joecrunner wrote:
"Oleg Kharitonov ran 100 miles in 11:28:03 in a 100 mile track race in 2002. That's an average of 6:53 pace, which means he essentially did four marathons in a row at an average of 3:00:16.
What's crazy is that this race actually came down to the wire. Another runner, Denis Jalybin, also wanted the record and was a full four laps ahead of Kharitonov with just seven miles to go. Kharitonov somehow picked up his pace and passed Jalybin at the end of the 402nd lap--with literally 135 meters left in the race. That's equivalent to catching someone in the last 4 feet (1.3 meters) of a mile race or the last 3 inches (8 centimeters) of a 100 meter dash. A defeated and exhausted Jalybin broke down and took a full 2 minutes to cover the last 135 meters while Kharitonov celebrated his new record.
Here's the full suite of 100 mile world records:
Men's road running: 11:46:37 by Yannis Kouros (GRE)
Men's track: 11:28:03 by Oleg Kharitonov (RUS)
Women's road running: 13:47:41 by Ann Trason (USA)
Women's track: 14:25:45 by Edit Berces (HUN)"
https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-fastest-time-anyone-has-run-a-100-mile-foot-race
Kouros' 100mi road record was a *split* in a longer race. Off hand I don't have the details, but it was at least 24hrs.
The Women's track (and now absolute) WR is now held by Gina Slaby from Dec '16 at Desert Solstice. 13:45:49.
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Just to add in some other relevant WRs.
-The 50 mile WR (roads) is 4:50:51, run at the AMJA 50 mile in Chicago (race no longer exists).
-The 100 km WR (track) is 6:10:20, run by Don Ritchie, and is the oldest record in track and field. He split 50 km in that race under 3 hours and was in 3rd or 4th place at that split.