Difference between revisions of "Self-Transcendence 3100 Mile Race"

From Multidaywiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(19 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
The [[Self-Transcendence]] 3100 Mile Race is the worlds longest certified footrace and takes place each summer in Queens, New York around Thomas Edison High School. The runners have 51 days in which to complete the distance and have 18 hours each day in which to run. The course closes at midnight each day and the runners go home to rest and return to start running at 6 a.m each day.
 +
 
==Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team==
 
==Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team==
  
 
[[Sri Chinmoy]] founded the [[Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team]] in 1977 as a service to the running community and to help promote spiritual growth through sports.
 
[[Sri Chinmoy]] founded the [[Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team]] in 1977 as a service to the running community and to help promote spiritual growth through sports.
  
Over the years, the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team has become the world's largest sponsor of ultra-distance running and a major organiser of road races, [[marathons|Marathon]],[[triathlons]],multi-sport events, long-distance swimming events and Master's track-and-field meets. It has hosted several national championships, and numerous world records have been set in its races.
+
Over the years, the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team has become the world's largest sponsor of ultra-distance running and a major organiser of road races, [[Marathon|marathons]], [[Triathlon|triathlons]],multi-sport events, long-distance swimming events and Master's track-and-field meets. It has hosted several national championships, and numerous world records have been set in its races.
 
 
==Self-Transcendence==
 
What is Self-Transcendence? Sri Chinmoy writes:
 
 
 
"We are all seekers who wish to transcend our present realities. Why do we want to transcend? We want to achieve something. We want to grow into something which is eternal;
 
In our life of self transcendence, from the lower we grow into the higher. The lower is transformed into the higher, the less perfect is transformed into the more perfect. Things that have to be rejected, we reject; things that have to be transformed, we transform; things that have to be transcended, we transcend. This process of transcendence is beyond the thinking of the mental man. It finds its existence in the self giving of the psychic man. The psychic man becomes part and parcel of reality by identifying with reality itself. The thinking man, the doubting man, finds it extremely difficult or impossible to identify himself with that reality.
 
In our ordinary life we deal with constant possibility, and at the end of our efforts we meet with either success or failure. But in the spiritual life, we do not care for failure or success; we care only for progress. In this way, possibility is transformed into inevitability.
 
Tomorrow's goal will be the starting point for the day after tomorrow. There is no end to our self transcendence. Our aspiration ascends, our realisation transcends, our satisfaction dawns.
 
 
 
When we feed our inner cry, and when we become our inner cry, at that time our song of realisation and transcendence begins."
 
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
 
+
The Self-Transcendence 3100 mile race began it's life as the fulfillment of a dream. Sri Chinmoy had been envisioning a race of enormous proportions for several years and in 1996 the pieces finally came together on a .54 mile loop in Jamaica Queens, New York. That first race however was 'only' 2,700 miles long and it was at the award ceremony after the successful completion of that inaugural event that [[Sri Chinmoy]] declared that the following year the race would be extended to 3,100 miles. The winner of that 1996 was George Jermolajevs and [[Suprabha Beckjord]] was the first lady to complete the distance.
The Self-Transcendence began it's life as the fulfillment of a dream. Sri Chinmoy had been envisioning a race of enormous proportions for several years and in 1996 the pieces finally came together on a .54 mile loop in Jamaica Queens, New York. That first race however was 'only' 2,700 miles long and it was at the award ceremony after the successful completion of that inaugural event that [[Sri Chinmoy]] declared that the following year the race would be extended to 3,100 miles. The winner of that 1996 was George Jermolajevs and [[Suprabha Beckjord]] was the first lady to complete the distance.
 
  
 
==Race Winners==
 
==Race Winners==
 
+
{| class="wikitable sortable"
2,700
+
|+ Winners of 3100 mile race (''best times: coloured background'')
*1996 [[Georges Jermolajevs]]
+
! colspan="1"| Date
 
+
! colspan="1"| Distance
3100
+
! colspan="3"| Men
*1997 [[Ed Kelly]]
+
! colspan="3"| Women
*1998 [[Istvan Sipos]]
+
|-
*1999 [[Ed Kelley]]
+
! Year
*2000 [[Asprihanal Aalto]]
+
! Miles
*2001 [[Asprihanal Aalto]]
+
! Country
*2002 [[Madhupran Wolfgang Schwerk]]
+
! Athlete
*2003 [[Namitabha Arsic]]
+
! Time<br />(days, hours, minutes, seconds)
*2004 [[Asprihanal Aalto]]
+
! Country
*2005 [[Srdjan Stojanovich]]
+
! Athlete
*2006 [[Madhupran Wolfgang Schwerk]]
+
! Time<br />(days, hours, minutes, seconds)
 
+
|-
 +
| 1997
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| USA
 +
| Edward Kelley
 +
| 47:15:19:56 <ref name="l" />
 +
| USA
 +
| [[Suprabha Beckjord]]
 +
| 51:02:09:56 <ref name="l" />
 +
|-
 +
| 1998
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| HUN
 +
| {{ill|István Sipos|hu|Sipos István (futó)}}
 +
| 46:17:02:06 <ref name="l" />
 +
| USA
 +
| Suprabha Beckjord
 +
| 49:14:30:54 <ref name="l" />
 +
|-
 +
| 1999
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| USA
 +
| Edward Kelley
 +
| 48:12:42:46 <ref name="l" />
 +
| USA
 +
| Suprabha Beckjord
 +
| 51:14:16:17 <ref name="l" />
 +
|-
 +
| 2000
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| FIN
 +
| [[Ashprihanal Pekka Aalto|Ashprihanal Aalto]]
 +
| 47:13:29:55 <ref name="l" />
 +
| USA
 +
| Suprabha Beckjord
 +
| 54:15:51:34 <ref name="l" />
 +
|-
 +
| 2001
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| FIN
 +
| Ashprihanal Aalto
 +
| 48:10:56:12 <ref name="l" />
 +
| USA
 +
| Suprabha Beckjord
 +
| 52:10:37:42 <ref name="l" />
 +
|-
 +
| 2002
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| GER
 +
| [[Wolfgang Schwerk|Madhupran Wolfgang Schwerk]]
 +
| 42:13:24:03 <ref name="l" />
 +
| USA
 +
| Suprabha Beckjord
 +
| 51:12:08:06 <ref name="l" />
 +
|-
 +
| 2003
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| SRB
 +
| Namitabha Arsic
 +
| 49:02:24:45 <ref name="l" /><ref name="duv" />
 +
| USA
 +
| Suprabha Beckjord
 +
| 56:03:00:22 <ref name="l" /><ref name="duv" />
 +
|-
 +
| 2004
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| FIN
 +
| Ashprihanal Aalto
 +
| 46:06:55:11 <ref name="l" /><ref name="duv" />
 +
| USA
 +
| Suprabha Beckjord
 +
| 55:13:13:00 <ref name="l" /><ref name="duv" />
 +
|-
 +
| 2005
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| SRB
 +
| Srdjan Stojanovich
 +
| 46:10:51:16 <ref name="l" /><ref name="duv" />
 +
| USA
 +
| Suprabha Beckjord
 +
| 63:04:23:28 <ref name="duv" /><ref name="f" />
 +
|-
 +
| 2006
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| GER
 +
| Madhupran Wolfgang Schwerk
 +
| 41:08:16:29 <ref name="duv" /><ref name="mws" />
 +
| USA
 +
| Suprabha Beckjord
 +
| 60:04:35:24 <ref name="duv" /><ref name="s" />
 +
|-
 +
| 2007
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| FIN
 +
| Ashprihanal Aalto
 +
| 43:04:26:32 <ref name="l" /><ref name="duv" />
 +
| USA
 +
| Suprabha Beckjord
 +
| 58:07:54:27 <ref name="duv" /><ref name="si" />
 +
|-
 +
| 2008
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| FIN
 +
| Ashprihanal Aalto
 +
| 44:02:42:15 <ref name="l" /><ref name="duv" />
 +
| USA
 +
| Suprabha Beckjord
 +
| 56:17:51:22 <ref name="duv" /><ref name="ac" />
 +
|-
 +
| 2009
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| FIN
 +
| Ashprihanal Aalto
 +
| 43:16:28:06 <ref name="l" /><ref name="duv" />
 +
| USA
 +
| Suprabha Beckjord
 +
| 60:08:58:51 <ref name="duv" /><ref name="n" />
 +
|-
 +
| 2010
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| FIN
 +
| Ashprihanal Aalto
 +
| 46:07:37:24 <ref name="duv" /><ref name="z" />
 +
| No finisher
 +
| &mdash;
 +
| &mdash;
 +
|-
 +
| 2011
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| UKR
 +
| Sarvagata Ukrainskyi
 +
| 44:13:38:52 <ref name="l" /><ref name="duv" />
 +
| AUT
 +
| [[Surasa Mairer]]
 +
| 53:15:54:25 <ref name="duv" /><ref name="sm" />
 +
|-
 +
| 2012
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| AUS
 +
| [[Grahak Cunningham]]
 +
| 43:10:36:39 <ref name="duv" /><ref name="sr" />
 +
| No entrants
 +
| &mdash;
 +
| &mdash;
 +
|-
 +
| 2013
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| RUS
 +
| [[Vasu Duzhiy]]
 +
| 47:05:39:00 <ref name="zd" />
 +
| AUT
 +
| Surasa Mairer
 +
| 50:04:57:24 <ref name="zd" />
 +
|-
 +
| 2014
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| UKR
 +
| Sarvagata Ukrainskyi
 +
| 44:06:58:10 <ref name="pj" />
 +
| AUS
 +
| {{ill|Sarah Barnett|fr}}
 +
| 50:03:55:08 <ref name="2014-women" />
 +
|-
 +
| 2015
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| FIN
 +
| Ashprihanal Aalto
 +
| bgcolor="#faecc8"|40:09:06:21 <ref name="2015-men" />
 +
| AUT
 +
| Surasa Mairer
 +
| 49:07:52:24 <ref name="2015-women" />
 +
|-
 +
| 2016
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| UKR
 +
| Yuri Trostenyuk
 +
| 46:01:10:25 <ref name="2016-scb" />
 +
| SVK
 +
| [[Kaneenika Janakova]]  
 +
| 51:07:31:07
 +
|-
 +
| 2017
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| RUS
 +
| Vasu Duzhiy
 +
| 46:17:38:22 <ref name="sc-wp" />
 +
| SVK
 +
| Kaneenika Janakova
 +
| bgcolor="#faecc8"|48:14:24:10 <ref name="SCC-2017" />
 +
|-
 +
| 2018
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| RUS
 +
| Vasu Duzhiy
 +
| 44:16:03:53 <ref name="SCR-2018" />
 +
| AUT
 +
| Surasa Mairer
 +
| 51:12:47:37 <ref name="SCR-2018" />
 +
|-
 +
| 2019
 +
| '''3100'''
 +
| FIN
 +
| Ashprihanal Aalto
 +
| 47:01:39:34<ref name="SCWP" />
 +
| USA
 +
| Harita Davies
 +
| 51:09:35:20
 +
|-
 +
|}
  
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==
  
[http://www.srichinmoyraces.org/3100/ Self-Transcendence 3100]
+
*[http://www.srichinmoyraces.org/3100/ Self-Transcendence 3100]
 +
*[http://www.3100.ws/ 3100 Mile race] New Website
 +
*[http://perfectionjourney.org Utpal Marshall's videos & blog]
 +
[[Category:Sri Chinmoy Races]]
  
 +
==Reference==
 +
*[https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/48702452 Sri Chinmoy Self-Transcendence: The 3,100-mile race around a New York block] By Justin Gouldin
 +
[[Category:3100 miles]]
 +
[[Category:USA Races]]
 +
[[Category:Ultramarathons]]
 
[[Category:Sri Chinmoy Races]]
 
[[Category:Sri Chinmoy Races]]
 
 
{{Template:Ultra events}}
 
{{Template:Ultra events}}

Latest revision as of 21:50, 28 December 2019

The Self-Transcendence 3100 Mile Race is the worlds longest certified footrace and takes place each summer in Queens, New York around Thomas Edison High School. The runners have 51 days in which to complete the distance and have 18 hours each day in which to run. The course closes at midnight each day and the runners go home to rest and return to start running at 6 a.m each day.

Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team

Sri Chinmoy founded the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team in 1977 as a service to the running community and to help promote spiritual growth through sports.

Over the years, the Sri Chinmoy Marathon Team has become the world's largest sponsor of ultra-distance running and a major organiser of road races, marathons, triathlons,multi-sport events, long-distance swimming events and Master's track-and-field meets. It has hosted several national championships, and numerous world records have been set in its races.

History

The Self-Transcendence 3100 mile race began it's life as the fulfillment of a dream. Sri Chinmoy had been envisioning a race of enormous proportions for several years and in 1996 the pieces finally came together on a .54 mile loop in Jamaica Queens, New York. That first race however was 'only' 2,700 miles long and it was at the award ceremony after the successful completion of that inaugural event that Sri Chinmoy declared that the following year the race would be extended to 3,100 miles. The winner of that 1996 was George Jermolajevs and Suprabha Beckjord was the first lady to complete the distance.

Race Winners

Winners of 3100 mile race (best times: coloured background)
Date Distance Men Women
Year Miles Country Athlete Time
(days, hours, minutes, seconds)
Country Athlete Time
(days, hours, minutes, seconds)
1997 3100 USA Edward Kelley 47:15:19:56 [1] USA Suprabha Beckjord 51:02:09:56 [1]
1998 3100 HUN Template:Ill 46:17:02:06 [1] USA Suprabha Beckjord 49:14:30:54 [1]
1999 3100 USA Edward Kelley 48:12:42:46 [1] USA Suprabha Beckjord 51:14:16:17 [1]
2000 3100 FIN Ashprihanal Aalto 47:13:29:55 [1] USA Suprabha Beckjord 54:15:51:34 [1]
2001 3100 FIN Ashprihanal Aalto 48:10:56:12 [1] USA Suprabha Beckjord 52:10:37:42 [1]
2002 3100 GER Madhupran Wolfgang Schwerk 42:13:24:03 [1] USA Suprabha Beckjord 51:12:08:06 [1]
2003 3100 SRB Namitabha Arsic 49:02:24:45 [1][2] USA Suprabha Beckjord 56:03:00:22 [1][2]
2004 3100 FIN Ashprihanal Aalto 46:06:55:11 [1][2] USA Suprabha Beckjord 55:13:13:00 [1][2]
2005 3100 SRB Srdjan Stojanovich 46:10:51:16 [1][2] USA Suprabha Beckjord 63:04:23:28 [2][3]
2006 3100 GER Madhupran Wolfgang Schwerk 41:08:16:29 [2][4] USA Suprabha Beckjord 60:04:35:24 [2][5]
2007 3100 FIN Ashprihanal Aalto 43:04:26:32 [1][2] USA Suprabha Beckjord 58:07:54:27 [2][6]
2008 3100 FIN Ashprihanal Aalto 44:02:42:15 [1][2] USA Suprabha Beckjord 56:17:51:22 [2][7]
2009 3100 FIN Ashprihanal Aalto 43:16:28:06 [1][2] USA Suprabha Beckjord 60:08:58:51 [2][8]
2010 3100 FIN Ashprihanal Aalto 46:07:37:24 [2][9] No finisher
2011 3100 UKR Sarvagata Ukrainskyi 44:13:38:52 [1][2] AUT Surasa Mairer 53:15:54:25 [2][10]
2012 3100 AUS Grahak Cunningham 43:10:36:39 [2][11] No entrants
2013 3100 RUS Vasu Duzhiy 47:05:39:00 [12] AUT Surasa Mairer 50:04:57:24 [12]
2014 3100 UKR Sarvagata Ukrainskyi 44:06:58:10 [13] AUS Template:Ill 50:03:55:08 [14]
2015 3100 FIN Ashprihanal Aalto 40:09:06:21 [15] AUT Surasa Mairer 49:07:52:24 [16]
2016 3100 UKR Yuri Trostenyuk 46:01:10:25 [17] SVK Kaneenika Janakova 51:07:31:07
2017 3100 RUS Vasu Duzhiy 46:17:38:22 [18] SVK Kaneenika Janakova 48:14:24:10 [19]
2018 3100 RUS Vasu Duzhiy 44:16:03:53 [20] AUT Surasa Mairer 51:12:47:37 [20]
2019 3100 FIN Ashprihanal Aalto 47:01:39:34[21] USA Harita Davies 51:09:35:20

External Links

Reference

Marathons, Ultramarathons and Multiday Events
Marathon
  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 1.18 1.19 1.20 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named l
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15 2.16 2.17 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named duv
  3. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named f
  4. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named mws
  5. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named s
  6. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named si
  7. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named ac
  8. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named n
  9. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named z
  10. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named sm
  11. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named sr
  12. 12.0 12.1 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named zd
  13. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named pj
  14. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named 2014-women
  15. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named 2015-men
  16. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named 2015-women
  17. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named 2016-scb
  18. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named sc-wp
  19. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named SCC-2017
  20. 20.0 20.1 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named SCR-2018
  21. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named SCWP