A New World Record - 100x10000 m Mass Relay
     Florida Striders Track
        Club (USA), 77:17:25 hrs, Jacksonville, Florida (USA), 3-6
      Dec 2009
    by Mike Marino
    
    It was a simple question I asked during a Florida Striders board
    meeting. I’d twice been part of a swim relay for a world record, and
    each time it was a lot of fun, so I figured our club could do the
    same
    with running. I didn’t have a specific record in mind and wasn’t
    sure
    of any specifics; I just thought it would be fun. The answer to the
    question was a tentative yes, and with it a massive coordination
    effort
    ensued.
    
    Nine months of e-mails, phone calls, committee meetings, and hours
    upon
    hours of work followed. All kinds of adjustments had to be made
    along
    the way. I initially requested that we set a new record with a 100 x
    5K
    relay in March. I got a response in April stating there was a
    similar
    record already established, a 100 x 10k relay, and we were approved
    to
    do that instead. It was initially just a world record attempt, but
    that
    garnered little interest. So we made it a benefit for The Donna
    Foundation, a charity that provides assistance to women with breast
    cancer. It had to be done on a track. We were rejected four times
    and
    it wasn’t until after the summer break that we would find a school,
    Bishop John J. Snyder High School, willing to let us use their track
    four days. 
    
    Other things would fall into place. Video evidence was required,
    with a
    recommendation to have the entire event professionally filmed. A
    contact through the Donna Foundation worked at Florida State College
    at
    Jacksonville and sold the idea to their media department, so we
    caught
    a huge break there. The film crew could also serve as witnesses, as
    there needed to be two independent witnesses at all times. We would
    still recruit witnesses though, as a way to get more people involved
    and so not to put so much on the film crew. And Bishop Snyder turned
    out to be the perfect fit. They had a brand new rubber track and
    helped
    out however they could, giving us full access to their facilities. 
    
    We got the 100 runners about six weeks before the event and even had
    to
    turn some away, but kept a list of alternates. The runners included
    a
    wide range of folks, some blazing fast, some not so much, eight guys
    in
    their 60’s, and one 10 year old kid whose conditioning coach (yeah,
    you
    read that right) assured me he could complete the 10k in well under
    the
    pace we needed. This list of runners, however, would remain in flux
    up
    until the event. I lost track of the number of changes to the
    runners
    prior to the order being established. And when the preliminary
    running
    order went out two weeks before the event, it had two open slots due
    to
    people dropping out just before the order was announced. The two
    open
    slots were filled and two swaps in the running order were made – it
    was
    a week before the event. Five days before the event and a runner got
    injured, an alternate was called to fill the spot. One more runner
    drops three days before the event, another alternate found to fill
    the
    slot. The day before the event I get a call from Bishop Snyder.
    Inclement weather that night resulted in their soccer game being
    rescheduled to the next night, when two of their kids were scheduled
    to
    run. Two more scheduling swaps made.
    
    The first day of the event, December 3rd, arrived. We were finally
    to
    what we felt would be the easy part of the event, the running. It
    was
    up to each runner to show up and deliver though, as it took all 100
    runners to get the world record, and it took only one runner not
    finishing their 10k for the entire attempt to fail.  
    
    It was a beautiful day, but as with most things with this event, it
    would change. The forecast included a long period of rain, and this
    would be followed by wind and cold. And while everything had been
    planned out as much as it possibly could, we knew something would
    come
    up and that we would just have to deal with it. Was it going to be
    someone not showing up?, would it be the schedule?, would someone
    get
    hurt?
    
    The first runner, Tim Deegan, started at 10:00am. There was
    excitement,
    energy – we were going for a world record. A good number of folks
    came
    out for the start, including students and faculty from Bishop
    Snyder.
    Tim finished his 10k, passing the baton to Kristin Smith. Kristin
    finished her run and gave the baton to CalLee Davenport; CalLee to
    Melissa Saunders, and on and on. By that night though, we were 19
    minutes behind schedule; runners weren’t going as fast as projected.
    This trend would change. Regina Sooey ran over four minutes faster
    than
    expected, George Hoskins ran over three minutes faster than
    projected,
    and others were either right on their projected time or a minute or
    two
    faster. By Friday morning, were within two minutes of the schedule.
    
    
    Intermittent rain began Friday afternoon, but it had no impact on
    us.
    Then things got exciting. Our oldest runner, Paul Smith (68) handed
    the
    baton to our youngest, 10-year-old Carter Bradford. The kid was
    electric on the track. He ran steady, strong. He was undaunted by
    the
    First Coast News cameraman following him around the track, and he
    was
    turning in negative splits. Carter put up a 43:37 and handed the
    baton
    to his mother, Lorna Bradford, a minute ahead of schedule. For the
    first time since the first runner, we were ahead of schedule. This
    trend would continue.
    
    By that evening the rain was steady. It would get heavy at times,
    but
    was pretty much falling straight down. The temperature was in the
    50’s
    and there wasn’t much wind...yet. Just before midnight, in pouring
    rain, we reached the halfway point when our 50th runner, Ryan Sloan,
    finished with a 35:13. The runners Friday night and early Saturday
    morning seemed to embrace the conditions and even enjoy them. The
    rain
    was making life miserable on the film crew though, who couldn’t let
    their equipment get wet. It was tough on the witnesses and
    volunteers
    too, as they had to sit or stand and watch. Our documentation was
    getting wet too, as water was getting through our supposedly
    waterproof
    tent. We kept going though, and runners were going faster than
    projected; we were over twenty minutes ahead of schedule. Our first
    minor scare came when I got a phone call Saturday at about 1:40am:
    “Hey
    Mike, I’m at Bishop Kenny,
    where’s the track?” the caller/runner would ask. Luckily, he was
    there
    well ahead of schedule and there was no traffic to contend with – he
    would make it to Bishop Snyder about
40
    minutes before he was supposed to run.
    
    Then things got nasty. At about 4:40am Saturday, the rain really
    started coming down and with it came gusts of wind. Further, the
    temperature began to drop, going down eight degrees in an hour. Ed
    Kelly was on the track when it started; all he could do was just
    keep
    moving. Then our first real scare came. Kent Northey had to deal
    with
    these conditions for his entire run. The wind had picked up so much
    that it actually took him off stride. This, combined with the
    already
    wet conditions, aggravated a knee issue he had from months before.
    Kent
    fought through it though, and got the baton to the next runner.
    There
    were a few instances of the rain letting up for the next two
    runners,
    Anthony and Kim Iselborn, but they too had to deal with periods of
    heavy rain and wind. And poor Kim, her cute little pink hat was
    either
    falling down in her eyes due to the rain or about to blow off due to
    the wind. 
    
    The rain finally let up and would eventually stop by the middle of
    Saturday morning, but the wind and cooler temperatures remained. It
    was
    actually good running weather, and the runner’s times were showing
    it.
    Through the next fifteen runners, only two runners went slower than
    projected, and each of them was only a minute off their projected
    time,
    whereas others were taking off time in chunks. Rushton Callaghan,
    Ann
    Krause and Ed Higginbotham were four minutes faster than projected,
    and
    Mike Ryan was over six. Other runners were two and three minutes
    faster
    than projected. We had gotten 45 minutes ahead of schedule. Our
    worry
    now was a runner being late, especially during the overnight, so a
    decision was made. Runner #98, Kellie Howard, would run in slot #78
    to
    get us closer to the schedule for runners 79 through 98, and then
    only
    the last two runners would be impacted. The move worked. We were
    back
    within 12 minutes of the runners’ scheduled start times.
    
    Late Saturday night and early Sunday morning was cold with
    temperatures
    in the 30’s and steady wind. The trend of fast running continued,
    though we would get another scare. Runner #82, Tim Dalton, was
    cruising
    at about a six-minute mile pace when he suddenly slowed down with
    about
    three miles to go. He felt something pull near his knee. He resorted
    to
    a shuffle that was getting him around the track; he didn’t want to
    walk
    because he was afraid he would stiffen up. He finished, iced his
    knee,
    took some ibuprofen, cheered other runners on for a while, and left
    the
    track with a stiff legged limp. There was some question with runner
    #86
    too, me. I’d had seven hours of sleep during the then four days of
    the
    event. I guess sleep is overrated – I ran pretty well to everyone’s
    surprise, myself included.
    
    The rest of the way was smooth. By 8:30 am Sunday morning, we were
    on
    runner 93 and I had spoken with all the remaining runners. They were
    all coming, and we even had an alternate, J.J. Porter, at the track
    just in case. We were at a pace to break the record by 12 hours.
    Runner
    by runner, lap by lap, we were getting closer. My instruction to
    runners was, “don’t fall down.” Runner #98, David Kelley, finished
    his
    10k in gritty fashion. Then runner #99, Kim Lundy, was giving the
    baton
    to the final runner, Donna Deegan. By this time, many runners, their
    families, and even some witnesses had come back to see the finish.
    
    The excitement and energy was amazing; you could almost touch it.
    Applause got louder for every lap Donna completed; the excitement
    was
    building. Donna came around to complete lap 24 – ONE LAP TO GO!!
    Just
    about everyone joined Donna for the final lap. Randy Arend and I
    held a
    pink ribbon to mark the finish. As Donna came down the final
    straight
    away, everyone was cheering, a cowbell was ringing, an air horn was
    blowing, and then Donna broke through the ribbon. Finally, 77 hours,
    17
    minutes and 25 seconds after we started running, and about nine
    months
    after we started planning the event, we had done it.
    
    Rousing applause, a bunch of high fives, some hugs, and a
    presentation
    of a check to Donna for the over $6000 we had raised followed. For
    many
    people there, it was a moment they may never forget. 
    
    Our work wasn’t over though. Now all the documentation had to be put
    together, the film had to be edited down to an hour, we had to
    gather
    media clips and articles of the event; all of which has to be
    submitted
    for verification of the record. We did something incredible though.
    A
    team of 100 runners, 50 witnesses, 12 film crew members, and many
    volunteers came together for a single purpose. Many folks made
    friends
    in the process, we raised money for a great cause, and, if approved,
    we
    did what we initially set out to do – set a new world record. 
    
     Thanks to everyone who supported the World Record Event at
    Bishop
    Snyder High School. The runners, witnesses, film crew and volunteers
    –
    everyone was instrumental in the success of the event. Special
    thanks
    as well to all the committee members, who all put in several hours
    of
    work and had many ideas that were utilized and made the event
    possible.
    Randy Arend handled all the
    entry forms, many of the donations, the insurance, and spent several
    hours at the track ensuring all event and witness documentation was
    completed. Kellie Howard
    also
    spent a lot of time at the track completing event documentation and
    ensuring witnesses completed their statements. Regina Sooey recruited just
    about
    every witness and coordinated the witness schedule. Keith Poythress dealt with (and
    is
    still dealing with) the shirts and made our lap counter. Sarah Horn from the Donna
    Foundation
    was key in setting up their website for donations and initiated the
    contact that resulted in Florida State College at Jacksonville
    filming
    the event (this was huge). Dave
      Bokros
    got us the time machines used for the event from First Place Sports
    and
    was helpful in many ways during the event. And finally, Nate Stanley, Lou Pereira and
    everyone else we came into contact with from Bishop Snyder High
    School
    were so helpful. They basically gave us full access to their track
    and
    facilities not only for the event, but also for five “practices”
    leading up to the event. They also gave us access to a golf cart and
    one of the most popular items of the event, the cowbell that we
    banged
    and clanged every time a runner had one lap remaining. 
    
    The event was a unique and exciting experience, and while it was a
    lot
    of work, it was also a whole lot of fun. Thanks so much everyone. 
    
    
    
    
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