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Founded by Sri Chinmoy in 1977, the Marathon Team is one of the world's largest organisers of endurance events.
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Results for the Sri Chinmoy 7 & 13-Hour Races May 23, 2026
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Galleries and Video from 3100 Mile Race

By Anonymous
7 September
Photo Galleries Video
Finish Galleries:
Asprihanal, Michael, Smarana, Madhupran, Arpan
 
Day 37 - July 19 Asprihanal final 24 hr
Day 22 - July 4 Oleg Chat with Matt
Day 18 - June 30 Sri Chinmoy meditates
Day 10 - June 23
Stefan Abichal
Day 2 - June 14 Smarana and Michael Music video
Day 1 - June 13 Matt July 3
Abakash's photos from the start Arpan Video of the Start
  Virendra Abichal Matt
   

Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team articles - more articles

41st Anniversary Celebration of Sri Chinmoy's first marathon

By Rupantar LaRusso author bio »
29 February

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.

Photos from New York's celebration of the 41st anniversary of Sri Chinmoy's first marathon run...

 

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Groundbreaking 3100 mile race documentary reaches Australia and New Zealand

By Rupantar LaRusso author bio »
31 January

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.

Since its initial release last year in the US, the documentary film 3100: Run and Become has been gradually rolled out across the globe. The film travels the world to celebrate the importance of running to the human soul, with a particular emphasis on our very own Sri Chinmoy Self-Trancendence 3100-Mile Race. Now the film has reached new Zealand and Australia, with premiere screenings in February and March.

New Zealand schedule

  • 11 February Rialto Cinemas, Auckland • tickets »
  • 13-14 February Lumiere Cinemas, Christchurch • tickets »
  • 17 February Penthouse Cinemas, Wellington • tickets »

While previewing the film, Stuff (New Zealand's biggest news website) interviewed Harita Davies (pictured above) from Christchurch, who completed the race in 2017 and 2019:

"What am I doing? It's crazy! That was the thought of New Zealander Harita Davies as she stepped up to the start line of the world's longest running race....The New-York based Cantabrian was the first New Zealand female to run the 3100. She's now done it twice." For the complete article...

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Sri Chinmoy's blend of sport and spirituality is starting to appear in some interesting places!

By Rupantar LaRusso author bio »
14 January

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.

We here at the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team definitely believe that sport is something beyond mere competition and beating the other guy into the dust - it can actually be a key part of one's self-discovery and finding true meaning in life. It is something our race founder and spiritual Teacher, Sri Chinmoy, advocated for many years, and we must admit we do find it kind of nice when we see people appreciating that philosophy in various places! Here are some such instances in recent months:

1. Rise of the Ultrarunners

rise-ultrarunners.jpgDean Karnazes called this book the the definitive book on ultra running today, and it made quite a few sports-books-of-the-year shortlists in 2019.  The author, Adharanand Finn, previously wrote a nice article in the Guardian about our 24 hour race in London, and then as part of his research into this book came back the next year to do the race himself. 

“This race holds a bizarre fascination for me. I love the way it merges the mundane with the epic, people attempting mind-boggling feats not out in the Himalayas or the depths of the jungle, but on a running track in Tooting in south London. It shows that you don’t have to go to the far corners of the Earth to find adventure, enlightenment, craziness, or whatever it is we’re all seeking, but that it exists everywhere if you just open your eyes.” (quote from the book)

His story of the race takes up a whole chapter (chapter 11, if you're interested) and is not only an amazing story of his own reaching the point where he considers quitting, but then breaks through into a whole other level of experience, but is also an extremely touching tribute to the many ordinary extraordinary people who also did the race with him, some of them in their seventies. The book tracks his running journey through many other ultradistance races, and at the same time opens a window for the uninitiated into the whole weird and wonderful world of ultrarunning itself. The book can be purchased on Amazon here...

sri-chinmoy-running.jpg
Sri Chinmoy running

2. Runner's tribe

In his January 10, 2020 column in Runnerstribe.com, Matt Fitzgerald (author of books such as The Endurance Diet and 80/20 Running) explores famous marathon runner Eliud Kipchoge's philosophy on running:

"There’s nothing unique about Kipchoge in this regard. Endurance racing is a spiritual experience for many athletes. Indeed, it’s almost impossible for a spiritually sensitive person to experience endurance racing non-spiritually, which is why spiritual leaders including Sri Chinmoy, an Indian-born advocate of meditation and running influential in the U.S. in the late 20th century, have promoted it even to nonathletes. “The inner running and the outer running complement each other,” Chinmoy wrote. “For outer running, we need discipline. Without a life of discipline, we cannot succeed in any walk of life. So when we do outer running, it reminds us of the inner running.” For the complete article...

 

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A thank-you donation to our friends at Flushing Meadows Corona Park

By Rupantar LaRusso author bio »
18 December

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.
  • Park Administrator Janice Melnick (right), SCMT Race Director Rupantar LaRusso (center) and Special Events Coordinator Danny Miller (left)

Flushing Meadows Corona Park in Queens, New York, is a very special place for the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team - we started holding races there in 1978, and since then it has played host to some of our most memorable events. It is where we first entered into the world of organising multi-day races, starting with our Five-Day Race and our 1000 Mile Race in the mid-1980's. Every April, we have our Ten and Six Day Race there, as well as many shorter races during the year that anyone can participate in (see below)

We recently held our Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team's Thanksgiving Day Race, and every year we donate the proceeds from that race to the wonderful Flushing Meadows Corona Park people - this year's donation was $3,000.

Next year's races in Flushing Meadows Corona Park:

  • 9 May Sri Chinmoy 5K, Half-Marathon and Relay
  • 26 November Sri Chinmoy Thanksgiving Day 5K & 10K
View full article »

Race Report and Photos from a very special Sri Chinmoy Heart-Garden race

By Tejvan Pettinger author bio »
12 October

About the author:

Tejvan organises short-distance running and cycling races for the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team in his home city of Oxford. He is also a very good cyclist, having won the National hill climb championships in 2013 and finished 3rd in the National 100 Mile Time Trials in 2014.
  • Runners at the start of the race
  • The Sri Chinmoy Oneness-Home Peace Run at the Heart-Garden Race
  • 3100 Mile Running legend Suprabha Beckjord with Ida Keeling
  • Nadirah and Askia Muhammad with Peace Torch
  •  Ida Keeling and her daughter Shelley speaking after the run
  • More runners during the race
  • Ida and Shelly Keeling share in the joy of the race
  • Coach Jim Hurt, Head Track Coach at St. John's University, receives the Peace Run Torch-Bearer award
  • Ms. Najibe Burger holds the Peace Torch with her good friend, Pranika Baum

On 12 October, our annual two-mile 'Sri Chinmoy Heart-Garden Run' took place at the site of the Sri Chinmoy Heart-Garden in Flushing Meadows-Corona Park, Queens, New York. The aim of the race is to celebrate Sri Chinmoy's belief that sport can be a vehicle for personal transformation and can make a small contribution to a better world. Also, the run is in memory of Sri Chinmoy, who loved the park very much.

The race is very much run in a spirit of appreciating the joy of running. After the two-mile race, there was a short peace walk with the Peace Torch - a torch carried by Sri Chinmoy Oneness-Home Peace Run to over 160 countries around the world. This short walk and ceremony gave everybody the opportunity to share in the Peace Run's message of oneness. 

During this year's event, participants from all other the world were joined by several special guests and friends who shared their thoughts and wishes for creating a better world. We were joined by Ida Keeling, a 104 year old sprinter and former Bronx Borough President. Ida recently broke the world record for women aged 100-104 for the 100m sprint, completing the distance in 1 minute and 17.33 seconds (WR link). Still vibrant with life-energy, Ida is an inspiring example of Sri Chinmoy's philosophy of self-transcendence and never quitting because of age. After the race, she shared her secrets of old age, which involve eating well, staying positive and doing daily exercise. Ida was accompanied by her daughter Shelley Keeling, who is an accomplished masters athlete and who is the one who introduced her mother to sprinting. Shelley recently 2 Gold medals and 1 Bronze at the recent European masters games at the age of 68.

Also speaking at the event were Nadirah and Askia Muhammad from the Jamaica area of Queens, New York.  Dr. Askia Muhammad is an imam who ministers to the Muslim community in Jamaica and is President of the Ummah Group, an organization dedicated to interfaith dialogue and spiritual development. He shared a very powerful opening prayer during the event. The Muhammads are parents of current 400m hurdles Olympic and world champion Dalilah Muhammad - asked about the success of his daughter, Dr. Askia modestly replied his greatest success was not to interfere with her God-given gifts - but only to gently encourage and support her daughter's decisions. Dalilah won the gold medal at the recent 2019 World Championships in Tokyo, setting the current world record with a time of 52.16 seconds.

We also were delighted to welcome our long-time friend Coach Jim Hurt, Head Track and Field Coach of nearby St. John’s University. Coach Hurt has spent 36 years with the St John's track and field and crosscountry teams (the Red Storm); 29 of those years were as head coach, and he has had a tremendous amount of success in those years. Our final guest was Ms. Najibe Burger, who has served the Queens community in so many capacities - she is currently on the boards of the Queens Council of the Arts and the Queens Family Court, as well as being the President of Latin American Cultural Center of Queens.

Flushing Meadows Park has a very special connection with the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team, having played host to our running events since the late 1970s and our multi-day ultra-races since the 1980s. On October 11, 2006, exactly one year before Sri Chinmoy's physical passing, this iconic section of Flushing Meadows Park was dedicated by the New York Parks department as the Sri Chinmoy Heart-Garden to celebrate the legacy and vision for world peace that Sri Chinmoy had encouraged.

Sri Chinmoy felt that sport and running gave us the outer dynamism and the inner aspiration to transcend our previous achievements. He also saw sport as an opportunity to promote happiness and goodwill amongst competitors.

"In competitive sports, our primary aim should be not to surpass others but constantly to surpass ourselves. In the outer life, when we run with our friends, we are seeing who is actually the best. And we cannot properly evaluate our own capacity unless we have some standard of comparison. But we compete not for the sake of defeating others, but in order to bring forward our own capacity."

- Sri Chinmoy

Related

  • Photos from the race
  • Heart-Garden Race homepage
  • Sri Chinmoy's quote is taken from his book The body, humanity’s fortress
View full article »

Sri Chinmoy and the dream of the sub-2-hour marathon

By Rupantar LaRusso author bio »
11 October

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.
  • A 19-year-old Eliud Kipchoge holds the Sri Chinmoy Oneness-Home Peace Torch
  • Sri Chinmoy finishes his first marathon, 3 March 1979

A pioneer in combining spirituality and sports, Sri Chinmoy felt that breaking the sub 2 hour barrier would have be a very significant victory for mankind, and many times over the years he would express his hope and his conviction that it would happen. Here is a selection of some of the things Sri Chinmoy said over the years:


"Name and fame in marathon running was first won for America by Frank Shorter. Frank Shorter really shook America out of its lethargy or complacent feeling. It was he who made the start. Now, people are running faster and faster. It will take at most five years, perhaps even less, for someone to run a marathon under two hours. How I wish that one of my disciples would do it! It is wishful thinking, but sometimes dreams come true. My disciples have an advantage because they have spirituality behind their running. If I were twenty years old, I would try it." 25 October 1982


"Often people say they will never run a marathon again. During or after the race they say that this is their last marathon. Then after four days they start thinking about their next marathon.

In ten or twenty years, people will regard the marathon the way we regard a ten-mile race today. People will consider forty miles or seventy miles or a hundred miles as long distance. Long distances will be as popular as the marathon is today. People will pay more attention to fifty-milers and hundred-milers.

Now people are doing so well in the marathon. In four or five years the best runners will run the marathon in under two hours. In twenty or thirty years people will run at a five-minute pace for fifty or a hundred miles. The children of people who are running the marathon now will run at the present marathon pace for thirty or forty miles, and then even farther. They will have such stamina. Sports are like that. Roger Bannister’s four-minute-mile record lasted for years. Then the hundred-metre record stayed for years. Jesse Owens’ long-jump record stayed for twenty years before it was broken by Bob Beamon. But ultimately all records are broken." 24 January 1983


"In the New York Marathon, the first mile is horrible for everybody. Then, from the second mile, the lead runners go really fast. This year Steve Jones ran 2:08:23, but Salazar’s record is still 13 seconds better. Somebody has to come from Africa and break the record. Under two hours — I envision it. Somebody will run under two hours." 6 November 1988


"My prophecy! Once I said that some day some runners would run the marathon in under two hours. A divine force spoke through me. Alas, something always reminds me inwardly. Again, while facing the Berlin Wall, I prophesied that in twenty-five years the Wall would be demolished and there would be one Berlin. In just two years, President Gorbachev fulfilled my desire! With regard to the marathon, God knows when it will happen; but still I maintain the same desire and the same promise that one day somebody will come, perhaps from Africa, to do it. It is not an impossible task.

One mile in under four minutes was a dream, and Roger Bannister manifested the dream. Now, how many people have run a mile in under four minutes? Someone has run in 3:44. When Roger Bannister ran in just under four minutes, the whole world adored him. Now someone has run two miles in under eight minutes. It is unimaginable! Like that we can do many things." 5 November 1997


Question: During the twenty-first century, will anybody break the two-hour marathon barrier?

Sri Chinmoy: How I wish the twenty-first century to prove my prophecy that someone will run a marathon in under two hours! For that I need a disciple who has implicit faith in me. I find it very difficult to believe that our human capacity is limited. Right now the world record for the marathon is 2:06. Just six minutes to reduce over twenty-six miles! Unfortunately, human beings always think, “My capacity, my capacity.” If the same world-class runners could say, “My capacity is coming from God. God is running in and through me,” and really mean it, then you would see surprising results. There are at least twenty world-class marathon runners. If they could have that kind of faith, you would hear in one month that the world record has been smashed.

...God has given each of us certain capacities. I may not be a runner, but somebody else may be a runner. I may be a singer, but somebody else may not be a singer. If anyone wants to increase his capacity in his own field, then he must have God-reliance, not self-reliance. Only then will his capacity become unlimited. Now our capacity is limited because we feel we are doing everything — we are taking this exercise and that exercise. We give ninety-nine per cent of the credit to what our mind is telling us and our life is prompting us to do. But if we can give one hundred per cent of the credit to God for whatever we are doing that is good and positive in our life, then our capacities will become unlimited. 25 February 1999 -  Complete quote...


paul_tergat.jpg
Sri Chinmoy holds the Peace Torch with Paul Tergat, 2005

"Paul Tergat, the world’s fastest marathoner, covered the distance in two hours, four minutes. His record is four minutes over two hours, so my prediction is still hanging in mid-air! I am praying that one day he or somebody else will run under two hours. Whoever runs under two hours will be given by me a very special honour, plus I shall meet with his plane fare and all his expenses, whether he comes from Kenya or anyplace else. I shall honour him most lovingly, cheerfully and proudly. Who knows, who knows? There will be someone in the near future. I do not want to say in the distant future — no! In the near future, someone will be able to fulfil my prediction." 14 October 2005


Sources

These quotes were excerpted from Sri Chinmoy's books Run and Become, Become and Run, parts 12 and 13; Sri Chinmoy answers, part 24; The Feet of the Supreme's Compassion and My Golden Children. These books are available to read in full at srichinmoylibrary.com; hardback editions of the Run and Become, Become and Run and Sri Chinmoy answers series can be purchased on Amazon.

View full article »

91-year-old sets new American age-group 800m record

By Vasudha Deming author bio »
29 September

About the author:

Vasudha Deming organizes events for the San Diego Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team.

On a sunny day in Glendale, California more than 100 masters-category athletes showed up to walk, run, throw, vault and jump at our annual Sri Chinmoy Masters Games event. Perhaps the most notable result was the new American record set in the 800-meter race by 91-year-old Gunnar Linde from Venice,CA. His time of 4:15:95 shaved some 24 seconds off the previous age-group (90-94) record set in 1989!

The remarkably fit athletes completed sprints, hurdles, middle distance events, a 5000-meter race walk, pole vault, long jump, high jump, pole vault, javelin, discus, and shotput. While one or two events were enough for some of the competitors, a brave group of seven men contested a pentathlon comprising 200 meters, 1500 meters, long jump, javelin, and discus. The results were inspiring, proving yet again that determination trumps age.

The Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team extends a sincere thank you to the athletes, volunteers, and officials. We'll see you next year!

 

View full article »

"Something serene that’s beyond words": report from the Sri Chinmoy Marathon

By Rupantar LaRusso author bio »
24 August

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.

We had about 400 runners at this year’s Self-Transcendence Rockland Lake Marathon. After the race, dozens of runners posted their experiences in various places online. Many of the comments gave a sense that the runners were drawn to this particular race for inner reasons, sometimes without quite knowing why. One wrote that while our marathon isn’t the wildest or loudest, we have something serene that’s beyond words—and this atmosphere is really conducive to transcendence.

As well as founding our Marathon Team and being an avid sprinter and long distance runner, Sri Chinmoy was also well known for his feats of weightlifting, which included honouring people for their service to humanity by lifting them overhead using a specially constructed apparatus. Between 1988 and 2007, he honoured over 8,000 people in this manner - people like Muhammad Ali and Nelson Mandela, but also . He once said that everyone who came to be lifted had an inner expectation of having a spiritual experience - and then Sri Chinmoy added that he never disappointed them. We get the feeling that people who come to our races also receive a similar kind of fulfilment.

We should note that dozens of runners commented how grateful they were to our medical team. Nowhere else, they mentioned, could a non-elite runner get such a high-quality post-race massage! Not only did our amazing crew soothe their muscles, but in many cases, runners received performance and nutrition advice!

We actually recognized a number of the runners not just from their participation in past Sri Chinmoy Marathons in Rockland Lake State Park, but because they also had visited the Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence 3100 Mile Race held in Queens this summer. There was even one runner who had entered a number of our monthly Rainbow Marathons that we held in the 1980s! As a side note, a number of the outside runners had also seen the recent documentary 3100: Run And Become, which chronicles the 3100 Mile Race and the spiritual significance of ultrarunning around the world. A few people gasped with joy when they saw Shamita Achenbach-König – one of the stars of the movie – on the course running the marathon! A number of folks took pictures of her for their collections and a few got to say hello to her as she passed them.

Maybe we'll see you there next year...
View full article »

BBC.COM: Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence: The 3,100-mile race around a New York block

By Rupantar LaRusso author bio »
16 June

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.
  • the start of the race
  • Ashprihanal runs with Black Roses member

One of the most insightful and revealing stories about the Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence 3,100-Mile Race appeared on the home page of the prestigious BBC.COM this past Friday, June 21. Including interviews with past and present runners, the article gives the reader a runner's insight into why anyone would want to run for 52 days around a New York City block, and what the experience is like for these pioneer ultra runners.

The article is written by long time reporter Justin Goulding of BBC Sports, under the Sport Insight section.

From the article: "It is a race so long that runners need a haircut during it. They can get through 20 pairs of shoes. They run more than two marathons a day. For almost two months. On five hours of sleep a night."

For the complete article...

View full article »

BBC.COM: Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence: The 3,100-mile race around a New York block

By Rupantar LaRusso author bio »
1 June

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.

One of the most insightful and revealing stories about the Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence 3,100-Mile Race appeared on the home page of the prestigious BBC.COM this past Friday, June 21. Including interviews with past and present runners, the article gives the reader a runner's insight into why anyone would want to run for 52 days around a New York City block, and what the experience is like for these pioneer ultra runners.

The article is written by long time reporter Justin Goulding of BBC Sports, under the Sport Insight section.

From the article: "It is a race so long that runners need a haircut during it. They can get through 20 pairs of shoes. They run more than two marathons a day. For almost two months. On five hours of sleep a night."

For the complete article...

View full article »

The Twenty-Third Annual Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence 3100 Mile Race

By Rupantar LaRusso author bio »
1 June

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.

Welcome to the 23rd Annual Self-Transcendence 3100 Mile Race. Called 'The Mount Everest of ultramarathons' by The New York Times, this is the longest certified footrace in the world. It attracts athletes from around the world who want to test themselves against this daunting distance, transcend their own previous capacity, and participate in a great adventure. Along the way, they may also set new world records and gain spiritual insights.

Athletes are able to test themselves in a format unlike any other ultra-marathon event. In order to meet their goal of 3100 miles in 52 days, they must log an average of 59.6 miles per day. The runners begin at 6 a.m. and run for extended periods throughout the day, taking breaks as needed. If they want to, they can continue as late as 12 midnight when the course closes for the night. View 2019 runner list »

Media articles from previous years:
BBC.COM, The New York Times: • Sports Illustrated: • The Times of London • The Wall Street Journal  • The Washington Post • Harpers Magazine • Outside Magazine • More media articles» 

View full article »

Video: Our New York races are getting more popular!

By Nirbhasa Magee author bio »
24 May

About the author:

Nirbhasa is from Ireland. He is an enthusiastic multi-day runner, having completed four times the Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence 3100 Mile Race - the longest race in the world.

Our Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team in the USA is best known for its multi-day ultradistance events; however in recent years we have been expanding our calendar of short-distance races in Queens, Brooklyn, Manhattan and the Bronx, as well as upstate New York. Our recent 5K, half-marathon and relay races in Flushing Meadow park saw over 400 finishers; people relished the chance to compete in teams, as well as the delicious post-race pancake breakfast!

Our shorter races (by that, we mean below marathon distance) will resume when the weather gets a little cooler in September; in the meantime we do have a fun, informal 2-mile race every Saturday morning at 8.07am in Queens - more info »

Upcoming NY Races:

  • 23 August: The Sri Chinmoy Marathon - Rockland State Park
  • 22 September: Sri Chinmoy 5K & 10K - Alley Pond Park
  • 20 October: A Sri Chinmoy Half-Marathon - Rockland State Park
  • 28 November: Sri Chinmoy Thanksgiving Day 5K & 10K
View full article »

Sri Chinmoy and Ted Corbitt: a running friendship

By Rupantar LaRusso author bio »
30 April

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.
  • Sri Chinmoy with his friend and ultra running legend Ted Corbitt at the first Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team 24-hour race in 1980.

Ted Corbitt was known as the father of long distance racing in the USA. A former Olympic marathoner, he helped to reawaken interest in marathon and ultra distance races through his own training and racing, and also through his advocacy of race standards. He was the first president of the New York Road Runners Club and helped to plan the original NYC Marathon course.

The Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team also benefited from a tremendous amount of assistance and encouragement from Ted as we started organising our own ultra running events. When we put on our first ultra - a 47-mile invitational race in 1978 - it was Ted we turned to for valuable advice. Over the years, Ted would be a frequent paricipant and guest at our races. In particular, Ted astounded all of us by competing in our 2000 and 2001 Six-Day races – his 2000 effort was the first time anyone over 80 years of age had completed that distance, and in 2001 he set a new over 80 mark of 303 miles.

Related

  • Recent article in the Sports Daily
  • A 1962 article in the New York Times, about Ted's participation in the London to Brighton ultras
  • Race summary of 2000 and 2001 races - read about Ted's 6-day races as they happened!

 

View full article »

40th Anniversary celebration of Sri Chinmoy's first marathon

By Tejvan Pettinger author bio »
5 March

About the author:

Tejvan organises short-distance running and cycling races for the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team in his home city of Oxford. He is also a very good cyclist, having won the National hill climb championships in 2013 and finished 3rd in the National 100 Mile Time Trials in 2014.
  • Sri Chinmoy reaches the finish line of his first marathon
  • Group photo at Chico marathon
  • Runners start their marathon in Perth
  • Dhavala Stott of Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team receives award from Chico Marathon
  • Runners line up for a 13-hour run in Sao Paolo
  • Runners in Melbourne
  • Dublin runners smiling despite the freezing temperatures
  • Aid station at Chico Marathon

On 3rd March 1979, Sri Chinmoy ran his first marathon, in Chico, California, completing the distance in a time of 4:31:34. In the next four years Sri Chinmoy would run 21 more marathons, but perhaps more significantly, he would inspire many runners to follow the philosophy of self-transcendence and take up long-distance running. 40 years after his first marathon, the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team continue to promote marathons and ultra distance races across the globe.

In honour of this significant milestone in the history of the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team, groups of runners from around the world held running events, including 70 members who travelled to Chico, California. Marathon. Events were also held in many different places around the world, including in Bristol (UK), Melbourne (Australia), Dublin (Ireland), Augsburg (Germany), Sao Paolo (Brazil), New York (US), and Zlin (Czech Republic). The weather varied from 37 degrees heatwave in Australia to a below freezing snow-storm in New York.

Race Reports from around the globe

 

Vasudha, our Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team co-ordinator in San Diego, writes: "Some 60 members of the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team from the US, Canada, Great Britain, and even Mongolia met in Chico, California to celebrate a significant milestone in the history of our team. On March 3, 1979, Sri Chinmoy ran his first marathon in Chico, California. To commemorate the 40th anniversary of this signal event - which in turn helped to launch the worldwide organisation that today sponsors hundreds of footraces, duathlons, triathlons, swimming events, and more - team members ran along the same course in beautiful Bidwell Park. The race that was then a full marathon - the Bidwell Classic - now features a half marathon and a 5K. In addition to participating in both these distances - and nabbing 13 age-group awards - Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team members hosted an aid station and cheered all the race participants who braved the cold, rainy weather. After finishing the half marathon, seven athletes covered an additional 13.1 miles to complete the marathon distance and to honour Sri Chinmoy's inaugural marathon."


In Australia the weekend co-incided with the arrival of the runners from the Sri Chinmoy Oneness-Home Peace Run, who were finishing the Australian leg of a 44-country journey that will carry the Peace Torch all nations in the Southern Hemisphere - the first time that the torch has gone all the way around the world as part of one run. As a result there were over 55 Australian and international runners - who fortunately were well-acclimatised for the heat, which hovered in the high 30s towards the end of the race.   


In New York, the weather veered to the other extreme - due to the cold and freezing snow on the track, the official race was cancelled. However, some intrepid runners wished to run their own personal marathon. With no official aid station, five runners - four women and one man, completed the distance, with many other runners completing several laps to take part in the spirit of the event, despite the outer challenges. Brazilian members of the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team marked the event by running a 13 hours race in Ibirapuera Park, São Paulo from 8 am to 9 pm - 6 men and 4 women ran a total of 671km.


In Dublin, runners also faced freezing temperatures with rain, biting wind and temperatures hovering above freezing. Despite these challenging conditions, six members of the Irish Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team remained undaunted by the weather and successfully completed the marathon distance.


Sri Chinmoy felt that running marathons was an excellent complement to the 'inner running' - the spiritual life.

Spiritual people often like running because it reminds them of their inner journey. The outer running reminds them that a higher, deeper, more illumining and more fulfilling goal is ahead of them in the inner world, and for that reason running gives them real joy.

Long-distance running gives us a real feeling of accomplishment. We can run 100 metres forty times during the year and not feel the same sense of accomplishment as when we run one marathon. But speed and endurance are both important, especially in the spiritual life. If one has only speed, then one cannot ultimately succeed; we need endurance because the goal is quite far. Again, if one has only stamina and no speed, then it will take forever to reach the goal. Only if someone has both qualities will he be able to make very good progress in his spiritual life and achieve something really great in life.

Sri Chinmoy's Marathon Runs

  1. March 3, 1979 - Bidwell Classic - Chico, CA - 4:31:34
  2. March 25, 1979 - Heart-Watchers Marathon - Toledo,OH - 3:55:07
  3. May 6, 1979 - Newsday-Long Island Marathon - Long Island, NY - 4:16:23
  4. May 12, 1979 - Champlain Valley Mar. - Plattsburgh, NY - 4:41:16
  5. Oct. 6, 1979 - Phidippides Marathon - Athens, Greece - 5:39:41
  6. Oct. 21, 1979 - New York City Marathon - New York, NY - 4:48:53
  7. Dec. 2, 1979 - Jersey Shore Marathon - Asbury Park, NJ - 4:33:44
  8. May 24, 1980 - Solo Run - Munich, Germany - 4:30:00
  9. June 1, 1980 - Sri Chinmoy Marathon - San Mateo, CA - 5:18:31
  10. Feb. 1, 1981 - Inspiration Marathon - Hampton, NH - 5:22:11
  11. March 7, 1981 - Bidwell Classic - Chico, CA - 4:30:21
  12. Oct. 25, 1981 - New York City Marathon - New York, NY - 4:36:22
  13. May 2, 1982 - Newsday-Long Island Marathon - L.I., NY - 4:26:56
  14. Oct. 24, 1982 - New York City Marathon - New York, NY - 4:44:41
  15. Nov. 7, 1982 - Sri Chinmoy Marathon - Zurich, Switz. - 4:36:00
  16. Nov. 14, 1982 - Jersey Shore Marathon - Asbury Park, NJ - 4:22:57
  17. Dec. 5, 1982 - Sri Chinmoy Marathon - San Juan, PR - 5:12:00
  18. Dec. 31, 1982 - Sri Chinmoy Marathon - Okinawa, Japan - 4:33:43
  19. Jan. 22, 1983 - Orange Bowl Marathon - Miami, FL - 5:33:33
  20. Jan. 30, 1983 - Solo Run - Flushing Meadow, NY - 5:20:03
  21. Feb. 6, 1983 - Inspiration Marathon - Hampton, NH - 5:56:59
  22. Feb. 20, 1983 - Solo Run - Hempstead, NY - 5:25:20
  • Sri Chinmoy's philosophy on running https://www.srichinmoyraces.org/sri-chinmoy-running. Race Reports by Arpan, Grahak, Vasudha and Patanga. Quotes by Sri Chinmoy are taken from his book The outer running and the inner running.
View full article »

Outside Magaine, (online): Review of '3100: Run and Become'

By Rupantar LaRusso author bio »
10 December

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.
  • Start of the 2015 Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence 3100-MIle Race

Outside Magazine's online review of Sanjay Rawal's new film "3100: Run and Become", examines the director's own spiritual background against the film's exploration of the common thread between the Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence 3100 Mile Race, the Kalahari Bushmen of Botswana, the 'marathon monks' of Hiei, Japan, and Shaun Martin, a Navajo runner who created the Canyon de Chelly Ultramarathon.

From the review:

"It’s hard to show transcendence, especially the kind that comes from the devotional practice of moving your body, but that’s what director Sanjay Rawal was trying to capture as he filmed runners around the world. 'My background is in mysticism and spirituality, so I’m interested in how running was their way to commune with the divine,' he says."

Soon to be released on iTunes.

For the full review from Outside Magazine...

Photo above: start of the 2015 Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence 3100 Mile Race.

View full article »

Finishing Photos, by Antara-Prabhat, and Results: 2018 Sri Chinmoy Marathon at Rockland Lake

By Rupantar LaRusso author bio »
23 August

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.
  • First female finisher, Caroline Day

View all finishers at the 2018 Sri Chinmoy Marathon at Rockland Lake, Congers, New York...

Place Name   Time Age Place Age
Group
    1 Samalya Schaeffer Berlin Germany 2:33:47     1 Men 30 to 39
    2 Connor Kinkema Collinsville  2:40:00     1 Men 19 and under
    3 Abhinabha Tangerman Amsterdam 1076 VM Netherlands 2:48:21     1 Men 40 to 49
    4 Stephen Bione Astoria  2:51:04     1 Men 20 to 29
    5 Evan Pilachowski Jackson Heights  2:51:52     2 Men 30 to 39
    6 Apaguha Vesely 12000 Prague 2 Czech Republic 2:53:48     2 Men 40 to 49
    7 Allen Meringolo Boston  2:54:59     2 Men 20 to 29
    8 Robert Lynn Scotch Plains  2:55:32     3 Men 30 to 39
    9 Michael Oliva Irvington  2:56:27     4 Men 30 to 39
   10 Michael Arnstein New York  2:56:41     3 Men 40 to 49
   11 Devon Holgate Falmouth  2:56:49     3 Men 20 to 29
   12 Knox Robinson Brooklyn  2:57:35     4 Men 40 to 49
   13 Winston Mei Bayside  2:58:11     5 Men 40 to 49
   14 Caroline Day Rockleigh  2:59:14     1 Women 20 to 29
   15 Dylan Carey Medway  3:01:23     4 Men 20 to 29
   16 Tom Godfrey Brooklyn  3:04:11     5 Men 30 to 39
   17 Sam Nicaise Philadelphia  3:04:23     6 Men 30 to 39
   18 Bharu Rother Zurich Switzerland 3:06:51     1 Men 50 to 59
   19 Alex Syed Tampa  3:07:26     7 Men 30 to 39
   20 Andrej Visnrvsky Zlin Czech Republic 3:09:44     5 Men 20 to 29
   21 Collin Gray Pottstown  3:10:40     6 Men 20 to 29
   22 Ryan Glynn Abington  3:11:19     2 Men 19 and under
   23 Amilcar Alfaro-Martell New York  3:11:21     8 Men 30 to 39
   24 Weicheng Shih Somerset  3:13:15     6 Men 40 to 49
   25 Samuel Masters Brighton  3:13:21     7 Men 20 to 29
   26 Tucker Grose Norwalk  3:13:22     8 Men 20 to 29
   27 Alexey Egorov Rockville  3:13:30     7 Men 40 to 49
   28 Brendon McDonough Hoboken  3:13:38     9 Men 20 to 29
   29 Sadanand Magee Dublin Ireland 3:14:25     9 Men 30 to 39
   30 Nigel McGregor New York  3:14:27    10 Men 30 to 39
   31 Robert Jaros Zilina Slovakia 3:15:01     8 Men 40 to 49
   32 Eliza Ragsdale Brooklyn  3:18:22     2 Women 20 to 29
   33 Ondrej Mocny Prague Czech Republic 3:19:05    11 Men 30 to 39
   34 Tony Cheong Brooklyn  3:20:12     2 Men 50 to 59
   35 Sarankhuu Jargal Ulaanbaatar Mongolia 3:21:23    10 Men 20 to 29
   36 Brad DeWees Arlington  3:22:34    12 Men 30 to 39
   37 Ricardo Mota Oia Portugal 3:22:36     9 Men 40 to 49
   38 Jorge Pina Lisbon Portugal 3:22:37    10 Men 40 to 49
   39 Hans Zanger Forestburgh  3:24:39    11 Men 20 to 29
   40 Andrea Marcato Oberengstringen Switzerland 3:24:48    13 Men 30 to 39
   41 Maximilian Zandl Salzburg Austria 3:25:04    12 Men 20 to 29
   42 Beau Atwater Bernardsville  3:25:20     1 Men 60 to 69
   43 Ananda-Lahari Zuscin Kosice Slovakia 3:25:37    11 Men 40 to 49
   44 Nitish Zuidema Utrecht 3573 AR Netherlands 3:25:45     3 Men 50 to 59
   45 Jennifer Blalock Brooklyn  3:26:01     1 Women 30 to 39
   46 Dylan Gooley Bristol  3:26:11     3 Men 19 and under
   47 Sharon Armstrong Brooklyn  3:26:27     3 Women 20 to 29
   48 Clifford Kian Johannesburg South Africa 3:27:11    12 Men 40 to 49
   49 Stephanie Snow Manassas  3:27:32     2 Women 30 to 39
   50 Wolfgang Ketterle Belmont  3:28:00     2 Men 60 to 69
   51 Frank Angelillo Southngton  3:28:47     4 Men 50 to 59
   52 Thomas Martorello Eastchester  3:29:18    13 Men 20 to 29
   53 Jared Johnson Briarcliff Manor  3:29:57    14 Men 30 to 39
   54 Jennifer Flaherty East Hampton  3:30:31     1 Women 40 to 49
   55 Petar Petrov Negotino Macedonia 3:32:04    15 Men 30 to 39
   56 Sean Baez Bronx  3:32:17    16 Men 30 to 39
   57 Nrishata Kiess Zurich Switzerland 3:32:21     5 Men 50 to 59
   58 Drew Meka Canajoharie  3:32:22    13 Men 40 to 49
   59 Lukas Ineichen Zurich Switzerland 3:32:58    17 Men 30 to 39
   60 Christina Scharmer Albany  3:33:05     4 Women 20 to 29
   61 Timothy Lamson Montpelier  3:33:37     6 Men 50 to 59
   62 Pierre Lantuas Dublin Ireland 3:34:06    18 Men 30 to 39
   63 Arvind Kumar Silver Spring  3:35:07    19 Men 30 to 39
   64 Haley Newman Philadelphia  3:35:53     5 Women 20 to 29
   65 Bahadur Szabo Schlieren Switzerland 3:35:59    14 Men 40 to 49
   66 Chris Shafer Egg Harbor Township  3:36:05     7 Men 50 to 59
   67 Mahasatya Janczak Jzbica Poland 3:36:19    15 Men 40 to 49
   68 Robyn Kenul Nesconset  3:36:48     3 Women 30 to 39
   69 Alvin Park Alpine  3:37:10     8 Men 50 to 59
   70 Udayachal Senkyr Zlin 76001 Czech Republic 3:37:11    16 Men 40 to 49
   71 Vladimir Augustin Jamaica  3:37:17    17 Men 40 to 49
   72 Kuniyoshi Watanabe New York  3:37:25    18 Men 40 to 49
   73 Abhinandan Willis Melbourne Australia 3:37:33    20 Men 30 to 39
   74 Josef Sverma Prague 19900 Czech Republic 3:37:45    19 Men 40 to 49
   75 Vihan Hernandez Guatamala Guatamala 3:37:54    14 Men 20 to 29
   76 Jacob Benesch New York  3:38:01    21 Men 30 to 39
   77 Ron Pawlikowski Lebanon  3:38:12     3 Men 60 to 69
   78 Pratul Halper Innsbruck Austria 3:38:51     9 Men 50 to 59
   79 Daulot Fountain Seattle  3:40:02     4 Men 60 to 69
   80 Lauren Kearney Carlsbad  3:40:23     1 Women 50 to 59
   81 Richard Byers Monsey  3:40:30    10 Men 50 to 59
   82 Virginia Day Rockleigh  3:41:04     2 Women 50 to 59
   83 Joanna Zhang Tenafly  3:41:06     2 Women 40 to 49
   84 Pataka Spacek Prague Czech Republic 3:42:09    20 Men 40 to 49
   85 Robert Buccigrossi Medford  3:42:55    21 Men 40 to 49
   86 Boijayanti Gomez-Badillo Jamaica  3:45:23     4 Women 30 to 39
   87 Rachel Lu Tenafly  3:46:35     3 Women 40 to 49
   88 Mikhail Rodnenkov Smolensk Russia 3:46:54    22 Men 30 to 39
   89 Rade Petrovski Skopje Macedonia 3:47:14    23 Men 30 to 39
   90 Kwang Park Wayne  3:47:32     5 Men 60 to 69
   91 Teddy Nosiku North Stonington  3:48:09     4 Men 19 and under
   92 Robert Smith Northport  3:48:45    11 Men 50 to 59
   93 Prabuddha Nicol Perth Australia 3:49:03     6 Men 60 to 69
   94 Phoebe Labat South Orange  3:49:09     6 Women 20 to 29
   95 Kanala Auer Vienna Austria 3:49:45     7 Men 60 to 69
   96 Dwight Grant Scarsdale  3:49:48    12 Men 50 to 59
   97 Karteek Clarke Edinburgh EH9 1LT Scotland 3:50:06    13 Men 50 to 59
   98 Tirtha Voelckner Munich 81247 Germany 3:50:14     4 Women 40 to 49
   99 Katharina Brotzner Salzburg Austria 3:50:28     7 Women 20 to 29
  100 Paul Mangum Dorchester  3:50:28    14 Men 50 to 59
  101 Uddipan Brown Rarotonga Cook Islands 3:50:32    15 Men 50 to 59
  102 Jwalanta Voelckner Munich 81249 Germany 3:50:43    22 Men 40 to 49
  103 Samantha Bernard Clarksburg  3:51:03     8 Women 20 to 29
  104 Kritartha Brada Prague Czech Republic 3:51:14    23 Men 40 to 49
  105 Devendra Baid New York  3:51:57    24 Men 40 to 49
  106 Nirbhasa Magee Reykjavik Iceland 3:52:24    24 Men 30 to 39
  107 Juan Diaz North Bergen  3:52:34     8 Men 60 to 69
  108 Madhu Sen Jersey City  3:52:47     5 Women 40 to 49
  109 Pramodan Gmeiner Dortmund 44143 Germany 3:54:09    25 Men 40 to 49
  110 Ankurika Hammerl Heidelberg Germany 3:54:40     9 Women 20 to 29
  111 Ronnie Lavi Hoboken  3:54:42    26 Men 40 to 49
  112 Melanie Peris Gatineau Canada 3:54:48     6 Women 40 to 49
  113 Timothy Guinee Gloucester  3:55:27    15 Men 20 to 29
  114 Robert Plagman Dolphin  3:55:33    25 Men 30 to 39
  115 Rohak Muravsky Prague 14700 Czech Republic 3:55:41    27 Men 40 to 49
  116 Arpan DeAngelo Jamaica  3:56:57     9 Men 60 to 69
  117 Grahak Cunningham Woodlands Australia 3:57:02    28 Men 40 to 49
  118 William McGinnis Cumberland  3:57:16    10 Men 60 to 69
  119 Jake Kelly Downingtown  3:57:16     5 Men 19 and under
  120 Rebecca Schwartz Bergenfield  3:57:29     5 Women 30 to 39
  121 Baoqiang Weng Beijing China 3:58:12    29 Men 40 to 49
  122 Agnikana Senkyrova Zlin 76001 Czech Republic 3:58:19     7 Women 40 to 49
  123 Whit Breeden Greenwich  3:58:25    26 Men 30 to 39
  124 Craig Thorne Stamford  3:58:29    16 Men 50 to 59
  125 Vinati Docziova Zlin Czech Republic 3:58:30     8 Women 40 to 49
  126 Mary Ellen Thompson Ocoee  3:58:37     9 Women 40 to 49
  127 Usika Muckenhumer Salzburg A-5020 Austria 3:58:48    17 Men 50 to 59
  128 Ekalabhya Bozinov Skopje MacEdonia 3:58:54    30 Men 40 to 49
  129 Anjie Thomas East Lyme  3:59:10    10 Women 20 to 29
  130 Dan Aylward Newbury  3:59:11    27 Men 30 to 39
  131 Melanie Balsdon Lindenhurst  3:59:13    10 Women 40 to 49
  132 Nikolaus Drekonja San Diego  3:59:15    16 Men 20 to 29
  133 Sadhiman Mordik Kiev Ukraine 3:59:55    31 Men 40 to 49
  134 Nathan Garcia New Haven  4:00:19    17 Men 20 to 29
  135 Robert Craig Isleworth Great Britain 4:00:26    32 Men 40 to 49
  136 Alison Graham New York  4:00:50    11 Women 40 to 49
  137 Jatnaban Sinilaine Vienna A-1150 Austria 4:00:53    11 Men 60 to 69
  138 Tim Gorzynski Newark  4:01:33    12 Men 60 to 69
  139 Himadri Kavai Budapest 1089 Hungary 4:01:40    28 Men 30 to 39
  140 Frank Colella Scarsdale  4:01:53    18 Men 50 to 59
  141 Jacqi Thornton Mohegan Lake  4:02:00     6 Women 30 to 39
  142 Helene Beyer Hamburg Germany 4:03:18     7 Women 30 to 39
  143 Krystal Gallagher Pleasant Valley  4:03:41    12 Women 40 to 49
  144 Douglas Ward New City  4:04:00    33 Men 40 to 49
  145 Marek Novotny Bratislava 82104 Slovakia 4:04:14    34 Men 40 to 49
  146 Daniela Bojila Firenzi Italy 4:04:43    13 Women 40 to 49
  147 Claude Letourneau Quebec Canada 4:05:23     1 Men 70 to 79
  148 Daniel Gall Germantown  4:06:14    18 Men 20 to 29
  149 Melissa Weymouth Augusta  4:06:33     8 Women 30 to 39
  150 Petra Kasperova Prague 14300 Czech Republic 4:06:40    11 Women 20 to 29
  151 Heather Zeoli Greensburg  4:07:03     9 Women 30 to 39
  152 Jacob Zeoli Greensburg  4:07:04    29 Men 30 to 39
  153 Joshua Austin Danbury  4:07:37    30 Men 30 to 39
  154 Jason Levine Brooklyn  4:08:07    35 Men 40 to 49
  155 Ching Yam Newburgh  4:08:27    36 Men 40 to 49
  156 Diane Bessey Old Orchard Beach  4:08:29     1 Women 60 to 69
  157 Paul Tam Brooklyn  4:08:53    37 Men 40 to 49
  158 Pathik Kozub Zlin 76302 Czech Republic 4:09:05    38 Men 40 to 49
  159 Keertivati Senkyrova Zlin 76001 Czech Republic 4:09:05    14 Women 40 to 49
  160 Christopher Regan Wappinger Falls  4:09:16    31 Men 30 to 39
  161 Jeff Mann Englishtown  4:10:52    32 Men 30 to 39
  162 Cynthia Loynd Stamford  4:11:25     3 Women 50 to 59
  163 Laura Sheets Carlisle  4:12:09    10 Women 30 to 39
  164 Shamita Achenbach-Konig Vienna A-1180 Austria 4:12:12     4 Women 50 to 59
  165 Dohai Achenbach Vienna A-1180 Austria 4:12:12    19 Men 50 to 59
  166 Jennifer Schu Wayne  4:12:22     5 Women 50 to 59
  167 Chris McEvoy Nyack  4:12:24    20 Men 50 to 59
  168 Dmitry Volkov Smolensk Russia 4:12:32    39 Men 40 to 49
  169 Michael Petsky Garden City  4:13:08    21 Men 50 to 59
  170 Bhauliya Moss Edinburgh Scotland 4:13:44     6 Women 50 to 59
  171 Bastiaan Schuttevaer Madison  4:14:05    40 Men 40 to 49
  172 Anupama Widmer Ehrendinger 5420 Switzerland 4:14:11    11 Women 30 to 39
  173 Carolyn Robinson Wichita  4:14:32    12 Women 20 to 29
  174 Christian Oswald Vienna 1100 Austria 4:14:57    33 Men 30 to 39
  175 Nayaja Perugini Oslo Norway 4:14:58    15 Women 40 to 49
  176 Petr Samak Zlin Czech Republic 4:15:00    41 Men 40 to 49
  177 Sweeta Pradhan Kathmandu 977 Nepal 4:15:10    12 Women 30 to 39
  178 Mike Eavers White Plains  4:15:27    42 Men 40 to 49
  179 Cleomar Gomez Da Silva Uberlandia Brazil 4:15:31    43 Men 40 to 49
  180 Vasuprada Funk Cherbourg 50100 France 4:15:39    13 Women 30 to 39
  181 Baridhi Yonchev Vitry Sur Seine France 4:15:52    34 Men 30 to 39
  182 Kevin Hill Rumson  4:17:11    22 Men 50 to 59
  183 Sam Wang Fredericksburg  4:17:20    23 Men 50 to 59
  184 Linda Cordova Hamden  4:17:32     7 Women 50 to 59
  185 Justin Gailey New Milford  4:17:35    35 Men 30 to 39
  186 Debby Valin Woodbridge  4:17:36     8 Women 50 to 59
  187 Robert Leder Stamford  4:17:52    44 Men 40 to 49
  188 Brian David Seattle  4:18:15    36 Men 30 to 39
  189 Raga Rosenthaler Salzburg Austria 4:18:24    37 Men 30 to 39
  190 Deveshu Zuderell Vienna Austria 4:18:46    24 Men 50 to 59
  191 Harita Davies Jamiaca  4:19:04    16 Women 40 to 49
  192 Jason Kalinowski Nanuet  4:19:36    45 Men 40 to 49
  193 Muslim Badami Wellington New Zealand 4:19:43    38 Men 30 to 39
  194 Dravanam Gilch Nurnberg 90429 Germany 4:20:19     9 Women 50 to 59
  195 Madison Philips Rumson  4:20:21    13 Women 20 to 29
  196 Sue Robinson Wanaque  4:20:56    17 Women 40 to 49
  197 Jogyata Dallas Auckland New Zealand 4:21:04     2 Men 70 to 79
  198 Kuladipa Babusik Povazska Bystrica Slovakia 4:21:09    46 Men 40 to 49
  199 Kim Hooper-Stanley Bethel  4:21:13    10 Women 50 to 59
  200 Donovan Davino North Stonington  4:21:16     6 Men 19 and under
  201 Karen Raps Brookfield  4:21:21    11 Women 50 to 59
  202 Max Gorelik Morton  4:21:27    39 Men 30 to 39
  203 Teodoro Urena New York  4:21:53    25 Men 50 to 59
  204 Prabala Carvalho Saint Cyr France 4:21:58    26 Men 50 to 59
  205 Abhejali Bernardova Zlin 76001 Czech Republic 4:21:58    18 Women 40 to 49
  206 Jacob Pelletier South Portland  4:23:13    19 Men 20 to 29
  207 Hanne Heinrich Portland  4:23:13    14 Women 20 to 29
  208 Fernanda Fonseca White Plains  4:23:23    19 Women 40 to 49
  209 Eliot Lee Croton on Hudson  4:23:26    27 Men 50 to 59
  210 John Abbate Yorktown Heights  4:23:27    13 Men 60 to 69
  211 Lawrence Kurv Oak Park  4:24:44    14 Men 60 to 69
  212 Charumati Pernicka Vsetin Czech Republic 4:25:12    20 Women 40 to 49
  213 Marin Nenov Sofia Bulgaria 4:25:31    40 Men 30 to 39
  214 Suzanne Nelson West Deptford  4:25:36    21 Women 40 to 49
  215 Martin Valek Ostravia 70030 Czech Republic 4:26:01    47 Men 40 to 49
  216 Indu Panicker Congers  4:26:23    28 Men 50 to 59
  217 Shankara Smith Barnes, London United Kingdom 4:26:46    22 Women 40 to 49
  218 Jana Duskova Dobsice Czech Reoublic 4:26:46    14 Women 30 to 39
  219 Cheryll Mae Martin Auckland New Zealand 4:27:51    15 Women 30 to 39
  220 Dambholi Milisits Budapest Hungary 4:29:15    48 Men 40 to 49
  221 Yasen Misiaczuk Sofia Bulgaria 4:29:20    41 Men 30 to 39
  222 Joao Theoto Jundiai Brazil 4:29:59    29 Men 50 to 59
  223 Ulla Plourde Plantsville  4:30:05    23 Women 40 to 49
  224 Deborah Saat New York  4:30:18     2 Women 60 to 69
  225 Pushkala Tramosljika Frankfurt 65933 Germany 4:30:31    49 Men 40 to 49
  226 Christopher Gilbert Hamden  4:31:20    50 Men 40 to 49
  227 Bob Oberkehr Northvale  4:31:53    15 Men 60 to 69
  228 Ashirvad Bellozaiantchic Jamaica  4:31:58    51 Men 40 to 49
  229 Kerry O'Connor Fayetteville  4:32:13    15 Women 20 to 29
  230 Kayla O'Connor Fayetteville  4:32:13    16 Women 20 to 29
  231 Jonathan Fitt Nashua  4:32:44    16 Men 60 to 69
  232 Nicholas Mansfield Spring Valley  4:32:53    52 Men 40 to 49
  233 Parichayaka Hammerl Jamaica  4:33:17    53 Men 40 to 49
  234 Vukasin Nikolic Becij Serbia 4:33:33    42 Men 30 to 39
  235 Ross Coomber Simcoe Canada 4:33:39     3 Men 70 to 79
  236 Dan Oh Leonia  4:34:17    17 Men 60 to 69
  237 Purnendu Knezevic Belgrade Serbia 4:34:36    54 Men 40 to 49
  238 Divyata Maliskova Zlin Czech Republic 4:34:42    16 Women 30 to 39
  239 Karen Chung Jersey City  4:35:04    24 Women 40 to 49
  240 Varsneya Grekulovic Bor Serbia 4:35:11    55 Men 40 to 49
  241 Christian Nilsson Huddinge Sweden 4:35:25    43 Men 30 to 39
  242 Ahlad Ahmadi Nurnberg 90443 Germany 4:35:45    30 Men 50 to 59
  243 Sara Maria Schmidt Den Hague Netherlands 4:36:39    17 Women 30 to 39
  244 Anya Plitsyna San Diego  4:37:07    18 Women 30 to 39
  245 Megan Gasvoda New York  4:37:14    17 Women 20 to 29
  246 Melissa Castillo-Garso Winthrop  4:37:17    19 Women 30 to 39
  247 Tavishi Matthews Canberra Australia 4:37:49    12 Women 50 to 59
  248 Akshaya Bradova Prague 4, 14000 Czech Republic 4:38:04    25 Women 40 to 49
  249 Jatnasheel Moser Heidelberg 73319 Germany 4:38:23    31 Men 50 to 59
  250 Patricia Daxner Salzburg 5020 Austria 4:38:29    20 Women 30 to 39
  251 Joanna Rees New York  4:38:30    26 Women 40 to 49
  252 Marek Bohman Bratislava 84108 Slovakia 4:38:59    56 Men 40 to 49
  253 Tarak Kupper Dortmund Germany 4:39:33    18 Men 60 to 69
  254 Maiwand Ahmadzal Kabul Afghanistan 4:39:39    44 Men 30 to 39
  255 Ambarish Keenan Dublin 14 Ireland 4:39:40    32 Men 50 to 59
  256 Hastakamala Diaz Canberra Australia 4:40:42    21 Women 30 to 39
  257 Richard Brodsky Atlantic Beach  4:41:12    19 Men 60 to 69
  258 Dheeraj Sakhuja Short Hills  4:41:13    57 Men 40 to 49
  259 Abhari Stradalova Zlin Czech Republic 4:41:21    22 Women 30 to 39
  260 Davin Ganpat Flushing  4:41:46    45 Men 30 to 39
  261 Samviraja Gori Padova 35124 Italy 4:41:51    27 Women 40 to 49
  262 Banshidhar Medeiros Jamaica  4:41:55    20 Men 60 to 69
  263 Olivia Swenson Pittsburgh  4:41:57    18 Women 20 to 29
  264 Stacey Marsh Canberra Australia 4:42:08    28 Women 40 to 49
  265 Larry Wilson Poughkeepsie  4:42:13    21 Men 60 to 69
  266 Kristin Waters New York  4:42:32    23 Women 30 to 39
  267 David Yoo Harrington Park  4:43:09    33 Men 50 to 59
  268 Pranjal Milovnik Bratislava Slovakia 4:43:15    58 Men 40 to 49
  269 Padyatra Komak Stupava Slovakia 4:44:01    59 Men 40 to 49
  270 Curtis Chong Cambridge  4:44:20    60 Men 40 to 49
  271 Eniko Soron Budapest Hungary 4:44:55    19 Women 20 to 29
  272 Min Jiang Linden  4:45:52    34 Men 50 to 59
  273 Glen Avery Houghton  4:46:35    22 Men 60 to 69
  274 Eszter Koncz Ehrendingen Switzerland 4:46:43    24 Women 30 to 39
  275 Gudrun Freier Winterthur Swiizerland 4:47:15    29 Women 40 to 49
  276 Angela Dutcher Roscoe  4:47:20    13 Women 50 to 59
  277 Cody Donahue Rochester  4:47:28    46 Men 30 to 39
  278 John Markola Bronxville  4:47:29     7 Men 19 and under
  279 Pearlette Toussant Philadelphia  4:48:54    30 Women 40 to 49
  280 Mitra Yakovski Sofia 3592 Bulgaria 4:48:54    47 Men 30 to 39
  281 Petr Hlava Prague 15600 Czech Republic 4:49:18    48 Men 30 to 39
  282 Palash Bosgang Red Hook  4:50:07    31 Women 40 to 49
  283 Maria Fred Wantagh  4:50:43    14 Women 50 to 59
  284 Tammy Massie Gaithersburg  4:50:56    32 Women 40 to 49
  285 Jorge Patino-Ladino Jamaica  4:51:21    20 Men 20 to 29
  286 Inna Vdovenko Belgorod Russia 4:51:45    25 Women 30 to 39
  287 Ashadeep Volkhardt Adelaide Australia 4:52:45    33 Women 40 to 49
  288 Giribhu Muhs Ehrendingen Switzerland 4:52:46    34 Women 40 to 49
  289 Koce Nikcevski Skopje Macedonia 4:53:19    35 Men 50 to 59
  290 Sunny Siew Chuan Syn Kings Point  4:53:40    23 Men 60 to 69
  291 Silvia Di Nunzio Bologna Italy 4:54:26    26 Women 30 to 39
  292 Priyavadin Reisecker Salzburg 5020 Austria 4:54:42    61 Men 40 to 49
  293 J C Santa Teresa Nanuet  4:54:54    36 Men 50 to 59
  294 Antana Locs Jamaica  4:55:12    15 Women 50 to 59
  295 Anastasiia Konova Dnipro Ukraine 4:55:38     1 Women 19 and under
  296 Jarret Ditch Bonita Springs  4:55:58    49 Men 30 to 39
  297 Irene Zimmerman Fishers  4:56:06    20 Women 20 to 29
  298 Monica Leigh Washingtonville  4:56:20    27 Women 30 to 39
  299 Diana Chavez New York  4:56:24    28 Women 30 to 39
  300 Grace Zimmerman Fishers  4:56:33    21 Women 20 to 29
  301 Patanga Cordeiro Sao Paulo Brazil 4:56:49    50 Men 30 to 39
  302 Phebe Ciulla Upper Saddle River  4:57:29    35 Women 40 to 49
  303 Cynthia Degirolamo Sandy Hook  4:58:57    16 Women 50 to 59
  304 Vesi Moncheva Jamaica  4:59:34    29 Women 30 to 39
  305 Michael Fred Wantagh  5:00:03    37 Men 50 to 59
  306 Emmy Stocker Cos Cob  5:00:14     3 Women 60 to 69
  307 Luana Koch Hamburg Germany 5:01:03    22 Women 20 to 29
  308 Igor Plitsyna San Diego  5:01:39    38 Men 50 to 59
  309 Nurari Merry Canberra Australia 5:02:07    36 Women 40 to 49
  310 Olga Sosa Corona  5:02:09    37 Women 40 to 49
  311 Antarajyoti Rossi Inpruneta Italy 5:02:21    38 Women 40 to 49
  312 Albert Lione Shelton  5:03:21    62 Men 40 to 49
  313 Kagni Leinonen Helsinki 00990 Finland 5:03:28    39 Women 40 to 49
  314 Zakia Haywood Bronx  5:03:31    40 Women 40 to 49
  315 Hideki Kinoshita Astoria  5:04:25    51 Men 30 to 39
  316 Sayer Ji Estero  5:05:02    63 Men 40 to 49
  317 Varunavi Klabnikova Geneva 1201 Switzerland 5:06:54    30 Women 30 to 39
  318 John Sorocco Brooklyn  5:06:57    24 Men 60 to 69
  319 Chih- Kao Hu Great Neck  5:07:03    39 Men 50 to 59
  320 Laurel Frankel Whitestone  5:08:05    17 Women 50 to 59
  321 Kaitlyn Ritz Farmington  5:08:34    23 Women 20 to 29
  322 Marina Pak Moscow Russia 5:08:45    41 Women 40 to 49
  323 Sopan Tzekov Sofia Bulgaria 5:08:55    52 Men 30 to 39
  324 Laila Faerman Jamiaca  5:09:20    31 Women 30 to 39
  325 James West Yonkers  5:09:41    40 Men 50 to 59
  326 Gerda Schlager Salzburg 5020 Austria 5:10:18     4 Women 60 to 69
  327 Kulapati Akbashev Ufa Russia 5:10:53    64 Men 40 to 49
  328 Toyesa Mrkonjic Zagreb Croatia 5:11:18    65 Men 40 to 49
  329 Erik Duisheev Bishkek Kyrgyzstan 5:12:12    21 Men 20 to 29
  330 Aruna Pohland Augsburg 86161 Germany 5:12:13    42 Women 40 to 49
  331 Maral Siegel Jamaica  5:13:57    25 Men 60 to 69
  332 Marcus Hedgpeth Brooklyn  5:14:45    53 Men 30 to 39
  333 Zuzana Rybkova Zlin Czech Republic 5:16:15    43 Women 40 to 49
  334 Wilson Aguirre Port Chester  5:17:33    22 Men 20 to 29
  335 Maria-Luiza Hariton Amance France 5:17:47    32 Women 30 to 39
  336 Sushloka Postler Vienna Austria 5:18:17    41 Men 50 to 59
  337 John Hemmerich Osawatomie  5:19:32    66 Men 40 to 49
  338 Vyacheslav Rayenok Kherson Ukraine 5:19:49    54 Men 30 to 39
  339 Donald Landry Montreal Canada 5:19:56     4 Men 70 to 79
  340 Praguna Vagner Munich 81249 Germany 5:20:12    42 Men 50 to 59
  341 Harashita Sunaoshi Kyoto Japan 5:20:21    18 Women 50 to 59
  342 Peter Maulbeck Roseland  5:21:08    26 Men 60 to 69
  343 Muniya Haskova Prague 8  18100 Czech Republic 5:21:18    44 Women 40 to 49
  344 Caroline Williams Arlington  5:22:38    19 Women 50 to 59
  345 Yatkara Aleksapolskyy Vancouver Canada 5:23:15    67 Men 40 to 49
  346 Anne Rice Spring  5:23:55    45 Women 40 to 49
  347 Kamil Haman Zlin 76001 Czech Republic 5:24:28    68 Men 40 to 49
  348 Didhiti Danner Ladenburg D-68526 Germany 5:24:46    20 Women 50 to 59
  349 Viharin Rosa Prague Czech Republic 5:25:01    69 Men 40 to 49
  350 Chris Solarz New York  5:25:11    55 Men 30 to 39
  351 Beatriu Reig New York  5:25:12    46 Women 40 to 49
  352 Dharmik Senkyr Zlin 76001 Czech Republic 5:25:19    27 Men 60 to 69
  353 Kalavati Kolesnichenko Moscow Russia 5:25:27    47 Women 40 to 49
  354 Dhuni Vancat Zlin Czech Republic 5:25:40    70 Men 40 to 49
  355 Christopher Meier Reisterstown  5:25:47    23 Men 20 to 29
  356 Rupashi 753   5:26:57    21 Women 50 to 59
  357 Nisanga Mehikic Zurich 8004 Switzerland 5:27:26    43 Men 50 to 59
  358 Yolanda Concepcion Brooklyn  5:28:35    22 Women 50 to 59
  359 Admas Belilgne New York  5:29:41     5 Women 60 to 69
  360 Bara Lochmanova Prague Czech Republic 5:30:09    33 Women 30 to 39
  361 Irina Zezegova Syktyvkar Russia 5:31:42    48 Women 40 to 49
  362 Nimagan Luther Heidelberg Germany 5:32:10    44 Men 50 to 59
  363 Uddhava Selucky Brno 60200 Czech Republic 5:32:17    71 Men 40 to 49
  364 Janett Singh Auckland New Zealand 5:35:07    34 Women 30 to 39
  365 Barrs Miroslav Plzen Czech Republic 5:37:40    72 Men 40 to 49
  366 Vasudha Deming San Diego  5:39:01    23 Women 50 to 59
  367 Deemanta Benedek Budapest Hungary 5:39:10    49 Women 40 to 49
  368 Natalia Serova Omsk Russia 5:39:56     6 Women 60 to 69
  369 Akbota Jumabayeva Astana Kazakhstan 5:41:29    35 Women 30 to 39
  370 Mirka Novakova Prague Czech Republic 5:41:47    36 Women 30 to 39
  371 Premananda Klaile Jamaica  5:42:11    56 Men 30 to 39
  372 Gatisheela Truong San Francisco  5:42:28    50 Women 40 to 49
  373 Eric Kreuter Yorktown Heights  5:44:19    45 Men 50 to 59
  374 Andrew Oresto Aberdeen  5:44:58    73 Men 40 to 49
  375 Dyutimati Zabelina Moscow Russia 5:45:36     7 Women 60 to 69
  376 Marta Brabkova Prague Czech Republic 5:46:17    51 Women 40 to 49
  377 Amy Jeon Flushing  5:47:06     8 Women 60 to 69
  378 Rathin Boulton Hackett Australia 5:48:07    74 Men 40 to 49
  379 Vigra Paz Guatemala City Guatemala 5:49:20    52 Women 40 to 49
  380 Durba Lee Auckland New Zealand 5:49:22    24 Women 50 to 59
  381 Vitor Silva Quinto Do Anjo Portugal 5:51:15     5 Men 70 to 79
  382 Dawn Jenci Milford  5:51:47    37 Women 30 to 39
  383 Kenneth Tom Staten Island  5:52:11    75 Men 40 to 49
  384 Jamik Ligon Ridgefield Park  5:52:20    76 Men 40 to 49
  385 Richard Holmes Durham  5:55:43    28 Men 60 to 69
  386 Avi Goldstein Hewlett  5:58:58    24 Men 20 to 29
  387 Chananel Laufer Brooklyn  6:00:15    57 Men 30 to 39
  388 Eva Paradise Prague 15500 Czech Republic 6:01:50    38 Women 30 to 39
  389 Jamie Harris London Canada 6:02:48     6 Men 70 to 79
  390 Gunthita Corda Winterthur 8402 Switzerland 6:03:00    25 Women 50 to 59
  391 Visuddhi Trummer Wels Aut 4600 Austria 6:06:10    26 Women 50 to 59
  392 Penny Nam Johannesburg South Africa 6:06:44    53 Women 40 to 49
  393 Niyojita Purevsuren Ulaanbaatar Mongolia 6:06:44    54 Women 40 to 49
  394 Diahann Malcolm Briarcliff Manor  6:09:04     9 Women 60 to 69
  395 Marion Landry Montreal Canada 6:10:25     1 Women 70 to 79
  396 Velma George Bronx  6:12:24    10 Women 60 to 69
  397 Istvan Csendes Szolnok Hungary 6:12:38    46 Men 50 to 59
  398 Elie Klachkin Livingston  6:13:32    29 Men 60 to 69
  399 Karpani Tsybenko Moscow Russia 6:15:11    55 Women 40 to 49
  400 Shaivya Rubczynska Warsaw 00-712 Poland 6:19:08    27 Women 50 to 59
  401 Sanjay Mohanta Ottawa Canada 6:19:55    77 Men 40 to 49
  402 Julia Marino East Greenbush  6:20:16    24 Women 20 to 29
  403 Ed Peters Norwalk  6:21:54    30 Men 60 to 69
  404 Evan Fink Castleton  6:22:08     8 Men 19 and under
  405 Garima Hoffman Santa Rosa  6:25:06     2 Women 70 to 79
  406 Lee Dickey Dracut  6:25:07    31 Men 60 to 69
  407 Utpal Marshall Jamaica  6:26:44    32 Men 60 to 69
  408 Al Emma Exton  6:29:57     7 Men 70 to 79
  409 Edgar Izaguirre Chicago  6:30:52    25 Men 20 to 29
  410 Laura Milak Middleburgh  6:34:26    11 Women 60 to 69
  411 William Milak Middleburgh  6:34:28    33 Men 60 to 69
  412 Simahin Pierce Auckland 1003 New Zealand 6:35:09     8 Men 70 to 79
  413 Jhonmarco Velazquez Passaic  6:35:25    26 Men 20 to 29
  414 Natashira Lecoq Cherbourg 50100 France 6:38:13    28 Women 50 to 59
  415 Rich Innamorato Long Island City  6:38:13    34 Men 60 to 69
  416 Brian Adler Tappan  6:41:36    47 Men 50 to 59
  417 Sarvesa Alic Linz 4040 Austria 6:42:52    56 Women 40 to 49
  418 Eliot Collins Raritan  6:43:06    35 Men 60 to 69
  419 Travis Pezzuto Easton  6:46:09    78 Men 40 to 49
  420 Randy Watson Valley Stream  6:51:40    36 Men 60 to 69
  421 Edwige Cotrel Dinan France 6:52:20    29 Women 50 to 59
  422 Thomas Podruchny Oakville Canada 6:57:44     1 Men 80 and over
  423 Heather Vaughn Ocean  7:02:39    57 Women 40 to 49
  424 Sumeru Scheucher St. Stefam A-8511 Austria 7:07:25    30 Women 50 to 59
  425 Alexander Guelke New York  7:07:36    79 Men 40 to 49
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2018 Sri Chinmoy Marathon Final Results - Rockland Lake State Park

By Suchitra Sugar
23 August
  • Caroline Day, overall female winner
  • first male finisher, Samalya Schaeffer
Place Name   Time Age Place Age
Group
1 Samalya Schaeffer 2:33:47 1 Men 30 to 39
2 Connor Kinkema 2:40:00 1 Men 19 and under
3 Abhinabha Tangerman 2:48:21 1 Men 40 to 49
4 Stephen Bione 2:51:04 1 Men 20 to 29
5 Evan Pilachowski 2:51:52 2 Men 30 to 39
6 Apaguha Vesely 2:53:48 2 Men 40 to 49
7 Allen Meringolo 2:54:59 2 Men 20 to 29
8 Robert Lynn 2:55:32 3 Men 30 to 39
9 Michael Oliva 2:56:27 4 Men 30 to 39
10 Michael Arnstein 2:56:41 3 Men 40 to 49
11 Devon Holgate 2:56:49 3 Men 20 to 29
12 Knox Robinson 2:57:35 4 Men 40 to 49
13 Winston Mei 2:58:11 5 Men 40 to 49
14 Caroline Day 2:59:14 1 Women 20 to 29
15 Dylan Carey 3:01:23 4 Men 20 to 29
16 Tom Godfrey 3:04:11 5 Men 30 to 39
17 Sam Nicaise 3:04:23 6 Men 30 to 39
18 Bharu Rother 3:06:51 1 Men 50 to 59
19 Alex Syed 3:07:26 7 Men 30 to 39
20 Andrej Visnrvsky 3:09:44 5 Men 20 to 29
21 Collin Gray 3:10:40 6 Men 20 to 29
22 Ryan Glynn 3:11:19 2 Men 19 and under
23 Amilcar Alfaro-Martell 3:11:21 8 Men 30 to 39
24 Weicheng Shih 3:13:15 6 Men 40 to 49
25 Samuel Masters 3:13:21 7 Men 20 to 29
26 Tucker Grose 3:13:22 8 Men 20 to 29
27 Alexey Egorov 3:13:30 7 Men 40 to 49
28 Brendon McDonough 3:13:38 9 Men 20 to 29
29 Sadanand Magee 3:14:25 9 Men 30 to 39
30 Nigel McGregor 3:14:27 10 Men 30 to 39
31 Robert Jaros 3:15:01 8 Men 40 to 49
32 Eliza Ragsdale 3:18:22 2 Women 20 to 29
33 Ondrej Mocny 3:19:05 11 Men 30 to 39
34 Tony Cheong 3:20:12 2 Men 50 to 59
35 Sarankhuu Jargal 3:21:23 10 Men 20 to 29
36 Brad DeWees 3:22:34 12 Men 30 to 39
37 Ricardo Mota 3:22:36 9 Men 40 to 49
38 Jorge Pina 3:22:37 10 Men 40 to 49
39 Hans Zanger 3:24:39 11 Men 20 to 29
40 Andrea Marcato 3:24:48 13 Men 30 to 39
41 Maximilian Zandl 3:25:04 12 Men 20 to 29
42 Beau Atwater 3:25:20 1 Men 60 to 69
43 Ananda-Lahari Zuscin 3:25:37 11 Men 40 to 49
44 Nitish Zuidema 3:25:45 3 Men 50 to 59
45 Jennifer Blalock 3:26:01 1 Women 30 to 39
46 Dylan Gooley 3:26:11 3 Men 19 and under
47 Sharon Armstrong 3:26:27 3 Women 20 to 29
48 Clifford Kian 3:27:11 12 Men 40 to 49
49 Stephanie Snow 3:28:00 2 Women 30 to 39
50 Wolfgang Ketterle 3:28:47 2 Men 60 to 69
51 Frank Angelillo 3:29:18 4 Men 50 to 59
52 Thomas Martorello 3:29:57 13 Men 20 to 29
53 Jared Johnson 3:30:31 14 Men 30 to 39
54 Jennifer Flaherty 3:32:04 1 Women 40 to 49
55 Petar Petrov 3:32:17 15 Men 30 to 39
56 Sean Baez 3:32:21 16 Men 30 to 39
57 Nrishata Kiess 3:32:22 5 Men 50 to 59
58 Drew Meka 3:32:58 13 Men 40 to 49
59 Lukas Ineichen 3:33:05 17 Men 30 to 39
60 Christina Scharmer 3:33:37 4 Women 20 to 29
61 Timothy Lamson 3:34:06 6 Men 50 to 59
62 Pierre Lantuas 3:35:07 18 Men 30 to 39
63 Arvind Kumar 3:35:53 19 Men 30 to 39
64 Haley Newman 3:35:59 5 Women 20 to 29
65 Bahadur Szabo 3:36:05 14 Men 40 to 49
66 Chris Shafer 3:36:19 7 Men 50 to 59
67 Mahasatya Janczak 3:36:48 15 Men 40 to 49
68 Robyn Kenul 3:37:10 3 Women 30 to 39
69 Alvin Park 3:37:11 8 Men 50 to 59
70 Udayachal Senkyr 3:37:17 16 Men 40 to 49
71 Vladimir Augustin 3:37:25 17 Men 40 to 49
72 Kuniyoshi Watanabe 3:37:33 18 Men 40 to 49
73 Abhinandan Willis 3:37:45 20 Men 30 to 39
74 Josef Sverma 3:37:54 19 Men 40 to 49
75 Vihan Hernandez 3:38:01 14 Men 20 to 29
76 Jacob Benesch 3:38:12 21 Men 30 to 39
77 Ron Pawlikowski 3:38:51 3 Men 60 to 69
78 Pratul Halper 3:40:02 9 Men 50 to 59
79 Daulot Fountain 3:40:23 4 Men 60 to 69
80 Lauren Kearney 3:40:30 1 Women 50 to 59
81 Richard Byers 3:41:04 10 Men 50 to 59
82 Virginia Day 3:41:06 2 Women 50 to 59
83 Joanna Zhang 3:42:09 2 Women 40 to 49
84 Pataka Spacek 3:42:55 20 Men 40 to 49
85 Robert Buccigrossi 3:45:23 21 Men 40 to 49
86 Boijayanti Gomez-Badillo 3:46:35 4 Women 30 to 39
87 Rachel Lu 3:46:54 3 Women 40 to 49
88 Mikhail Rodnenkov 3:47:14 22 Men 30 to 39
89 Rade Petrovski 3:47:32 23 Men 30 to 39
90 Kwang Park 3:48:09 5 Men 60 to 69
91 Teddy Nosiku 3:48:45 4 Men 19 and under
92 Robert Smith 3:49:03 11 Men 50 to 59
93 Prabuddha Nicol 3:49:09 6 Men 60 to 69
94 Phoebe Labat 3:49:45 6 Women 20 to 29
95 Kanala Auer 3:49:48 7 Men 60 to 69
96 Dwight Grant 3:50:06 12 Men 50 to 59
97 Karteek Clarke 3:50:14 13 Men 50 to 59
98 Tirtha Voelckner 3:50:28 4 Women 40 to 49
99 Katharina Brotzner 3:50:28 7 Women 20 to 29
100 Paul Mangum 3:50:32 14 Men 50 to 59
101 Uddipan Brown 3:50:43 15 Men 50 to 59
102 Jwalanta Voelckner 3:51:03 22 Men 40 to 49
103 Samantha Bernard 3:51:14 8 Women 20 to 29
104 Kritartha Brada 3:51:57 23 Men 40 to 49
105 Devendra Baid 3:52:24 24 Men 40 to 49
106 Nirbhasa Magee 3:52:34 24 Men 30 to 39
107 Juan Diaz 3:52:47 8 Men 60 to 69
108 Madhu Sen 3:54:09 5 Women 40 to 49
109 Pramodan Gmeiner 3:54:40 25 Men 40 to 49
110 Ankurika Hammerl 3:54:42 9 Women 20 to 29
111 Ronnie Lavi 3:54:48 26 Men 40 to 49
112 Melanie Peris 3:55:27 6 Women 40 to 49
113 Timothy Guinee 3:55:33 15 Men 20 to 29
114 Robert Plagman 3:55:41 25 Men 30 to 39
115 Rohak Muravsky 3:56:57 27 Men 40 to 49
116 Arpan DeAngelo 3:57:02 9 Men 60 to 69
117 Grahak Cunningham 3:57:06 28 Men 40 to 49
118 William McGinnis 3:57:16 10 Men 60 to 69
119 Jake Kelly 3:57:16 5 Men 19 and under
120 Rebecca Schwartz 3:57:29 5 Women 30 to 39
121 Baoqiang Weng 3:58:12 29 Men 40 to 49
122 Agnikana Senkyrova 3:58:19 7 Women 40 to 49
123 Whit Breeden 3:58:25 26 Men 30 to 39
124 Craig Thorne 3:58:29 16 Men 50 to 59
125 Vinati Docziova 3:58:30 8 Women 40 to 49
126 Mary Ellen Thompson 3:58:37 9 Women 40 to 49
127 Usika Muckenhumer 3:58:48 17 Men 50 to 59
128 Ekalabhya Bozinov 3:58:54 30 Men 40 to 49
129 Anjie Thomas 3:59:10 10 Women 20 to 29
130 Dan Aylward 3:59:11 27 Men 30 to 39
131 Melanie Balsdon 3:59:13 10 Women 40 to 49
132 Nikolaus Drekonja 3:59:15 16 Men 20 to 29
133 Sadhiman Mordik 3:59:55 31 Men 40 to 49
134 Nathan Garcia 4:00:19 17 Men 20 to 29
135 Robert Craig 4:00:26 32 Men 40 to 49
136 Alison Graham 4:00:50 11 Women 40 to 49
137 Jatnaban Sinilaine 4:00:53 11 Men 60 to 69
138 Tim Gorzynski 4:01:33 12 Men 60 to 69
139 Himadri Kavai 4:01:40 28 Men 30 to 39
140 Frank Colella 4:01:53 18 Men 50 to 59
141 Jacqi Thornton 4:02:00 6 Women 30 to 39
142 Helene Beyer 4:03:18 7 Women 30 to 39
143 Krystal Gallagher 4:03:41 12 Women 40 to 49
144 Douglas Ward 4:04:00 33 Men 40 to 49
145 Marek Novotny 4:04:14 34 Men 40 to 49
146 Daniela Bojila 4:04:43 13 Women 40 to 49
147 Claude Letourneau 4:05:23 1 Men 70 to 79
148 Daniel Gall 4:06:14 18 Men 20 to 29
149 Melissa Weymouth 4:06:33 8 Women 30 to 39
150 Petra Kasperova 4:06:40 11 Women 20 to 29
151 Heather Zeoli 4:07:03 9 Women 30 to 39
152 Jacob Zeoli 4:07:04 29 Men 30 to 39
153 Joshua Austin 4:07:37 30 Men 30 to 39
154 Jason Levine 4:08:07 35 Men 40 to 49
155 Ching Yam 4:08:27 36 Men 40 to 49
156 Diane Bessey 4:08:29 1 Women 60 to 69
157 Paul Tam 4:08:53 37 Men 40 to 49
158 Pathik Kozub 4:09:05 38 Men 40 to 49
159 Keertivati Senkyrova 4:09:05 14 Women 40 to 49
160 Christopher Regan 4:09:16 31 Men 30 to 39
161 Jeff Mann 4:10:52 32 Men 30 to 39
162 Cynthia Loynd 4:11:25 3 Women 50 to 59
163 Laura Sheets 4:12:09 10 Women 30 to 39
164 Shamita Achenbach-Konig 4:12:12 4 Women 50 to 59
165 Dohai Achenbach 4:12:12 19 Men 50 to 59
166 Jennifer Schu 4:12:22 5 Women 50 to 59
167 Chris McEvoy 4:12:24 20 Men 50 to 59
168 Dmitry Volkov 4:12:32 39 Men 40 to 49
169 Michael Petsky 4:13:08 21 Men 50 to 59
170 Bhauliya Moss 4:13:44 6 Women 50 to 59
171 Bastiaan Schuttevaer 4:14:05 40 Men 40 to 49
172 Anupama Widmer 4:14:11 11 Women 30 to 39
173 Carolyn Robinson 4:14:32 12 Women 20 to 29
174 Christian Oswald 4:14:57 33 Men 30 to 39
175 Nayaja Perugini 4:14:58 15 Women 40 to 49
176 Petr Samak 4:15:00 41 Men 40 to 49
177 Sweeta Pradhan 4:15:10 12 Women 30 to 39
178 Mike Eavers 4:15:27 42 Men 40 to 49
179 Cleomar Gomez Da Silva 4:15:31 43 Men 40 to 49
180 Vasuprada Funk 4:15:39 13 Women 30 to 39
181 Baridhi Yonchev 4:15:52 34 Men 30 to 39
182 Kevin Hill 4:17:11 22 Men 50 to 59
183 Sam Wang 4:17:20 23 Men 50 to 59
184 Linda Cordova 4:17:32 7 Women 50 to 59
185 Justin Gailey 4:17:35 35 Men 30 to 39
186 Debby Valin 4:17:36 8 Women 50 to 59
187 Robert Leder 4:17:52 44 Men 40 to 49
188 Brian David 4:18:15 36 Men 30 to 39
189 Raga Rosenthaler 4:18:24 37 Men 30 to 39
190 Deveshu Zuderell 4:18:46 24 Men 50 to 59
191 Harita Davies 4:19:04 16 Women 40 to 49
192 Jason Kalinowski 4:19:36 45 Men 40 to 49
193 Muslim Badami 4:19:43 38 Men 30 to 39
194 Dravanam Gilch 4:20:19 9 Women 50 to 59
195 Madison Philips 4:20:21 13 Women 20 to 29
196 Sue Robinson 4:20:56 17 Women 40 to 49
197 Jogyata Dallas 4:21:04 2 Men 70 to 79
198 Kuladipa Babusik 4:21:09 46 Men 40 to 49
199 Kim Hooper-Stanley 4:21:13 10 Women 50 to 59
200 Donovan Davino 4:21:16 6 Men 19 and under
201 Karen Raps 4:21:21 11 Women 50 to 59
202 Max Gorelik 4:21:27 39 Men 30 to 39
203 Teodoro Urena 4:21:53 25 Men 50 to 59
204 Prabala Carvalho 4:21:58 26 Men 50 to 59
205 Abhejali Bernardova 4:21:58 18 Women 40 to 49
206 Jacob Pelletier 4:23:13 19 Men 20 to 29
207 Hanne Heinrich 4:23:13 14 Women 20 to 29
208 Fernanda Fonseca 4:23:23 19 Women 40 to 49
209 Eliot Lee 4:23:26 27 Men 50 to 59
210 John Abbate 4:23:27 13 Men 60 to 69
211 Lawrence Kurv 4:24:44 14 Men 60 to 69
212 Charumati Pernicka 4:25:12 20 Women 40 to 49
213 Marin Nenov 4:25:31 40 Men 30 to 39
214 Suzanne Nelson 4:25:36 21 Women 40 to 49
215 Martin Valek 4:26:01 47 Men 40 to 49
216 Indu Panicker 4:26:23 28 Men 50 to 59
217 Shankara Smith 4:26:46 22 Women 40 to 49
218 Jana Duskova 4:26:46 14 Women 30 to 39
219 Cheryll Mae Martin 4:27:51 15 Women 30 to 39
220 Dambholi Milisits 4:29:15 48 Men 40 to 49
221 Yasen Misiaczuk 4:29:20 41 Men 30 to 39
222 Joao Theoto 4:29:59 29 Men 50 to 59
223 Ulla Plourde 4:30:05 23 Women 40 to 49
224 Deborah Saat 4:30:18 2 Women 60 to 69
225 Pushkala Tramosljika 4:30:31 49 Men 40 to 49
226 Christopher Gilbert 4:31:20 50 Men 40 to 49
227 Bob Oberkehr 4:31:53 15 Men 60 to 69
228 Ashirvad Bellozaiantchic 4:31:58 51 Men 40 to 49
229 Kerry O'Connor 4:32:13 15 Women 20 to 29
230 Kayla O'Connor 4:32:13 16 Women 20 to 29
231 Jonathan Fitt 4:32:44 16 Men 60 to 69
232 Nicholas Mansfield 4:32:53 52 Men 40 to 49
233 Parichayaka Hammerl 4:33:17 53 Men 40 to 49
234 Vukasin Nikolic 4:33:33 42 Men 30 to 39
235 Ross Coomber 4:33:39 3 Men 70 to 79
236 Dan Oh 4:34:17 17 Men 60 to 69
237 Purnendu Knezevic 4:34:36 54 Men 40 to 49
238 Divyata Maliskova 4:34:42 16 Women 30 to 39
239 Karen Chung 4:35:04 24 Women 40 to 49
240 Varsneya Grekulovic 4:35:11 55 Men 40 to 49
241 Christian Nilsson 4:35:25 43 Men 30 to 39
242 Ahlad Ahmadi 4:35:45 30 Men 50 to 59
243 Sara Maria Schmidt 4:36:39 17 Women 30 to 39
244 Anya Plitsyna 4:37:07 18 Women 30 to 39
245 Megan Gasvoda 4:37:14 17 Women 20 to 29
246 Melissa Castillo-Garso 4:37:17 19 Women 30 to 39
247 Tavishi Matthews 4:37:49 12 Women 50 to 59
248 Akshaya Bradova 4:38:04 25 Women 40 to 49
249 Jatnasheel Moser 4:38:23 31 Men 50 to 59
250 Patricia Daxner 4:38:29 20 Women 30 to 39
251 Joanna Rees 4:38:30 26 Women 40 to 49
252 Marek Bohman 4:38:59 56 Men 40 to 49
253 Tarak Kupper 4:39:33 18 Men 60 to 69
254 Maiwand Ahmadzal 4:39:39 44 Men 30 to 39
255 Ambarish Keenan 4:39:40 32 Men 50 to 59
256 Hastakamala Diaz 4:40:42 21 Women 30 to 39
257 Richard Brodsky 4:41:12 19 Men 60 to 69
258 Dheeraj Sakhuja 4:41:13 57 Men 40 to 49
259 Abhari Stradalova 4:41:21 22 Women 30 to 39
260 Davin Ganpat 4:41:46 45 Men 30 to 39
261 Samviraja Gori 4:41:51 27 Women 40 to 49
262 Banshidhar Medeiros 4:41:55 20 Men 60 to 69
263 Olivia Swenson 4:41:57 18 Women 20 to 29
264 Stacey Marsh 4:42:08 28 Women 40 to 49
265 Larry Wilson 4:42:13 21 Men 60 to 69
266 Kristin Waters 4:42:32 23 Women 30 to 39
267 David Yoo 4:43:09 33 Men 50 to 59
268 Pranjal Milovnik 4:43:15 58 Men 40 to 49
269 Padyatra Komak 4:44:01 59 Men 40 to 49
270 Curtis Chong 4:44:20 60 Men 40 to 49
271 Eniko Soron 4:44:55 19 Women 20 to 29
272 Min Jiang 4:45:52 34 Men 50 to 59
273 Glen Avery 4:46:35 22 Men 60 to 69
274 Eszter Koncz 4:46:43 24 Women 30 to 39
275 Gudrun Freier 4:47:15 29 Women 40 to 49
276 Angela Dutcher 4:47:20 13 Women 50 to 59
277 Cody Donahue 4:47:28 46 Men 30 to 39
278 John Markola 4:47:29 7 Men 19 and under
279 Pearlette Toussant 4:48:54 30 Women 40 to 49
280 Mitra Yakovski 4:48:54 47 Men 30 to 39
281 Petr Hlava 4:49:18 48 Men 30 to 39
282 Palash Bosgang 4:50:07 31 Women 40 to 49
283 Maria Fred 4:50:43 14 Women 50 to 59
284 Tammy Massie 4:50:56 32 Women 40 to 49
285 Jorge Patino-Ladino 4:51:21 20 Men 20 to 29
286 Inna Vdovenko 4:51:45 25 Women 30 to 39
287 Ashadeep Volkhardt 4:52:45 33 Women 40 to 49
288 Giribhu Muhs 4:52:46 34 Women 40 to 49
289 Koce Nikcevski 4:53:19 35 Men 50 to 59
290 Sunny Siew Chuan Syn 4:53:40 23 Men 60 to 69
291 Silvia Di Nunzio 4:54:26 26 Women 30 to 39
292 Priyavadin Reisecker 4:54:42 61 Men 40 to 49
293 J C Santa Teresa 4:54:54 36 Men 50 to 59
294 Antana Locs 4:55:12 15 Women 50 to 59
295 Anastasiia Konova 4:55:38 1 Women 19 and under
296 Jarret Ditch 4:55:58 49 Men 30 to 39
297 Irene Zimmerman 4:56:06 20 Women 20 to 29
298 Monica Leigh 4:56:20 27 Women 30 to 39
299 Diana Chavez 4:56:24 28 Women 30 to 39
300 Grace Zimmerman 4:56:33 21 Women 20 to 29
301 Patanga Cordeiro 4:56:49 50 Men 30 to 39
302 Phebe Ciulla 4:57:29 35 Women 40 to 49
303 Cynthia Degirolamo 4:58:57 16 Women 50 to 59
304 Vesi Moncheva 4:59:34 29 Women 30 to 39
305 Michael Fred 5:00:03 37 Men 50 to 59
306 Emmy Stocker 5:00:14 3 Women 60 to 69
307 Luana Koch 5:01:03 22 Women 20 to 29
308 Igor Plitsyna 5:01:39 38 Men 50 to 59
309 Nurari Merry 5:02:07 36 Women 40 to 49
310 Olga Sosa 5:02:09 37 Women 40 to 49
311 Antarajyoti Rossi 5:02:21 38 Women 40 to 49
312 Albert Lione 5:03:21 62 Men 40 to 49
313 Kagni Leinonen 5:03:28 39 Women 40 to 49
314 Zakia Haywood 5:03:31 40 Women 40 to 49
315 Hideki Kinoshita 5:04:25 51 Men 30 to 39
316 Sayer Ji 5:05:02 63 Men 40 to 49
317 Varunavi Klabnikova 5:06:54 30 Women 30 to 39
318 John Sorocco 5:06:57 24 Men 60 to 69
319 Chih- Kao Hu 5:07:03 39 Men 50 to 59
320 Laurel Frankel 5:08:05 17 Women 50 to 59
321 Kaitlyn Ritz 5:08:34 23 Women 20 to 29
322 Marina Pak 5:08:45 41 Women 40 to 49
323 Sopan Tzekov 5:08:55 52 Men 30 to 39
324 Laila Faerman 5:09:20 31 Women 30 to 39
325 James West 5:09:41 40 Men 50 to 59
326 Gerda Schlager 5:10:18 4 Women 60 to 69
327 Kulapati Akbashev 5:10:53 64 Men 40 to 49
328 Toyesa Mrkonjic 5:11:18 65 Men 40 to 49
329 Erik Duisheev 5:12:12 21 Men 20 to 29
330 Aruna Pohland 5:12:13 42 Women 40 to 49
331 Maral Siegel 5:13:57 25 Men 60 to 69
332 Marcus Hedgpeth 5:14:45 53 Men 30 to 39
333 Zuzana Rybkova 5:16:15 43 Women 40 to 49
334 Wilson Aguirre 5:17:33 22 Men 20 to 29
335 Maria-Luiza Hariton 5:17:47 32 Women 30 to 39
336 Sushloka Postler 5:18:17 41 Men 50 to 59
337 John Hemmerich 5:19:32 66 Men 40 to 49
338 Vyacheslav Rayenok 5:19:49 54 Men 30 to 39
339 Donald Landry 5:19:56 4 Men 70 to 79
340 Praguna Vagner 5:20:12 42 Men 50 to 59
341 Harashita Sunaoshi 5:20:21 18 Women 50 to 59
342 Peter Maulbeck 5:21:08 26 Men 60 to 69
343 Muniya Haskova 5:21:18 44 Women 40 to 49
344 Caroline Williams 5:22:38 19 Women 50 to 59
345 Yatkara Aleksapolskyy 5:23:15 67 Men 40 to 49
346 Anne Rice 5:23:55 45 Women 40 to 49
347 Kamil Haman 5:24:28 68 Men 40 to 49
348 Didhiti Danner 5:24:46 20 Women 50 to 59
349 Viharin Rosa 5:25:01 69 Men 40 to 49
350 Chris Solarz 5:25:11 55 Men 30 to 39
351 Beatriu Reig 5:25:12 46 Women 40 to 49
352 Dharmik Senkyr 5:25:19 27 Men 60 to 69
353 Kalavati Kolesnichenko 5:25:27 47 Women 40 to 49
354 Dhuni Vancat 5:25:40 70 Men 40 to 49
355 Christopher Meier 5:25:47 23 Men 20 to 29
356 Rupashi 753 5:26:57 21 Women 50 to 59
357 Nisanga Mehikic 5:27:26 43 Men 50 to 59
358 Yolanda Concepcion 5:28:35 22 Women 50 to 59
359 Admas Belilgne 5:29:41 5 Women 60 to 69
360 Bara Lochmanova 5:30:09 33 Women 30 to 39
361 Irina Zezegova 5:31:42 48 Women 40 to 49
362 Nimagan Luther 5:32:10 44 Men 50 to 59
363 Uddhava Selucky 5:32:17 71 Men 40 to 49
364 Janett Singh 5:35:07 34 Women 30 to 39
365 Barrs Miroslav 5:37:40 72 Men 40 to 49
366 Vasudha Deming 5:39:01 23 Women 50 to 59
367 Deemanta Benedek 5:39:10 49 Women 40 to 49
368 Natalia Serova 5:39:56 6 Women 60 to 69
369 Akbota Jumabayeva 5:41:29 35 Women 30 to 39
370 Mirka Novakova 5:41:47 36 Women 30 to 39
371 Premananda Klaile 5:42:11 56 Men 30 to 39
372 Gatisheela Truong 5:42:28 50 Women 40 to 49
373 Eric Kreuter 5:44:19 45 Men 50 to 59
374 Andrew Oresto 5:44:58 73 Men 40 to 49
375 Dyutimati Zabelina 5:45:36 7 Women 60 to 69
376 Marta Brabkova 5:46:17 51 Women 40 to 49
377 Amy Jeon 5:47:06 8 Women 60 to 69
378 Rathin Boulton 5:48:07 74 Men 40 to 49
379 Vigra Paz 5:49:20 52 Women 40 to 49
380 Durba Lee 5:49:22 24 Women 50 to 59
381 Vitor Silva 5:51:15 5 Men 70 to 79
382 Dawn Jenci 5:51:47 37 Women 30 to 39
383 Kenneth Tom 5:52:11 75 Men 40 to 49
384 Jamik Ligon 5:52:20 76 Men 40 to 49
385 Richard Holmes 5:55:43 28 Men 60 to 69
386 Avi Goldstein 5:58:58 24 Men 20 to 29
387 Chananel Laufer 6:00:15 57 Men 30 to 39
388 Eva Paradise 6:01:50 38 Women 30 to 39
389 Jamie Harris 6:02:48 6 Men 70 to 79
390 Gunthita Corda 6:03:00 25 Women 50 to 59
391 Visuddhi Trummer 6:06:10 26 Women 50 to 59
392 Penny Nam 6:06:44 53 Women 40 to 49
393 Niyojita Purevsuren 6:06:44 54 Women 40 to 49
394 Diahann Malcolm 6:09:04 9 Women 60 to 69
395 Marion Landry 6:10:25 1 Women 70 to 79
396 Velma George 6:12:24 10 Women 60 to 69
397 Istvan Csendes 6:12:38 46 Men 50 to 59
398 Elie Klachkin 6:13:32 29 Men 60 to 69
399 Karpani Tsybenko 6:15:11 55 Women 40 to 49
400 Shaivya Rubczynska 6:19:08 27 Women 50 to 59
401 Sanjay Mohanta 6:19:55 77 Men 40 to 49
402 Julia Marino 6:20:16 24 Women 20 to 29
403 Ed Peters 6:21:54 30 Men 60 to 69
404 Evan Fink 6:22:08 8 Men 19 and under
405 Garima Hoffman 6:25:06 2 Women 70 to 79
406 Lee Dickey 6:25:07 31 Men 60 to 69
407 Utpal Marshall 6:26:44 32 Men 60 to 69
408 Al Emma 6:29:57 7 Men 70 to 79
409 Edgar Izaguirre 6:30:52 25 Men 20 to 29
410 Laura Milak 6:34:26 11 Women 60 to 69
411 William Milak 6:34:28 33 Men 60 to 69
412 Simahin Pierce 6:35:09 8 Men 70 to 79
413 Jhonmarco Velazquez 6:35:25 26 Men 20 to 29
414 Natashira Lecoq 6:38:13 28 Women 50 to 59
415 Rich Innamorato 6:38:13 34 Men 60 to 69
416 Brian Adler 6:41:36 47 Men 50 to 59
417 Sarvesa Alic 6:42:52 56 Women 40 to 49
418 Eliot Collins 6:43:06 35 Men 60 to 69
419 Travis Pezzuto 6:46:09 78 Men 40 to 49
420 Randy Watson 6:51:40 36 Men 60 to 69
421 Edwige Cotrel 6:52:20 29 Women 50 to 59
422 Thomas Podruchny 6:57:44 1 Men 80 and over
423 Heather Vaughn 7:02:39 57 Women 40 to 49
424 Sumeru Scheucher 7:07:25 30 Women 50 to 59
425 Alexander Guelke 7:07:36 79 Men 40 to 49
426 Prasad Balabommala 7:13:25 80 Men 40 to 49
View full article »

'3100: Run and Become' opens in theaters across the United States

By Nirbhasa Magee author bio »
19 August

About the author:

Nirbhasa is from Ireland. He is an enthusiastic multi-day runner, having completed four times the Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence 3100 Mile Race - the longest race in the world.

For almost three years, filmmaker Sanjay Rawal has been exploring the significance of running in different cultures across the world, spending time with the Gaolo-San bushmen in Botswana, the legendary Japanese gyoman-san running monks, and Navajo runners in the deserts of Arizona. A large part of his time was spent following the 52-day journey of the 3100 Mile Race, documenting two runners - our record holder and 14-time finisher Asprihanal Aalto from Finland and first-time entrant Shamita Achenbach-König from Austria - as they bravely embark on this modern day running oddyssey.

The result of all that hard work - the compelling 80-minute long documentary 3100: Run and Become - is now being released in theaters across the USA to an extremely enthusiastic reception.

"This film shows how great anyone can become when they transcend their limits." - Tegla Laroupe, women's marathon record holder

Find a theater near you:

  • Purchase tickets: Seattle • Denver • Chicago • NYC
  • For a full list of cities, and to request a screening in your own city, visit the official film site...
View full article »

Uniting Sports and Spirituality: a feature article in Hinduism Today

By Rupantar LaRusso author bio »
22 June

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.
asprihanal.jpg
Asprihanal Aalto sets the 3100 Mile Race world record in 2015

The April/May/June issue of Hinduism Today contained an extremely in-depth article written by Dr. Kusumita Pedersen, Professor Emerita of Religious Studies at St. Francis College. Kusumita has been studying meditation with Sri Chinmoy since 1971 - long before the founding of the Marathon Team - and this article explores the many different ways in which sport can contribute to personal growth and development, and a happier world.

Quite unusually for Indian spiritual teachers, Sri Chinmoy was an avid sportsman who brought the philosophy of self-transcendence to all of his activities. The article talks at length about Sri Chinmoy's youth spent in an ashram in south India which included sports as an integral part of the discipline, the running and weightlifting endeavours he pursued throughout his life, and the different initiatives he founded - the Impossibility-Challenger festival which has featured numerous Guinness World record attempts, the Sri Chinmoy Oneness-Home Peace Run which has carried a burning peace torch to over 140 countries, and of course the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team. In particular, the article shares the inner experiences of some of the runners of the Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence 3100 Mile Race, which the Marathon Team puts on every year and which is the longest certified road race in the world. The 2018 edition of the run started on June 17, and will continue until August 7.

“I hit the wall many times—and went on. I was convinced I had taken my body to the limits of its endurance, but then I went deeper, into the core of my being where strength, power, poise and silence all exist. If we can tap into this inner source, nothing can stop us moving forward.” - Grahak Cunningham, 4-time finisher and 2012 winner.

  • Read the article »
  • 3100 Mile race homepage »
View full article »

Start of 2018 Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence 3100 Mile Race

By Tejvan Pettinger author bio »
18 June

About the author:

Tejvan organises short-distance running and cycling races for the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team in his home city of Oxford. He is also a very good cyclist, having won the National hill climb championships in 2013 and finished 3rd in the National 100 Mile Time Trials in 2014.
  • The start
  • The race starts
  • The Runners on the first lap
  • Afternoon sun
  • Encouragement

On 17 June 2018, ten intrepid runners took to the start line of the world's longest certified road race - the 22nd edition of the Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence 3100 Mile Race. Over the next seven weeks, the runners will aim to complete a daily average of 60 miles or more in order to finish the race within the official time limit of 52 days. The runners have to contend with the hot New York summer, a hard concrete course and the many physical and mental challenges of competing in this epic of self-transcendence.

The race was founded by spiritual teacher and ultra-runner pioneer Sri Chinmoy, who saw distance running as a vehicle to enable runners to bring to the fore their physical, mental and spiritual capacities to complete this unique challenge.

“We have to believe in a higher Power.
Only by believing in a higher Power
Can we go beyond and beyond
Our limited, human capacity.”

– Sri Chinmoy [1]

In this year's race, we have the 2017 winner, Vasu Duzhiy from Russia. Also returning to the race is Kaneenika Janakova, from Slovakia who last year broke the women's world record, setting a time of 48 days+14:24:10. Proving that age is no barrier to ultra distance, the race also welcomes William Sichel (64) from Orkney, Scotland, UK. Sichel holds a host of Scottish and UK distance records and completed the race in 2014. Yolanda Holder, 60 years old and the only person to have racewalked the distance, also returns to the race after completing last year at her first attempt in a time of 51days+17:00:13. Surasa Mairer, former 3100 Mile women's record holder and current female world record holder for 1000 km, 700 miles, and 1300 miles is also starting.

View all runner's biographies.

First day's race

How to follow the race

This unique race has developed a following from all around the world. You can follow the race by viewing two race cams, daily results, daily blogs and photos.

  • Daily results at 3100 Mile Race
  • 3100 Mile home page - with Web Cam and race director's videos.
  • Perfection Journey - Daily race blog by Utpal Marshall
  • Photos by Jowan
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