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There’s a Six-Day Ultramarathon Happening Inside a Speed Skating Rink

Runners have been logging miles around a 443-meter running track all week. Last year’s winner ran 437 miles. 

While summer racing heats up, some ultra athletes in Milwaukee are keeping on their layers as they race ’round the clock at the Six Days in the Dome ultramarathon. Held inside the Pettit National Ice Center, which houses two full-sized hockey rinks and a speed skating track nestled inside the 443-meter running track, the facility’s temperature is kept at a steady 55 degrees year-round.

That’s the point in this competition, which originated in 2014 at the Alaska Dome in Anchorage—where Joe Fejes broke the then American record for six days by running 580 miles. Eventually, the race relocated to Milwaukee for its second running in 2019. Whereas many ultra competitions feature rough terrain, brutal conditions, and require an “expect anything” mindset, the original race director, Steve Durbin, wanted to create an ultra race in a fully-controlled environment.

But just because the environment is carefully calibrated for racing success doesn’t mean the great distances require any less mettle than ultras that are contested in rugged outdoor settings. Ultramarathon running requires a great deal of planning—runners schedule their sleep, kit changes, showers, and fueling, and must stay on top of the unavoidable blisters, chafing, and other small aches and pains that can end their race if not tended to. 

“The thing about ultra-running, the finish is not a guarantee,” race co-director Mike Melton told UrbanMilwaukee.com. “That’s part of the challenge. How deep into yourself will you go? How deep into the pain cave can you handle? How can you manage the sleep deprivation, the miles you want to do? Everyone’s motivation is something different, something unique.”

As Saturday night looms, athletes are nearing the end of the nearly weeklong competition, which began on June 18. The stakes are high, as those who place in the top six will secure their place on the U.S. 24-Hour National Team. As of Wednesday afternoon, Romania’s Nicolae Buceanu and Sandra Villines-Burruss from Florida were in the lead, at 268.268 and 243.243 miles, respectively.

Canadian Viktoria Brown took the win last year with a total of 457.4135 miles, setting two Canadian records and one world record in the process, but she didn’t return to defend her title, so the multi-day competition is anyone’s game at this point.

In addition to the six-day competition, there are 12, 24, 48, and 72-hour categories, and several attempts at records have been pursued. New Delhi’s Meenal Kotak was cheered on Wednesday afternoon as she completed her 72-hour attempt, recording just over 235 miles and setting a women’s record for India.

(06/25/2023) Views: 675 ⚡AMP
by Runner’s World
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