About the author:

Rupantar has been the race director of the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team since 1985, having been asked by Sri Chinmoy to serve in that capacity. As well as working on the big races the US Marathon Team organise each year - the 3100 Mile Race and the Six and 10 Day Race - he also spends a considerable amount of time archiving the Marathon Team's 40 year history on this website.

Cherns, Trishul. "John Kenul - 200 Ultras Finished, Many More to Go." Ultrarunning. May 1990.

"Perhaps the most consistent ultradistance finisher in the world in the last twenty years has been my firend and ultra-buddy, John  Kenul. He has completed 200 ultra marathons in 204 attempts. This quiet man of 45 was born in Genoa, Itlay, and now lives in Borough Park, Brooklyn. He is a great inspiration to all New York runners and I hope this interview will inspire the reader with what he has to say about our sport.

Ultrarunning: When was your first ultramarathon?

John Kenul: The 1969 37.5-mile Peekskill to Yonkers (New York) race. It was a handicap race sponsored by the New York Road Runners club. The starting field was five or six runners including the great Ted Corbitt.

Ultrarunning: Why have you run so many ultras?

John Kenul: I must give credit to Sri Chinmoy and the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team and to Rich Innamorato and the Broadway Ultra Society. They have inspired me to run so many races by organizing an unlimited amount of good ultras in the New York area. They have given me plenty of opportunities to run by putting on many excellent races. They are all so good, I have to run them all.

Ultrarunning: What changes have you seen in the last 20 years of our sport?

John Kenul: There are more females in the sport and a higher quantity of people running in the races.

Ultrarunning: What was the greatest performance you have witnessed in a race?

John Kenul: Don Richie's world 100-mile road record (11:30:51) in Flushing Meadow Park, New York, in 1979. His pace (6:55 per mile) was unbelievable for 100 miles.

Ultrarunning: What were the best and worst organized races you have participated in?

John Kenul: The best organized races are put on by the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team and the Broadway Ultra Society...

Ultrarunning: What positive step can ultrarunning take to improve its popularity?

John Kenul: The race directors should let the media know about our sport. It will awaken the running population to the long distance experience. In New York, newspaper columnist Eddie Coyle writes quite a bit about ultrarunning in the Daily News. He himself has run quite a few ultras.

We enjoy running long distances. If the public can see our happiness and identify with our happiness, they themselves will become happy and society will have a more positive outlook on life. Radiate happiness and people will bask in the happiness sunshine.