ukathleticscoach wrote:
Moo Goo wrote:Can anyone verify any of the PRs on his Wiki page?
See power of 10 for the actual pr's
The Power of 10 doesn't cover all races by any means so that's no way to check any pbs
ukathleticscoach wrote:
Moo Goo wrote:Can anyone verify any of the PRs on his Wiki page?
See power of 10 for the actual pr's
The Power of 10 doesn't cover all races by any means so that's no way to check any pbs
I reached out to the SI.com writer, Brion O'Connor. He emailed me back.
Thank you, Dave. I am looking into this, and may get back to you ...
Best,
-B
Brion O'Connor
Writer & editor
The Scot wrote:
Brilliant story, thanks for the OP for picking this up. If I was running across America I'd have a GPS on each limb for data redundancy, and it'd be going up on Strava regularly as I went along. Imagine all that Kudos!
I'd ask people to make really slow segments in front of me so I could rack up all the CRs!
Are you saying you think they confirm his previous performances? The results there are different to the one now used (3rd at world long champs) - and it seems hard to find any further details of any of those races.
Anyone had more luck finding historical age group world champs results?
TroLLminator wrote:
1 2 3 green wrote:Robert Young is not the first to employ this strategy. We have seen runners using bikes, bikers using cars, drivers using planes, pilots using spaceships, etc. etc. Robert simply skipped a step and went from running to driving.
Ever heard of Mile Rossi?
or Ffyona Campbell
http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/at-last-ffyona-becomes-human-1350732.htmlCoachKev wrote:
Thank you for those two links the are perfect
This thread is following a very similar pattern to the other cheat/fraud threads:
1. A cheater is exposed, and in the first 24 hours LR sleuths do intensive research and verify the cheating.
2. Said cheater scrambles to lock down or alter social media due to extra scruitiny.
3. The cheater starts posting defenses of the him/herself in 3rd person on the web. Mike Rossi tried this early in his thread, so did Kip Litton. The beach race director in San Diego (Ahole elites) tried it, although that was not actually cheating, per se.
4. Cheater doubles down with denials and may threaten lawsuits: Rossi, Parveneh Moyedi, and this thread. Probably others.
5. Momentum gathers on LR, spreads to other sites and news outlets, and the mockery and ridicule goes into high gear.
CoachKev, I'll bet you any amount of money you want to risk that you are either this Robert Young guy, or someone in his rv.
That's entertainment!
You can find all the results for World Championships involving Triathlon via the search feature near the bottom of the page
A simple civil question.
Since supporters of Mr. Young are posting here and possibly members of the support team I ask- the actual team ---
Please tell us what happened during the time period Mr. Delmott references. A copy of your activity log and the supporting electronic data from the tracker would be a good start.
Explaining why Mr. Young was not in Mr. Delmotts view will be a good first step.
Simply put give me (us) a convincing narrative of Mr. Youngs activity and location in reference to the tracking device during the time period in question.
Also clarify if the published tracking data is for the support RV activity or Mr. Youngs actual activity.
Thank you
Tom Hyland
Here we go again?I promise not to let this fester for months on end like I did with Mike Rossi. I will act on it quickly. A few questions.1) How far is this guy trying to run? How many miles in how many days? What pace does that average out to and why is that theoretically possible? I'm not familiar with multi-day races so give me some info like the credentials of the people who have held the record in the past.2) What type of data is he posting?3) Couldn't me and a buddy prove this in the span of 24-48 hours? Wh would it entail anything besides us getting a bike, throwing it in a car and riding next to these guy for 48 hours. My buddy is a school teacher and is free. Maybe we'd need a third person. One rides the bike, one drives the car and one sleeps.4) How much time is left in this journey? I'd rather not have to drive out to middle America right now to prove this. Can I wait until NCAAs are over? Or are there any college kids near the route that want me to pay them to do it. It might be fun.
LRC to the Rescue. wrote:
I think , LRC should buy him the all tech gear and offer him 100k if he starts over and is on record pace for 1/4 of the way across the country! We could network to run every step with him!
I think I should wait until the Rossi challenge ends before I make any offers.
ROJO - CHIMED IN!!! WOOT WOOT
OK - so I may be up for a road trip to see if this nozzle is really doing what he says he is doing. I am up for 50-100 miles on a bike to keep him company...I say bike because if he is TRULY running sub 7 min pace each day (or) night, that is faster than I can run right now. On a bike, I am good to go.
Anyone else up for a road trip?
Per his Run Time Table on the web site - I am thinking June 16, 17, 18 - but per his pace and current location, that may have to be moved up since it appears he is way ahead of schedule.
I think the Flash couldn't beat this guy in a race.....
rojo wrote: My buddy is a school teacher and is free. Maybe we'd need a third person. One rides the bike, one drives the car and one sleeps.
I gladly be the one to sleep thru all this proposed verification activity.
There is a crowd-funded effort underway to have a team of very credentialed veteran ultrarunners (who both also write about the sport) shadow the guy for upwards of a week.
Re: your questions,
1. He is attempting to break a cross-continent record of approximately 46 days. His route must be (I believe) at least 2800 miles). It is theoretically possible for someone who is one of the best multiday runners in history to average ~70 miles/day for that long. It has been done very recently in the 3100-mile Self Transcendence race in NYC (a very well-monitored venue on a short-loop course). It has not been done often (not even close).
2. He is posting GPS positions at approx. 12-minute intervals from a tracker his team has said is being carried in his support RV.
3. Yes. See above. I think there is no need.
4. He is a little over halfway through. No hurry and, again, it is already covered.
Some of us have to work and my job is not to continually post on this forum, I apologise for my lack of urgency in addressing the many issues.
here are some responses for many of you
Tracker is on the RV as explained earlier for people to find Rob, I'm not there so cannot comment if he could put it on his body or if there is even a tracker that could do this.
Hr watch is fine but batteries run out and chafing from a strap would drive you crazy after a few days. This will sound like an excuse to many of you but it's a reality. Anyone who has done a 100 miler will testify how even the smallest irritant can ruin your race and HR straps chafe like hell after a while with sweat etc getting worse on the body.
Watches are fine but you have the same issues with charging, accuracy and as far as I am aware there is no GPS watch that will continuously record for more than 12 hours with accuracy. Therefore Rob would have to have loads of watches and keep charging and swopping them. He may well be doing this and it is a question I will ask.
No matter what any of you say there are internet and wifi issues across the country like there are in many countries. Again this is a reality and not an excuse.
Rob won the race across America last year and I would have thought that would have been good enough for most of you to see his pedigree as it was in your back yard and not some tinpot race like we have in the UK.
Complete video coverage is practically impossible in my opinion as you would need a separate crew for this alone. I do know the majority of the run has been recorded on film, and I believe all of it on GPS but I will get full clarification on this later today. You also have the footage from your TV channels mentioned earlier.
I have no idea who Kev McE is and it's not me before you get that impression.
Rob is both an abused child and a gifted athlete.
My website which has some old articles on my run with Rob and other success and my DNF's are covered here but I haven't written for a while so please don't go mad at me for that as I have been busy coaching other runners to achieve their goals.
http://ultrakev.blogspot.co.uk/
I will upload some videos of one of the run's I did with Rob when he ran 373 miles without sleep and it has some of the footage of my watch recording him doing sub 7 min pace. I will post here when I have worked out how to get this from my phone to youtube.
I have run numerous ultras in the UK and abroad up to 100 miles. I have two DNF's as well the TP100 which I dropped at mile 94 and the TDS where I dropped at the 90k point. The TDS is the rough mountain ultra that is part of UTMB in Chamonix. I returned and finished the CCC the year after. My fastest 100 mile is 24.08 and my fastest 5k is 21.09.
I am a former IM triathlete who got fed up with being ripped off and have 4 IM finished to my name. I started running in 2006 after 20 years of no exercise and was fat. I now teach others to not make the same mistakes as I did when it comes to running. I'm still fat as I drink too much wine.
This is not about me though and I am only giving you this information to satisfy those who have asked.
I am waiting for clarification from British Triathlon and will post when I have answers.
In the meantime I encourage you to run with Rob or get others to run with him once again.
I have no affiliation with him or his sponsors, I am just a runner who doesn't like to see awful things being written about someone who in my experience is genuine. I have run long distances with this man and I for one know that he is the real deal.
Maybe if you ran with him you would experience that too
[quote]rojo wrote:
Or are there any college kids near the route that want me to pay them to do it. It might be fun.[quote]
If he goes through Ohio at the right time, I will definitely go ride a bike for as long as my schedule permits.
CoachKev wrote:
here are some responses for many of you
Oh my, where to begin.
I'm afraid I am genuine and not Rob or any of his team. I'm just a runner who coaches a little.
What sort of evidence would you like or would you prefer to lose money. Now that would be great entertainment for me!
By the way anyone interested in Rob's specific tracker data for analysis, you can download an up-to-date KML file directly from:
http://live.opentracking.co.uk/robxamerica/data/route/team1.kml?i=837866
What I have been using was the KML data processed into distances between lat/lon points - which yields a lower distance and speed than actuality since it is not including all curves/turns in calculating the distances. So all the splits I posted are straightline best-case-scenario distances... the actual speed of travel would have to be a bit higher than the tracker points would indicate to account for curves/turns getting cut off in the tracker points.
CoachKev wrote:
I'm afraid I am genuine and not Rob or any of his team. I'm just a runner who coaches a little.
What sort of evidence would you like or would you prefer to lose money. Now that would be great entertainment for me!
You claimed he was a domestique for a pro cycling team. Name the team and provide evidence.
CoachKev, I'm sorry but all that did was muddy the waters even further. You are saying that having multiple GPS watches to charge is a hassle, given that they are trying to set a world record? And all your account of him running the "375 miles with no sleep" shows is that you ran with him for 24 ish miles, and at one point you were running 7 minute pace. If you were going for a record like that, why would he not have someone record every step of it? Obvious stuff here. And we all know the answer.
Rob Young's book is on amazon.co.uk and you can read quite a few of the opening parts for free at:
Rob's first day of marathon running was quite a doozy. Below are his claims in his book.
Sunday, April 13, 2014 - Watched London Marathon. Enamored by the 40,000 runners behind the elites. Observed that £53 million was raised for charity. Made crazy 20p bet he could run 50 marathons. "I was just a 31-year-old office worker who hadn't run his first marathon yet." Briefly mentions that he had been a pro cyclist (no team or details mentioned), and later mentions he "was a triathlete for Great Britain." He claims he was decent at swimming and fast at biking and had to build a big lead "because my running was awful. I was slow: Mr Plod, Dr Dawdle." That day he researched online about marathon frequency records (Larry Macon's 157 and 239; Richard Abad 366).
Monday, April 14, 2014:
3:30 AM - Alarm goes off and wakes up. Bikes 20 minutes over to Richmond Park.
4:15 AM - Starts running 26.2 miles in Richmond Park. Claims to have finished in 4:07.
8:30ish AM - Changed into his work clothes in the park before biking off to Richmond to catch the train to work. "I was tired and hungry, but still felt fresh. . . . I thought I might have to run quicker or get up earlier in [the] future as I was going to be late. . . ." ". . . In fact, I felt so happy about what I'd done that morning that I began to develop a new plan: maybe I should run another one after work? . . ."
5:30ish PM - Left work and took the train back to Richmond. Biked to the park. Guzzled Lucozade and a can of Red Bull. Starts running a second marathon.
9:00ish PM - Finished his second marathon of the day. Claims to have "finished in 3 hours 28 minutes - a personal best and still there was no 'wall' to climb over."
11:00 PM - Arrives home.
Tuesday, April 15, 2014:
3:30 AM - Alarm goes off and wakes up. Has a couple of small blisters on right foot. Legs felt tired, but that was the new normal.
Ran another marathon in another personal best, 3:19.
Wednesday, April 16, 2014:
Another marathon.
Thursday, April 17, 2014:
Ran two marathons, before and after work.
Friday, April 18, 2014:
Another marathon.
Saturday, April 19, 2014:
Another marathon.
Sunday, April 20, 2014:
Two more marathons.
So in summary, Rob claims to have become an instant marathoner. Not only does he claim to run his first three marathons ever all within a 30-hour period of time which included less than 4 hours sleep, but he got progressively FASTER as he did so: 4:07, 3:28, 3:19.
Now for non-runners, this might not seem implausible. But for anyone remotely associated with running, this is not possible. Remember, this claim is more than running his first marathon on no training (something that is not really impossible), but repeating it TWICE and FASTER each time within 24 hours after completing his first.
Rob claims he was not a distance runner, and yet he ran 78 miles within 30 hours and got progressively faster, all on a whim without any training or any previous long-distance running experience.