy of Adidas, which bought Five Ten in 2011. Many of Five Ten’s approach shoes have circular lugs for grip, but the lugs on the rebooted Five Tennie are notched, running widthwise across the outsole to provide traction when scrambling uphill on rock and scree.

Another modern feature: a gusseted tongue. That means it’s attached to the inside of the leather upper, forming a sock-like construction to prevent pebbles and grit from breaching the shoe. And the inside of the upper is buttery soft, ideal for slipping on between sends when you don't want to don socks as well.

Most important, the company corrects a significant flaw in the original Five Tennie—the lack of a women’s version. Five Ten failed to make one in the eighties due to a perceived lack of women climbers and demand. That’s rectified this time around.

After getting a first glimpse of the reboot at Outdoor Retailer this week, we’re excited by the shoe’s return. Approach shoes are a staple in a climber’s kit these days, necessary for hiking to and from the crag and for walking down after a multi-pitch climb. It’s fun to see the original Five Tennie done up with the latest materials and construction. The retro design, with chunky green and blue panels on the upper, only make us want it more. (Both versions come in more subdued black if that’s more to your taste.)

The new Five Tennie goes on sale in February 2019 for $125.

Free Love and Bioterrorism in ‘Wild Wild Country’

The new Netflix docuseries tells a strange-but-true story that’s set in 1980s Oregon but feels especially relevant today

In 1981, thousands of followers of a mystic guru named Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh left India to start a new society based on free expression and free love on a ranch in rural Oregon. One doesn’t need a deep understanding of the American West to guess how that went down with the local ranchers and townspeople in nearby Antelope, Oregon, population 40.

Yet the details of the years-long conflict are so bizarre that one observer commented at the time that people looking back on the saga would consider it too fanciful to be true. The six-part documentary series Wild Wild Country, out March 16 on Netflix, confirms that prediction, telling a twisted story filled with bombings, bioterrorism, and the largest illegal bugging operation ever recorded on U.S. soil—all set against the barren, beautiful backdrop of Wasco County, Oregon. Executive produced by brothers Mark and Jay Duplass and directed by brothers Chapman and Maclain Way, it’s a commendable retelling of a largely forgotten piece of history that feels familiar today. Indeed, many of the series’ themes—religious freedom, xenophobia, fighting for control over land, even voter suppression—make the story disturbingly relevant.

(Netflix)

Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh began attracting followers in Pune, India, in the 1960s. His basic vision involved taking the best parts of Western and Eastern societies and creating a “new man” not weighed down by the baggage of traditional societal norms. This philosophy included but was not limited to sex, but that, naturally, is what attracted the most attention. When the Rajneeshees later became an American obsession, one late-night talk show host asked a follower if they believed in free love. “We don’t charge for it, if that’s what you’re asking,” was the pithy reply.

When tensions with Indian authorities began to mount, the Rajneeshees went looking for a new place to grow. They came up with the Big Muddy Ranch, a 70,000-acre property in Oregon’s gorge country.

Early on in the series, one local recalls seeing an early arrival to the Big Muddy—which was renamed Rajneeshpuram—speaking to just how unaccustomed the area was to other walks of life. “I figured he was not an American. You can spot Europeans by their shoes. They were fashionable leather shoes, not cowboy boots.” And it was downhill from there. The shoes weren’t the only thing different about the Rajneeshees. They dressed only in shades of pink and red and were inclined to spontaneous singing and dancing. Facing pressure from the tiny Antelope City Council over development plans, the Rajneeshees—who numbered 7,000 on the Rajneeshpuram at one point—mobilized to take over the council, which resulted in their taking over the police force as well. This led to a spectacle of pink-shirted officers patrolling the no-stoplight town. There was also a harebrained scheme to sway Wasco County elections by busing in thousands of homeless people from across the country to become voters and an allegation that they tried to poison a reservoir with ground-up beavers. Wild Wild Country has plenty of such light moments that revel in the pure strangeness of the story.

For the most part, though, the story is a sinister one, with nerves raw and violence always in the offing. Following a mysterious bombing at a Rajneeshee apartment complex in Portland, followers at the Rajneeshpuram began hoisting assault rifles for protection. “I don’t believe in ‘turn the other cheek,’” Ma Anand Sheela, who ran the day-to-day on the ranch and rarely missed a chance to call her neighbors “stupid,” told a TV station. A 1984 salmonella outbreak in the Dalles, the largest city in Wasco County, was linked to the Rajneeshees. The same year, several public officials opposed to the group received chocolates laced with the bacteria. In 1985, an armed woman was dispatched to Portland to assassinate a U.S. attorney, a plan that did not come to fruition. And undercover footage from a Rajneeshee compound suggested that the line between “free love” and rape could be a blurry one among followers.

(Netflix)

Belligerent as the Rajneeshees come off, it’s also clear that the Oregonians who fought them had their own prejudices. While opposition to the group was often shrouded in concerns for the environment or infrastructure, it was a thin veneer. “I just don’t like ’em,” one old-timer says matter-of-factly to a camera.

The directors allow both sides plenty of screen time to explain their side of the conflict, using archival footage and retrospective interviews with some central players. Ma Anand Sheela, who sat for interviews with the Ways, emerges as the most compelling character, an unflappable provocateur in the face of rural American conservatism and, later, a pariah of the Rajneeshees. It is Sheela who oversees the largest illegal bugging operation ever, not against the enemies of Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, but against Bhagwan himself (as well as the rest of the compound)—an act of palace intrigue that began the unraveling of the great social experiment on the Big Muddy.

Noticeably absent from the series is Rajneesh, who died in 1990. For years, he stopped speaking to his followers, which only enhanced his standing with them. Many followers sent him their life savings, allowing him to amass a very large collection of Rolls-Royces.

If there is a reasonable explanation for this behavior from Rajneesh’s devotees, the Ways don’t try to explain it. That’s just as well. There’s so much going on here that it verges on overload, with questions raised one moment and dropped the next, such as one of Sheela’s plans to sedate the homeless by slipping drugs into their beer, which passes as a madcap aside. And at just over an hour per episode, Wild Wild Country is not quite bingeable like some other Netflix docs.

What ultimately undid the Rajneeshees was an immigration investigation that uncovered a conspiracy to defraud the green card system. On the verge of a multiagency raid, Bhagwan went on the lam but was caught in North Carolina. The group’s connection to the salmonella outbreaks and assassination plots became public in 1985, leading to the arrest of Sheela—who was by this time in hiding from the Rajneeshees—on charges of attempted murder. By the end of the year, Bhagwan pled guilty and agreed to leave the country. The saga was over.

What’s perhaps most remarkable about all of this, and what inspired the Ways to make the docuseries, is how this episode of conflict slipped into obscurity as soon as it was over. Unlike other controversial sects—Jonestown, the Branch Davidians—the Rajneeshees left Oregon peacefully and faded quickly into history. By the late 1980s, the Big Muddy had fallen into tax delinquency and was seized by the state. It is now a Christian youth camp. The city of Antelope, meanwhile, holds an annual music festival featuring country and gospel music. Presumably, you can still tell an outsider by their shoes.

When Crappy Gear Is OK

A price tag isn’t everything

In 2004, my friend Nick and I went on a 10-day road trip, from Montana to Phoenix, where I was moving after graduate school. I bought a tent on sale from Campmor and a cheap sleeping bag, and the least expensive backpacking stove I could find. Neither of us had camped or hiked all that much prior to the trip, and it was an education. We drove down the west coast, visiting Olympic National Park, Smith Rock, Redwood National Park, Yosemite, Zion, and the Grand Canyon. We hiked in cotton clothing, slept terribly, and didn’t know shit about anything. It was one of the best trips I’ve ever taken, and the crappiest outdoor gear I’ve ever used.

Have you ever heard a couple reminisce about the early years of their marriage or relationship, fondly talking about their first tiny apartment filled with thrift store furniture, and how they barely scraped by, eating ramen noodles, and despite not having anything, managed to fall in love? I think that’s what most of us do in the outdoors, too.

Nick and I hiked to the top of Half Dome, up Angels Landing, and through the Tall Trees Trail. I used the backpack I’d used to carry my notebooks to class for the past couple years in grad school, and carried the one Nalgene water bottle I owned (which I sometimes clipped to the outside of the backpack with a carabiner, as if that made it easier to access than putting it inside the pack itself). I carried a rain jacket that I’d bought at a used gear swap (which turned out to not actually be that waterproof), and instead of a puffy jacket (an expensive luxury I hadn’t even heard of at that point), I covered myself in non-technical layers that I’d bought at thrift stores in Missoula.

I can remember my first “really nice” sleeping bag, a middle-of-the-road down bag that retailed at $199, and my first legit backpacking pack, which was nothing special, but was magical just because it enabled me to spend more than one consecutive night sleeping under the stars (without tying stuff to the outside of my pack!). Now a decade and a half after that, I’m in a little bit better of a financial situation than my recent-college-graduate self, and I’ve owned a few different backpacks, tents, and sleeping bags. And they’ve almost all been great, each one better than the last one, but not quite as memorable as all that crappy stuff I first bought when I had no money and no experience in the outdoors. You will probably always remember the first car you ever owned that was all yours, even if it was a piece of junk. My 1985 Pontiac Sunbird, that I bought for $500 in high school, was ugly, loud, and smelled a little funky, but it represented freedom—the first time I could drive wherever I wanted. My third car? Nicer, but not as special.

Now, I have nothing against quality outdoor gear. I love gear that I don’t have to think about—stuff that does its job, lasts a long time, and doesn’t make my backpack feel like it’s full of sandbags. I don’t miss that first bulky, heavy sleeping bag, or the sale tent with only one door on it, or that janky backpacking stove. But every once in a while, I think about them, because they remind me of the time when everything beyond the trailhead was new—what it might look like, what it might feel like, how I would handle it. Like it or not, experience seems to shrink things, including your sense of wonder, as you check new places off your list and collect photos. Maybe it’s just me, but I think some of the best memories coincide with some of the crappiest gear, and I think we’d all do well to focus more on that state of new, shiny wonder we had back then, and less on new, shiny gear.

But I’m definitely never going back to that not-so-waterproof secondhand rain shell.

Step Up Your Weekday Lunch Game

Steer clear of takeout, snack foods, and grab-and-go sandwiches

When midday hunger hits and you realize you have nothing to eat, it’s easy to turn to an unhealthy option. “All of us do it. You’re grabbing this and grabbing that, and then you end up with poor choices,” says chef Biju Thomas, founder of Denver-based restaurant Little Curry Shop and co-author the athlete-focused Feed Zone cookbooks.

If it’s not a Clif bar or handfuls of office-kitchen freebies, many people default to wraps and sandwiches. While these are portable and filling, they’re also heavy on simple carbs, especially those made using bread without nuts, whole grains, or seeds. That’s fine occasionally, but in the middle of a sedentary workday, the energy spike and subsequent crash can wreak havoc on both your productivity and your fitness. “You want something that’s substantial and filling, but not all bread,” Thomas says. “It’s important to pick things that promote focus and don’t make you sleepy.”

Kelly Bailey Newlon, chef and co-founder of Boulder-based meal service Real Athlete Diets, agrees, adding that your priorities at lunch should be lots of protein for an energy boost and muscle repair, plus fiber to promote digestion and healthy blood-sugar levels.

For lunch ideas that check all those boxes, Thomas and Newlon both suggest a filling twist on the humble salad. You can prep both in advance, and the recipes make large portions, perfect for trying different combos throughout the week.


Warm Curry Roasted Root Vegetable Salad

Rather than just a mound of greens, Thomas says we should start to think of a salad as a hearty pile of roasted vegetables and protein. He tops that with spices and seasonings, rather than a heavy dressing.

Thomas’ go-to lunch recipe is hearty, relatively inexpensive, and versatile. “You can recreate it a million ways,” he says.

Greens

Start with your choice of mixed and/or bitter greens.

Roasted Vegetables

On top of your greens, add any number of roasted vegetables. Anything goes, but Thomas’ favorite medley includes:

  • 2 pounds carrots, washed and cut into 3-inch strips
  • 1/2 red onion, cut into thick strips
  • 6 to 10 garlic cloves, smashed
  • 1 medium sweet potato, cubed
  • 3 to 4 jalapeños, cut into thick chunks
  • 1 small bunch parsley, coarsely chopped

Protein

Pile up your favorite protein. Roasted chicken, smoked turkey, grilled tofu, canned beans, tuna, chopped eggs, or carnitas are all great options.

Seasonings

  • Olive oil
  • 1 tablespoon of your favorite seasonings (Thomas recommends Madras curry.)
  • Salt and pepper
  • 1/2 fresh lemon

Asian-Inspired Grain Bowl

Newlon uses whole grains in her salads for some added fiber and protein to keep her full throughout the afternoon. She also loves toppers that add crunch—some of her favorites are raw vegetables and crisp fruits. She finishes it off with a nut-butter-based dressing.

Grain

1 cup cooked quinoa, rice, noodles, or other grain of your choice

Toppings

  • 1 apple, sliced with peel on
  • 1 avocado, chopped
  • 1/4 cucumber, chopped
  • 4 to 5 leaves each of fresh basil, cilantro, and mint, chopped

Protein

Pick your protein. Newlon suggests tofu, shredded chicken, or shrimp. Opt for six to eight ounces of whatever you choose. The serving should be about the size of your fist.

Dressing

Combine everything below and add to your lunch as needed.

  • 1 tablespoon honey or maple syrup
  • 1 tablespoon peanut butter
  • 1 tablespoon tamari
  • 1/4 teaspoon fresh minced ginger
  • 1/4 teaspoon fresh minced garlic
  • 2 tablespoons fresh lime juice

Here’s Why Athletes Love to Suffer

The effort paradox explains everything from mountain climbing to buying IKEA furniture

When you really think about it, “because it’s there” is not a very satisfying answer. That was the motivation George Mallory famously offered to a New York Times reporter in 1923 before heading off on his tragic third attempt to climb Mount Everest. Of course, Mallory had some reasonable incentives, too—reaching the highest point in the world for the first time, eternal fame, and so on. People who’ve followed in his footsteps also have their reasons. Even today, Everest summiters earn decent bragging rights.
 
But none of that explains why many of us head anonymously into the mountains or run midpack marathons—or, for that matter, do Sudoku puzzles or buy hard-to-assemble Swedish furniture. That’s the riddle that a new paper in Trends in Cognitive Sciences, by University of Toronto psychologist Michael Inzlicht and colleagues from Brown and Carnegie Mellon, explores. According to the prevailing models of cognitive psychology, neuroscience, and economics, we’re wired to minimize effort whenever possible. But sometimes, Inzlicht and his colleagues argue, we value experiences and outcomes precisely because they’re hard, not in spite of that. That difficulty can add value, a surprise they call the effort paradox.
 
The classical view of effort is that “toil and trouble,” as Adam Smith called it in The Wealth of Nations back in 1776, subtracts from the value we assign to things. If you can purchase a coffee table that arrives in pieces with a bag of seemingly mismatched screws and some inscrutable pictographic instructions, or simply buy the same thing preassembled, economic theory predicts that you’ll be willing to pay more for the latter. But studies of the IKEA effect have found that we actually value the coffee table we’ve had to grapple with more highly.
 
Similar motivations seem to underlie much of what we do outdoors. Climbing a peak may offer fresh air and a view, but just getting to the top is rarely the goal for climbers these days. Instead, they seek out challenging routes. Similarly, runners may start out in the sport motivated by the desire to get healthier, but by the time they progress to ultramarathons their underlying goals have shifted. The first 100-miler you run may be fueled by a Mallory-esque inclination to find out what’s on the other side. But the second one is probably fueled by something else. In both climbing and running, beyond a certain level of experience, the effort required seems to be part of the allure.
 
Inzlicht and his colleagues present several frameworks for why this might be. One is cognitive dissonance: if you do something that’s really hard for an outcome that you don’t consider particularly valuable, you suffer an unpleasant disconnect that you assuage by convincing yourself that the outcome was valuable after all. If I worked so hard to get this, I must really like it, you tell yourself. As a result, you end up liking things that require effort.

Interestingly, other species display a fondness for rewards they’ve expended effort to obtain. Rats like food more if they’ve had to work for it. The effect shows up in locusts, too, which suggests that cognitive dissonance isn’t the whole story, since locusts don’t do a whole lot of introspecting about their motivations. Instead, it may be that rewards obtained from difficult tasks seem extra sweet because of the sharp contrast between the unpleasantness of working hard and the joy of achievement.
 
Both of these options assume that what we really value are the fruits of hard effort, rather than the effort itself. But that’s not necessarily the case. The theory of learned industriousness assumes that over time we learn that working hard leads to rewards, so we begin to value the effort itself, like Pavlov’s dogs salivating at the sound of a bell. Or we may simply be hard-wired to derive pleasure from full immersion in challenging tasks, as the notion of flow seems to suggest.
 
The paper doesn’t reach any conclusions about these theories. Instead, its goal is to point out the blind spot in current thinking about motivation, choice, and decision-making: sometimes having to work for something makes it more valuable, not less. And it closes with a series of questions that still need exploration, like why some people are drawn to effort more than others, and whether that trait can be trained or enhanced.
 
For me, Inzlicht’s paper recalls a ten-day hiking trip my wife, Lauren, and I took in 2012, along Tasmania’s rugged South Coast Track. What sets this trail apart from some of the island’s more well-known hiking routes is how absurdly unpleasant it is. The coastline is buffeted by nonstop winds from the Southern Ocean, and it rains 250 days a year. Even in midsummer, we were repeatedly pelted by hail so fierce that we had to take cover. Long stretches of trail disappeared under thigh-deep pools of mud crisscrossed by downed trees and surrounded by impenetrably dense, leech-infested scrub. Lauren and I have done a lot of hiking, sometimes in extremely tough conditions. This was the hardest we’d ever struggled.
 
The question we started to wrestle with after a few days was: Why? Sure, we liked the trail’s remoteness, and the landscape was beautiful in those rare moments when the fog lifted enough for us to see it. But we couldn’t shake the feeling that we’d been drawn to this ordeal precisely because of how grueling we’d heard it would be. I don’t know which of the theories Inzlicht discusses applies here, but I’m glad he’s asking the question—because six years later, that hike remains one of the highlights of my life, for reasons that I’m still not sure how to explain. It’s nice to think that maybe I’m not crazy after all.


My new book, Endure: Mind, Body, and the Curiously Elastic Limits of Human Performance, with a foreword by Malcolm Gladwell, is now available! For more, join me on Twitter and Facebook, and sign up for the Sweat Science e-mail newsletter.

The Arizona Trail Race Gets a New King and Queen

Kaitlyn Boyle smashed the women’s record for the AZT300, while Kurt Refsnider reclaimed the record for the 760-mile AZTR

Despite sizzling conditions, with temperatures in the high 80s, this year saw a slew of fast times at the 760-mile Arizona Trail Race and the shorter AZT300, with new records at both events set on the trail that traverses Arizona from the Mexico to Utah borders.

Headlines belonged to Kaitlyn Boyle, a 30-year-old from Prescott, Arizona, who finished as the first woman and second overall in the AZT300, which covers the first 300 miles of the route, from Parker Canyon Lake, near the Mexico border, to Superior, outside Phoenix. Boyle’s time of two days, two hours, and 57 minutes (50:57) not only lopped more than ten hours off the five-year-old women’s course record—already considered a fast time—but is also the fourth-fastest known time on the course. In all, she outpaced 76 other riders. (The overall winner was four-time race veteran Neil Beltchenko, who finished in one day, 23 hours, and 13 minutes (47:13), the second-fastest time ever recorded. It was an impressive showing after his win in late February at the Iditarod Trail Invitational 350.)

(Courtesy Kaitlyn Boyle)

Simply finishing the AZT300 is a feat in itself, which makes Boyle’s success that much more impressive. The route traverses brutal Sonoran Desert, with razor-sharp plants and rocks that want to slice open tires and skin, all the way to the 9,000-foot top of Mount Lemmon and back down again, making for massive elevation gain and wild weather fluctuations. The event is self-supported, which leads to heavy loads on steep, technical singletrack. Attrition is massive: At the time of writing, with the race still going on, some 45 percent of the field had already quit.

“It feels good to finally achieve what I know I’m capable of,” Boyle says. She has started the AZT four times but finished only once, in 2015, when she covered the course in almost three days. “Kaitlyn’s ride is impressive because of her previous failed attempts,” says Scott Morris, AZT race director, who himself once held the course record. “It’s especially satisfying when someone keeps trying, encounters bad luck, but eventually triumphs.”

Boyle says that in the run-up to the race, she was initially aiming for a sub-60-hour finish. “But I didn’t feel super inspired. When I thought about what would change that, what would motivate me, I realized that I wanted to try to go as fast as the guys go.” Three weeks before the start, Boyle dropped her goal to 48 hours.

Her confidence wasn’t unfounded: Earlier in the season, Boyle set a women’s course record at the 24 Hours in the Old Pueblo, with a time that would have put her third in the men’s race. She’s been racing (and doing well in) ultra-distance mountain bike races since 2012. Boyle was also inspired to set such an ambitious goal for herself by her “ex-turned-best” friend Kurt Refsnider, who holds the record of 45 hours and 7 minutes on the AZT. “Having spent a lot of time with Kurt, who is one of the strongest men out there at this stuff, I realized, yeah, he’s great and he’s talented, and I have learned a lot from him…but he’s not beyond me,” Boyle says.

“I think my ride illustrates the power of a vision,” she says. “You will never do it unless you imagine it.” Boyle also hopes her performance will inspire more women to compete in similar events. “In ultra-endurance sports, where mental strength can override certain physiological factors like power, women are on an equal playing field as men. We just need to believe it and not limit ourselves.”

Boyle also believes she can go faster. “I lost a few hours because I never slept and started falling apart because of it,” she says. “But honestly, my 51 hours is more of a success to me than if I’d had the perfect race in 48. To have had a breakdown late in the race and then come back and finish strong was the real victory.” Boyle says that although she initially didn’t think she would return to the AZT300, now she foresees coming back someday. “Not next year,” she says. “But I think I’ll be back. I can go faster.”

(Courtesy Kurt Refsnider)

Less than two hours after Boyle finished in Superior, her friend and inspiration, Refsnider, came through the Superior finish line in third place, but he didn’t stop long to celebrate. The 36-year-old was leading the full 760-mile Arizona Trail Race (AZTR), which runs concurrently with the 300 but continues on to the Utah border, including crossing Grand Canyon on foot with your bike on your back. Refsnider set the fastest known time on this behemoth during an individual time trial (ITT) in 2010 (Beltchenko bested it in 2016), but he hadn’t been back since. This year, just four days after he congratulated Boyle at the Superior finish of the 300, Refsnider set a new course record on the full course, finishing in an eye-watering six days, six hours, and six minutes (150:06), shaving more than six hours off Beltchenko’s time.

“Both Kurt’s and Kaitlyn’s performances embody the principles that the race was founded on: traveling fast and light in a self-supported manner,” Morris says. “As for Kurt, it’s always nice to see someone put together a flawless ride on what can be such a challenging trail.

To win, Refsnider slept around two hours per night, for a total of just 12 hours during his 150-hour run. He felt strong for the first five days but says the last 30 hours were tough. “After I had a nap north of Flagstaff, I decided I would push all the way to the border, including the canyon, without stopping,” Refsnider says. “It was probably a little audacious.” On his hike out of Grand Canyon, which he tackled overnight, Refsnider began hallucinating river otters and Chinese writing on rocks. Once out of the canyon and national park and falling asleep at the wheel, he stopped for a nap. After four minutes, a raven landed at his side and woke him—Refsnider admits that might have been a hallucination, too—but the brief rest was enough of a reset to carry him the remaining few hours to the border.

(Courtesy Kurt Refsnider)

“It nearly broke me the first time,” Refsnider says of his 2010 ITT. The course was virtually unknown back then, so he had no beta on water and food sources and no times for reference. Twice, he ran out of food. “This was a much more focused ride. More mature,” Refsnider says. “I went hard when I knew I could, but slowed down and was patient when I had to. That was the biggest difference—my mentality. It was the most fun I’ve ever had racing an ultra.”

But it wasn’t enough fun that he’ll return. “Nope, never again,” Refsnider says. “Even if someone comes along and does it faster, I’ll just congratulate them. This was as close to a perfect run as you get. There’s nothing I could ever stand to gain.”

Why We Love the Salomon Ultra Pro

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When Salomon’s S/Lab Ultra ($180) first launched in 2017, we were excited: it was the first amply cushioned trail shoe in the S/Lab family, a collection of minimal kicks designed for the likes of ultrarunner Kilian Jornet. To create the S/Lab Ultra, the French company worked with three-time Ultra-Trail du Mont-Blanc champion and John Muir Trail FKT holder Francois D’haene, whose tall frame begged for more cushioning than Salomon offered at the time.

To address his needs, Salomon gave the S/Lab Ultra 26 millimeters of dual-density EVA foam—a thicker midsole than most of Salomon’s shoes get—with a polyurethane insert to help the shoe retain its cushion instead of packing out after a full day of running. D’haene wore a single pair of the shoes for all 211 miles of his John Muir Trail FKT in 2017. The pricey Ultra quickly became Salomon’s bestselling S/Lab product ever.

Now, though, Salomon has launched a more affordable version for the rest of us, called the Ultra Pro ($150). It has a slightly wider last,more padding around the heel, and a thicker, more durable mesh upper, while it keeps the S/Lab Ultra’s TPU-enhanced midsole, eight-millimeter drop, and external fit wings that maintain snugness while allowing the upper to expand as the foot swells.

As an injury-prone runner who has historically leaned toward soft, maximalist shoes because of their impact-absorbency, I was excited to see what Salomon would bring to the table. After totaling 16 miles in the Ultra Pro, I’ve been consistently surprised by how the shoe marries cushioning and responsiveness in a package that looks slim but delivers the comfort of something fatter. The midsole is bouncy without being stiff, and the eight-millimeter drop is offset by a gentle rocker, which makes for effortless transition from heel to toe and a fun, fluid ride that doesn’t beat up your feet. The external fit wings also help lock in the midfoot, solving problems I’ve had with my feet sliding forward on downhills in other Salomon models.

All you maximal loyalists getting excited thinking Salomon has finally made a shoe for you, take note: the Ultra Pro does not compare to the 32 millimeters of pillowy foam on monster trucks from brands like Hoka and Altra. Instead, it offers comfort while maintaining the agility and increased ground sensitivity of shoes with thinner midsoles. In other words, it’s exactly what a lot of runners have been waiting for.

I have yet to test these shoes on a run longer than six miles, so I can’t speak to their performance and comfort over ultra distances. However, on my first run in the Ultra Pro, I forgot until half a mile in that I was wearing new shoes at all. And that’s the highest compliment I can give.

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