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Articles tagged #Jon Sutherland
Today's Running News
Jon Sutherland of Washington, Utah, officially ended the longest consecutive daily running streak in history on December 31, 2024. He ran every single day for 55 years, 7 months, and 6 days, totaling 20,309 consecutive days—a record of unmatched consistency, discipline, and passion for the sport.
Sutherland began his streak on May 29, 1969, at just 19 years old. Over five and a half decades later, now 74, he finally decided to hang up the streak—but not before cementing himself in the annals of running history.
For perspective, that’s nearly two-thirds of a century without missing a single day. Rain, injury, illness—none of it stopped him from getting in at least one mile daily. Though not all of those runs were fast or long, the sheer volume of uninterrupted effort is unparalleled.
Interestingly, just behind Sutherland on the all-time list is Jim G. Pearson, who began his still-active streak on February 16, 1970, in Marysville, Washington. Pearson, now 81, has logged 20,236 consecutive days (55.4 years) as of today—meaning he could soon surpass Sutherland’s final total if he keeps going.
As of now, Jon Sutherland holds the record for the longest running streak ever completed.
If you’ve ever skipped a run because of bad weather or a sore ankle, let Jon’s example remind you what commitment really looks like.
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Miami’s Robert “Raven” Kraft was streaking long before it was cool, and not in the way that gets you arrested. On Tuesday afternoon at 5th Street Lifeguard Station in Miami’s South Beach neighbourhood, Kraft completed his 18,263rd run, marking an impressive 50-year streak of daily running.
Kraft began his prolific streak on January 1, 1975, when he was 24, and over half a century later, he’s amassed 18,263 total runs and over 234,000 kilometres. That’s roughly equivalent to walking around the world more than five and a half times—quite a feat!
The 74-year-old was joined on Tuesday by hundreds of runners for his daily tradition of running eight miles (12.87 km) along the sands of South Beach. Kraft, who has also been a singer and songwriter for just as long, played a few songs after his anniversary run alongside the Dark Shadows band.
Beyond the streak, Kraft has built a community around his daily runs, called the “Raven Runners.” Unlike most, Kraft’s eight-mile route has never changed. He has reportedly run the exact same route in almost every single run. In an interview with Sports Illustrated, Kraft said he has a list of more than 3,700 runners from around the globe who have joined him for a run over the past 50 years. “The Raven List” reflects that he has been joined by runners from all 50 states, as well as runners from more than 60 countries.
Kraft’s legacy will soon be etched into Miami Beach’s history. On Jan 1, Third Street and Ocean Drive will reportedly be renamed “Robert ‘Raven’ Kraft Way.”
According to the United States Running Streak Association, Kraft has the sixth-longest active run streak. Jon Sutherland of Washington, Utah, holds the world’s longest-running streak with over 55 years (20,000+ days). Toronto’s Rick Rayman has the longest active run streak in Canada, with a total of 16,824 days (46+ years).
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Miami’s Robert “Raven” Kraft was streaking long before it was cool, and not in the way that gets you arrested. On Tuesday afternoon at 5th Street Lifeguard Station in Miami’s South Beach neighbourhood, Kraft completed his 18,263rd run, marking an impressive 50-year streak of daily running.
Kraft began his prolific streak on January 1, 1975, when he was 24, and over half a century later, he’s amassed 18,263 total runs and over 234,000 kilometres. That’s roughly equivalent to walking around the world more than five and a half times—quite a feat!
The 74-year-old was joined on Tuesday by hundreds of runners for his daily tradition of running eight miles (12.87 km) along the sands of South Beach. Kraft, who has also been a singer and songwriter for just as long, played a few songs after his anniversary run alongside the Dark Shadows band.
Beyond the streak, Kraft has built a community around his daily runs, called the “Raven Runners.” Unlike most, Kraft’s eight-mile route has never changed. He has reportedly run the exact same route in almost every single run. In an interview with Sports Illustrated, Kraft said he has a list of more than 3,700 runners from around the globe who have joined him for a run over the past 50 years. “The Raven List” reflects that he has been joined by runners from all 50 states, as well as runners from more than 60 countries.
Kraft’s legacy will soon be etched into Miami Beach’s history. On Jan 1, Third Street and Ocean Drive will reportedly be renamed “Robert ‘Raven’ Kraft Way.”
According to the United States Running Streak Association, Kraft has the sixth-longest active run streak. Jon Sutherland of Washington, Utah, holds the world’s longest-running streak with over 55 years (20,000+ days). Toronto’s Rick Rayman has the longest active run streak in Canada, with a total of 16,824 days (46+ years).
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On Jan. 29, New Zealand’s Nick Willis ran another sub-4 minute mile at the NYC Millrose Games for the 20th consecutive year. This achievement is something only a few runners have come close to, which has sparked us to find the craziest active running streaks.
Nick Willis – 20 years of sub-4 minute miles
Willis first ran sub-4 during his undergrad at the University of Michigan in 2003 (3:58.15). At last weekend’s Millrose Games, Willis broke four minutes for the 63rd time in his career (3:59.71), which marked the 20th consecutive year he has run sub-4 miles. Willis is New Zealand’s only two-time Olympic medallist in the 1,500 metres, winning a silver medal in Beijing and bronze in Rio. In 2020, Willis passed his countryman, Sir John Walker, who previously held the consecutive sub-4 mile record of 18 years.
Simon Laporte – 46 years of running every day
At 46 years, the Notre-Dame des Prairies, Que. runner holds the longest active run streak in Canada. Laporte began his streak on Nov. 27, 1975, and hasn’t missed a day since. The 70-year-old run streaker has no plans to stop anytime soon, and he is planning for his streak to reach 50 in 2025. The longest active streak in the world is held by Jon Sutherland of Utah. Sutherland’s run streak of 52.7 years recently passed the legendary record set by Ron Hill (52.1) last year.
Streak Runners International (SRI) says for runs to qualify as a streak, they must cover at least one mile (1.61 kilometres) each day. The run may occur on the road, track, trails, or treadmill, but a minimum of one mile must be completed.
Lois Bastien – 41.8 years of running every day
Bastien holds the longest-standing women’s run streak record, at 42 years. She is now 79 and still runs every day in her home state of Florida.
Ben Beach – 54 consecutive Boston Marathons
Although Beach does not have the record for most Boston Marathon finishes (58), the 72-year-old marathoner does have the record for most consecutive Boston Marathons (54). Beach ran his first Boston in 1967 when he was 18. This year, Beach completed his 54th consecutive Boston Marathon, finishing in 5:47:27.
Allyson Felix – Five straight Olympic Games with a medal in track and field
U.S. sprinter Allyson Felix is one of the greatest female Olympians ever. She has not only represented her country at five straight Olympic Games, but she has also medalled at all of them (seven gold, three silver and one bronze) – a feat that no other female athlete has accomplished in track and field. Although Felix intended that Tokyo would be her last Olympics, her streak will remain active until Paris 2024, where Jamaican sprinter Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce will get the chance to equal her at five consecutive Olympics with a medal.
Karl Meltzer – a 20-year streak of winning a 100-mile race
Meltzer, 54, has been on the elite ultramarathon scene for more than 20 years. With his most recent win this year at the Beast of the East 100-miler, he has won a 100-miler for 20 consecutive years, bringing his career total to 45 wins over 100 miles. This is an unprecedented number, and the only person who can top it (for now, at least) is Meltzer himself.
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The lead story in The Seattle Times on Feb. 15, 1970, was headlined, “Nixon bans war toxins.” In sports, the banner trumpeted that the Seattle Pilots were dropping the price of their field box seats for 1970 from $6 to $4.50 – though it became a moot point when the Pilots moved to Milwaukee six weeks later.
One other event that day, however, went unnoted in the news. Jim Pearson, the cross-country coach at Ferndale High School, didn’t go for a run.
The world has changed in myriad ways in the ensuing half-century, but there has been one constant. Through rainstorms and blizzards, floods and Nor’westers, surgeries and illness, and now through a worldwide pandemic, Pearson has run every day since.
That’s 50 years, 40 days and counting for the 75-year-old Pearson, now hunkered down in Marysville. Hunkered, that is, except for his daily peregrination in Adidas, a welcome diversion in our shelter-in-place existence.
Put another way, it’s 18,304 straight days of running at least a mile, which is the minimum requirement for an officially recognized running streak (but Pearson, a former national record-holder at 50 miles, almost never runs that short a distance). Put yet another way, it’s 176,926 total miles, up to and including Pearson’s 2½-mile run on Friday.
It’s the second-longest active streak in the country, 266 days behind the 18,570 of 69-year-old Jon Sutherland of West Hills, Calif. Pearson says with mock indignation, “Every day I run, and I haven’t gained a day on him.”
But everyone else in the country, and probably the world, is behind these two ironmen, as compiled by the Streak Runners International Inc. and United States Running Streak Association, Inc. Their registry is all based on the honor system, but Pearson has 50 years-plus of log books and running diaries to back him up.
“I’ve always said the first 100 days are the hardest on this streak stuff,’’ said Pearson. “People say, ‘Oh, you’re amazing.’ No, I’m not. People who can do one year, that’s amazing. How do you run every day for a year? But once you’ve done that, it’s something you just do.”
Pearson is duly grateful that running is an activity that can be maintained through the coronavirus quarantining – with proper social distancing, of course. It’s just one of numerous challenges Pearson has faced to keep his streak alive since his summer coach with the Everett Elks track team, Keith Gilbertson Sr., implored Pearson to get more consistent with his running.
Running became a way of life in the Pearson family. All three of his children, two boys and a girl, put together run streaks that stretched into multiple years. Barbie, his wife, didn’t run, but she told Jim when they were married, “I won’t interfere with your running.”
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