![]() (At night, they switch to a more basic out-and-back road run.) If it takes them, say, 50 minutes to run the loop, then they have 10 minutes to rest before the next lap starts. The rules are straightforward: Participants run a 4.166667-mile loop on a rocky trail every hour for as long as they humanly can. This year, Steene and 69 other runners started the race early on October 20, a Saturday morning. The race involves repeating a 4-mile loop trail over and over again until only one runner remains. Because, it only requires one thing … the willingness to keep stepping to the line, until no one else is left.” ![]() “The race has been won by some of the preeminent multiday runners of our time and it has been won by the total unknown. “There are always surprises,” Laz posted on Facebook before this year’s Big’s Backyard Ultra. Laz hosts Big’s Backyard Ultra in his own backyard in Bell Buckle, Tennessee. Just a day earlier, Steene had been the lone runner-and therefore, the winner-across the finish line at a quirky, brutal race known as Big’s Backyard Ultra, the brainchild of Gary Cantrell, better known as Lazarus Lake or Laz, the founder of the equally challenging yet slightly more well-known Barkley Marathons. ![]() “It will take a couple of weeks to recover,” he said. Johan Steene, a 44-year-old ultrarunner from Stockholm, Sweden, was lounging in his motel room outside of Nashville, Tennessee, watching TV on Wednesday evening. Participants continue running an endless loop until there’s only one person left standing. Unlike most ultramarathons, Big’s Backyard Ultra, held in a backyard in Tennessee, has no set distance or finish time. ![]()
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