Ron Hill . . . 50 years of daily runs, no matter what. |
Ron
Hill, once Europe’s top marathoner and now aged 75, started his ‘streak’ on December
20th, 1964. He has run at least a mile every day since, come hell or
high water. The nearest he came to
missing a day was when he broke his sternum in a car crash in 1993. On another occasion
he was treated for a stomach problem by serial killer Dr Harold Shipman, but overcame
that too and still went running!
Ron doesn’t
hit the headlines as often as he once did in his prime, but 2014 has still been
an interesting year to say the least. He’s had a road named after him in his home
town of Accrington, had a health scare when some cancerous tissues were found in
his nether regions, and over in America a ‘streaker’ has emerged who, being much
younger, is being tipped to overhaul Ron’s incredible record in the not-too-distant
future.
Sixty-three
year old Jon Sutherland exceeded 45 years
of running every day a short while ago, which puts him at No.2 on the
all-time list behind our Ron, overtaking his fellow American Mark Covert who quit
his streak on exactly 45 years. During celebrations for Sutherland’s feat, there
was some discussion over whether Ron Hill’s streak was actually valid – for after bunion surgery in 1993 Ron only kept it alive by
covering a mile on a track, using crutches. Some reckon that going along with
the help of crutches doesn’t count as running at all. Sutherland himself is not
arguing though, and said he considers himself number 2 behind Ron.
As many of us have found, your
speed tends to decrease rather sharply once you pass the age of 50 or so, and
Hill these days is a very steady traveller compared to his golden era. But the streak
has become so important to him that he often puts it ahead of his own health
and well-being on occasion.
The car smash that left him
with a broken sternum luckily happened
after he’d run that day, but to complete the next day’s outing he had to discharge
himself from hospital, and then sneak out of the house when his wife went shopping,
hobbling a very painful and dangerous single mile to keep the record intact.
More recently he suffered a couple of very nasty falls in the snow because of
potholes, but again limped slowly home to complete the run in question.
Hill's Ipswich victory. |
I’m a long-time Hill admirer. How can you not be impressed by the man who single-handedly
invented Tracksters? I also recall the time I went down with food poisoning in Portugal
and for at least 24 hours was sustained only by sipping bottled water and reading
Ron’s incredibly detailed autobiography, the self-published ‘Long Hard Road’. The
book is so detailed it comes in two volumes and runs to 828 pages!
Many,
including certain people close to me, have been rather uncomplimentary about
this quirky tome, but I found it compelling and got through every word - a task
that required almost as much stamina as Ron’s streak itself.
Long may
he run.
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