Oakville, Ont. native Matthew Munro grew to become the youngest individual to complete the Sulphur Springs 100-mile path race in Ancaster, Ont. on Might 28, 2023, on the age of 19–however he wasn’t fairly glad. On Aug. 9, Munro, now 20, moved as much as 200 miles, toeing the road on the Bigfoot 200-miler in Washington state. Crossing the road on Aug. 13 after 93 hours, 37 minutes and 44 seconds, he grew to become the youngest Canadian ultrarunner to finish a 200-mile race.
The 333-km course traverses via the Cascade Mountain Vary in Washington state, and contains 13,887 m of elevation achieve and 14,289m of loss. Alongside the route are six sleep and 13 support stations with scorching meals, medical and crew entry.
Munro admits that the toughest half in regards to the race was realizing he’d be on the market on the course for days–he didn’t really feel mentally ready for the gruelling expertise. “I used to be starting to lose my thoughts at 70 miles in–I couldn’t grasp that I wasn’t even midway completed but,” he says. He notes that the members of his crew motivated him via that first tough patch.
By the 150-mile mark, the Canadian reveals that he needed to give up. “I felt like a zombie. I may barely discuss or stand; I didn’t have sufficient energy,” Munro says. “I couldn’t determine if I ought to proceed to undergo, or if I ought to drop out and possibly remorse it for the remainder of my life. I considered all of my coaching and the sacrifices I made–it was a really emotional second.” After an influence nap and a snack, he continued trudging alongside the path to finish the ultimate quarter of the race.
Munro took 111th place in a subject of 219 racers (84 of whom didn’t end), changing into the youngest Canadian and third-youngest individual ever to finish the Bigfoot 200 mile.
19-year-old Ontario runner turns into youngest finisher at Sulphur Springs 100 miler
Munro says the chances of him taking over one other 200-miler are good, since he now is aware of that he can do it bodily and is aware of what he’ll need to struggle via mentally. “I do know I may’ve run that race so much quicker,” he says. “I even hope to be on the rostrum in the future.”