Running News Daily is edited by Bob Anderson in Los Altos California USA and team in Thika Kenya, La Piedad Mexico, Bend Oregon, Chandler Arizona and Monforte da Beira Portugal. Send your news items to bob@mybestruns.com Advertising opportunities available. Train the Kenyan Way at KATA Kenya. (Kenyan Athletics Training Academy) in Thika Kenya. KATA Portugal at Anderson Manor Retreat in central portugal. Learn more about Bob Anderson, MBR publisher and KATA director/owner, take a look at A Long Run the movie covering Bob's 50 race challenge.
Index to Daily Posts · Sign Up For Updates · Run The World Feed
David Eliuk celebrated a top-heavy triumph at the Servus Edmonton Marathon on Sunday, setting a world record for the most shirts worn while completing a 42.2-km race.
The Edmonton man sported 78 running shirts as he crossed the finish line in 5:01:50, absolutely smothering the official Guinness World Record of 54 shirts set by British runner David Smith in 2022.
His new marathon crown, which has yet to be ratified by Guinness World Records, will be a familiar fit for Eliuk (and certainly a more comfortable one than his race outfit on Sunday), who previously held the Guinness World Record of 120 for the most shirts worn in a half-marathon.
While being encased in scores of T-shirts may look comical to outsiders, it’s a different story altogether on the inside, Eliuk told Canadian Running on Tuesday.
“It hurt. It actually caused restriction of blood flow to my hands and my lower arms,” Eliuk said of his effort at this year’s Hypothermic Half Marathon in Edmonton, where he officially set the half-marathon record.
He said his marathon attempt Sunday was originally part of his bid to simultaneously hold both the half-marathon and marathon titles. However, his half-marathon record fell in May to American Dan Harvey, who sported 127.
Eliuk said while Sunday’s shirt count of 78 was much less constricting and painful than his three-digit total for the half, his run at the Servus Edmonton Marathon presented a different set of challenges—not the least of which were the temperatures of a summer race.
“While I’m wearing fewer shirts and I don’t have the restriction and I don’t have the mobility issues, I also have to be very aware of my body temperature and sustaining myself through hydration and fuel for five hours,” he said. “It was still uncomfortable, still almost 30 pounds of shirt, and the weight on my shoulders and my back especially was really, really hard.”
Fortunately, race organizers allow runners who expect to take longer than six hours to finish to set out an hour before the usual 7 a.m. start time, which helped allay Eliuk’s concerns over heat.
“I was able to talk with the race director and the race crew and was allowed to enter that wave. So I actually started an hour before the regular marathon. I think it was about 8 C at 6 a.m. Being able to start out running in 8 C temperatures instead of 15 C makes a huge difference when I’m doing what I’m doing.”
Weighing on Eliuk, besides the shirts, was the clock. Guinness World Records rules require that record attempts for the most T-shirts worn in a marathon be completed within six hours.
“My morning was really solid and really good,” he said. “I was able to keep moving for the majority of it and I hit the half at around two hours and 11 minutes, so I had almost four hours to complete the second half of the race.”
Eliuk said he’s content just to appreciate his latest accomplishment, and doesn’t plan on chasing his former goal of holding both the marathon and half-marathon T-shirt records at the same time.
“I know how hard it is at 120 shirts, so for this other guy to go to 127, he’s just at a different level. I’ve been in his shoes before. I know how uncomfortable he was, so I’m happy letting the half-marathon record go.”
Next on his race calendar is the New York City Marathon in November, which he and his girlfriend will be running in support of Think Pink Rocks, a campaign supporting genetic testing for the detection of breast cancer.
“I’ll just be wearing the one shirt in New York,” he said.
This year’s Servus Edmonton Marathon was won by Meng-Tsung Chu from Colorado Springs, in 2:22:54 (one of the fastest times in the race’s 32-year history) and Janelle Bykowski of Lethbridge, Alta., in 2:51:53–and it was her very first marathon.
(08/23/2023) Views: 808 ⚡AMP