Ok so unlike the rest of you weirdos, I read the article. Here is his charity.
“McKee is running for Macmillan Cancer Support and Hospice in West Cumbria, which supported his father through a cancer diagnosis in 1997. His father fully recovered from cancer but died from an unrelated illness in 2005.”
The good old going from one extreme to the other. It’s not the vice, it’s him. It shouldn’t be celebrated that he kicked one bad addiction because he apparently needs to anything beyond reason. Hiding from what?
The good old going from one extreme to the other. It’s not the vice, it’s him. It shouldn’t be celebrated that he kicked one bad addiction because he apparently needs to anything beyond reason. Hiding from what?
Also in the article is that he ran over 100 “marathons” in 2021, so the extreme running isn’t exactly new. Who knows how much he was drinking. Possibly not all that much.
The guy averaged at least 182 miles per week all year and ran a total of 9,400 miles. I don't care if you are hobbling at 12-minute miles that is still an impressive accomplishment. Even when I was in 29:00 10,000m shape you would not get me motivated enough to even hit 15 miles a day let alone 26.
Ok so unlike the rest of you weirdos, I read the article. Here is his charity.
“McKee is running for Macmillan Cancer Support and Hospice in West Cumbria, which supported his father through a cancer diagnosis in 1997. His father fully recovered from cancer but died from an unrelated illness in 2005.”
Seems worthy.
Moral of the story: you raise JUST $2M for cancer support, you're a loser and we need a more clear definition of "marathon"
GARY McKee is less than 100 miles from running the equivalent of Cumbria to Kalgoorlie by completing a marathon every day this year. Not bad for a man who has been carrying a hamstring in…
Pre-Covid, there have been organised marathon events in the UK on every day throughout the year, including Xmas day. A lot have very small fields, but the 100 Marathon Club is quite popular over here, with a handful of race organisers putting on multiple events a year, including things like 4-in-4, 7-in-7, 10-in-10, etc.