Mike Wardian became extremely familiar with the Ƶapptrails this weekend.
The Washington, D.C. resident spent almost 14 hours on the rocks, dirt and grass of Ƶappand was the first runner to ever complete the 50/50 at the third annual Ƶapp50 on Saturday, Aug. 16 and Sunday, Aug. 17.
Wardian placed ninth on Saturday’s 50-mile race and then returned to the trails the next day for the 50-kilometre run. His combined time of 13:45:10 was the best amongst the 85 brave souls who took on the 50/50 challenge.
“I’m feeling so good,” he said at the finish line on Sunday. “I thought yesterday [Saturday] was a lot tougher because I didn’t know what the trails were like. The first half of yesterday I was so scared on every descent, but today I was more comfortable. Yesterday I was crab walking a lot of the descents, but today I was able to kind of run it and it felt really good – I’m pleased with how my body responded.”
Running long distances on back-to-back days is nothing new for Wardian, who said in November he competed in a marathon in San Antonio in the morning and ran at a marathon in Las Vegas six hours later.
“I’m fortunate because I bounce back really quick,” he said. “I love this kind of stuff, the more races the better. Something like stage racing I get stronger each day, I’m good at it and I was able to take advantage of it today.”
The accomplished runner has competed everywhere from Ethiopia to the North Pole in 2014, but said Ƶappis now up there for one of his favourite spots.
“This is one of the sweetest places I’ve ever run,” he said. “I think this is one of the premier race events in the world. I get to go to a lot of places and I’d love to experience this again – there’s nothing like it.”
Wardian edged out Colin Miller for the 50/50 crown. Miller placed sixth overall on both days.
“My goal was to run yesterday as fast as I could and then deal with today,” he said on Sunday. “It took a while to get into it today, but I found my stride.”
Michael Versteeg, competing in his first back-to-back run of this magnitude finished third.
“It was tough,” he said on Sunday. “I don’t normally do two days in a row, but it was an opportunity for me to try it and I’m really happy. It took the first 25 kilometres for my body to get over what I was asking of it.”
For the women, it was Kathy McKay on top. McKay beat out the second place runner Vicki Romanin by over two hours and said it was a long, but rewarding couple of days on the trails.
“I think my body composition is about 90 per cent gel,” she joked at the finish line on Sunday. “It was awesome, I felt a lot better today than yesterday. The first hour really sucked, but it sucked a lot less after that.”
For more details on the race, visit www.squamish50.com.