Dubai Telegraph - Courtney Dauwalter: No loneliness for the long-distance runner

EUR -
AED 3.85008
AFN 70.757963
ALL 97.955404
AMD 407.104681
ANG 1.883645
AOA 955.969707
ARS 1055.802012
AUD 1.622193
AWG 1.889403
AZN 1.795578
BAM 1.944323
BBD 2.110193
BDT 124.892774
BGN 1.955857
BHD 0.39511
BIF 3034.57529
BMD 1.048213
BND 1.407266
BOB 7.222504
BRL 6.089167
BSD 1.045101
BTN 88.097292
BWP 14.259102
BYN 3.420345
BYR 20544.965697
BZD 2.106784
CAD 1.47451
CDF 3009.418434
CHF 0.929796
CLF 0.037132
CLP 1024.596131
CNY 7.60169
CNH 7.608708
COP 4616.044989
CRC 534.032391
CUC 1.048213
CUP 27.777632
CVE 110.76984
CZK 25.268843
DJF 186.288527
DKK 7.459075
DOP 63.415504
DZD 140.067679
EGP 52.017374
ERN 15.723188
ETB 129.401876
FJD 2.388908
FKP 0.827372
GBP 0.83466
GEL 2.861414
GGP 0.827372
GHS 16.453302
GIP 0.827372
GMD 74.423426
GNF 9046.074154
GTQ 8.066232
GYD 218.655135
HKD 8.158144
HNL 26.44113
HRK 7.477172
HTG 137.169651
HUF 410.352674
IDR 16691.264721
ILS 3.821086
IMP 0.827372
INR 88.380983
IQD 1373.682528
IRR 44116.647041
ISK 145.103979
JEP 0.827372
JMD 165.035815
JOD 0.743499
JPY 160.493397
KES 135.757471
KGS 90.98635
KHR 4245.260573
KMF 491.559061
KPW 943.390885
KRW 1465.359179
KWD 0.322525
KYD 0.870975
KZT 521.849631
LAK 23023.988297
LBP 93867.432577
LKR 304.347668
LRD 188.494832
LSL 18.909527
LTL 3.095099
LVL 0.634053
LYD 5.130966
MAD 10.517234
MDL 19.100616
MGA 4904.58649
MKD 61.561577
MMK 3404.553427
MNT 3561.82614
MOP 8.377707
MRU 41.839417
MUR 49.600955
MVR 16.195214
MWK 1819.697389
MXN 21.680515
MYR 4.672411
MZN 66.977539
NAD 18.909354
NGN 1773.858758
NIO 38.531971
NOK 11.715311
NPR 140.95527
NZD 1.798596
OMR 0.403563
PAB 1.045141
PEN 3.960409
PGK 4.161423
PHP 61.751234
PKR 291.141349
PLN 4.304378
PYG 8156.011724
QAR 3.816127
RON 4.976889
RSD 116.999422
RUB 110.5659
RWF 1437.099386
SAR 3.938271
SBD 8.795122
SCR 14.25517
SDG 630.494166
SEK 11.524352
SGD 1.412115
SHP 0.827372
SLE 23.795332
SLL 21980.497729
SOS 599.044422
SRD 37.111943
STD 21695.883154
SVC 9.145018
SYP 2633.665293
SZL 18.91016
THB 36.392893
TJS 11.167586
TMT 3.679226
TND 3.319951
TOP 2.45502
TRY 36.315528
TTD 7.106121
TWD 34.062192
TZS 2772.522521
UAH 43.425167
UGX 3872.179958
USD 1.048213
UYU 44.537103
UZS 13448.566691
VES 48.943826
VND 26640.321592
VUV 124.445899
WST 2.926181
XAF 652.120061
XAG 0.03439
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.832847
XDR 0.799466
XOF 657.751906
XPF 119.331742
YER 261.97454
ZAR 19.055964
ZMK 9435.181668
ZMW 28.820153
ZWL 337.524009
  • SCS

    -0.1800

    13.54

    -1.33%

  • CMSC

    -0.1600

    24.57

    -0.65%

  • AZN

    -0.0400

    66.36

    -0.06%

  • BCC

    -4.0900

    148.41

    -2.76%

  • GSK

    -0.1300

    34.02

    -0.38%

  • NGG

    -0.4300

    62.83

    -0.68%

  • BCE

    -0.3900

    26.63

    -1.46%

  • BTI

    0.3800

    37.71

    +1.01%

  • RIO

    -0.9500

    62.03

    -1.53%

  • BP

    -0.3600

    28.96

    -1.24%

  • RBGPF

    0.8100

    61

    +1.33%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    24.43

    -0.61%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    6.8

    +0.44%

  • JRI

    -0.1300

    13.24

    -0.98%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    8.86

    -0.56%

  • RELX

    0.2400

    46.81

    +0.51%

Courtney Dauwalter: No loneliness for the long-distance runner
Courtney Dauwalter: No loneliness for the long-distance runner / Photo: CHANDAN KHANNA - AFP

Courtney Dauwalter: No loneliness for the long-distance runner

Some time during a 200-mile race, maybe when she has been awake all night, ultra runner Courtney Dauwalter will probably start hallucinating.

Text size:

It could be a leopard in a hammock, a cowboy twirling a lasso, or hundreds of white kittens on the trail.

"I'll make some friends out there," she laughs.

Dauwalter sits at the apex of an elite group of ultra runners -- people who run 50, 100 or 200 miles (322 kilometers) in one go.

Wearing over-sized shorts and a huge smile, she burst onto the scene around a decade ago, and was soon leaving competitors -- including men -- for dust, knocking hours off course records.

And always with boundless enthusiasm.

"I love it for so many reasons," she says. "I love it for exploring. I love going somewhere you've never been, and running the trails there and not knowing what's around the corner, or what the summit will look like, or how you'll get there."

- Pizza and burgers -

Dauwalter is something of a contradiction: she's the best female ultra runner on the planet, and is worshipped in the extreme running community as something akin to superhuman.

But she's nothing like an elite athlete is supposed to be.

She doesn't have a coach -- "I prefer to just play around with the puzzle pieces myself" -- doesn't follow a strict diet -- she'll eat pizzas, burgers and candies -- and wears baggy basketball-style shorts because, well, they're comfortable.

Her training regime is dictated not by performance markers and down-to-the-millisecond metrics, but by how she feels when she wakes up.

"There's no set plan, no schedule; that way I can see how my body feels, see how my brain feels, see where I'm at emotionally, and that'll determine if I push, or have a more chill day."

But -- eat your heart out, Tom Brady -- it works.

The last few years have seen her notch female first places in top-ranking races around the globe, including February's 128-kilometer Transgrancanaria, which she did in less than 15 hours.

She also holds the female record for the brutal Big Dog Backyard Ultra, a last-man-standing run in Tennessee, where there is no finish line, just an endless 4.167-mile loop every hour.

In 2020, Dauwalter ran it a staggering 68 times -- almost three days in which she clocked over 283 miles.

(The winner's purse is around $1.60. Second place gets the dubious honour of having "Did Not Finish" written next to their name in the record book.)

- Puddle -

Now 38, success in the running world came relatively late.

Dauwalter was in her mid-20s before she tried her first marathon.

"I was so scared that 26 miles would shatter my legs and I'd be a puddle on the side of the road.

"And so when I didn't die, and my legs didn't shatter, then it just made me wonder what else was out there."

Which led to ultras.

"It blew my mind. Everyone was just out there to have an adventure. And then you'd come up to these aid stations, and they'd have all these snacks, so we're just filling our pockets with jelly beans. And I was like: 'This sport is so cool.'

"Afterwards, everyone just hangs out and shares stories from their day. No one cares what place you were or your pace or your time."

In 2017, with a series of high-profile successes under her belt, Dauwalter gave up her teaching job, and began running professionally.

Sponsorship now allows her to jet around the globe, taking part in some of the world's most prestigious ultra marathons in breathtakingly beautiful places.

- Pain cave -

As she breezes through the thin mountain air on snow-spattered trails around her home in Leadville, Colorado, Dauwalter keeps up a cheerful chatter that makes her running look easy.

She insists it's not.

"I think in these 100 mile or 200 mile races, it feels more like a roller coaster, where you don't know exactly when those really hard moments are going to come.

"You try to just kind of buckle in and ride it and wait for the low moments to pass and keep problem solving."

Those problems could be as easy-to-fix as needing more calories. But if it gets really hard, she'll enter "the pain cave."

"It's this image that I've created in my brain of an actual cave, where I'll go in with a chisel and work to make that cave bigger.

"Every time I race, I want to get there... because it's where the work actually happens."

Still, even with her astonishing mind-over-matter toughness, there are inevitably some hairy moments when you have to stay awake and run for two days.

Like that time she almost completely lost her sight 12 miles from the finish.

She kept going, though it was hardly graceful as she stumbled over the rocks and roots.

"I was belly-flopping all over the place," she said. Fortunately, it was a trail she knew fairly well, so she felt confident she wasn't going to plunge over the edge of a cliff.

Was that frightening? "It was... less than ideal," she laughs.

- Brain -

Ultra running is a rare sport in which men and women compete on a level playing field, especially at the really long distances.

For Dauwalter that's because running 200 miles is less about the size of your quads, or your lung capacity, and more about your ability to stay awake, maintain your focus, or even just not throw up your food.

While to the outsider, the sport seems like an impossible physical feat, she insists it's much more mental.

"What I've learned over the years of doing these is how strong our brains are and how, in those moments where our bodies want to tap out, our brains can actually help us continue pushing forward."

It's hard not to be charmed by Dauwalter's irrepressible enthusiasm, by her infectious belief that if a gangly former science teacher can become a world-beating professional athlete who eats jelly beans and wears too-big shorts, we could probably all achieve a bit more.

You don't have to stay awake for days, or run 200 miles (though she thinks you probably could if you wanted to). But she really wants you to give her sport a try.

"It's running trails with friends, trading stories, and not knowing what's around the next corner. It's being surprised by the views, and at the end being surprised by what you were able to do."

I.Viswanathan--DT