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Powered by potatoes: Endurance athletes are chasing speed with spuds

Powered by potatoes: Endurance athletes are chasing speed with spuds

Washington Post06-05-2025

Professional ultramarathoner Tara Dower lived out of her Ford Transit van while training for last year's Hardrock Hundred Mile Endurance Run. The ultramarathon includes 33,197 feet of elevation gain, reaching a high point of 14,048 feet at Handies Peak, outside Silverton, Colorado. It takes the average participant just over 39 hours to complete — a day and a half of running, climbing and trying to stuff one's body with enough food to make it possible.

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'Seeing her fight cancer the way she did – and obviously I was with her through the end-of-life care – I have an ignorance to my own suffering,' says Goodge. 'I've seen someone go through worse, and the fact that I choose to do this kind of thing means that when it does get tough, I can think back to that or think about my mom. 'I have no reason to complain or whine or moan, just keep pushing forward. And I feel like she's with me there every step of the way.' For Goodge, a typical day traversing Australia on foot would start at 4 a.m., his dad greeting him with cereal and a black coffee to fuel the early-morning miles. His coach would then give him a massage or apply strapping – 'my toes,' Goodge explains, 'were taking a hell of a beating' – before the day's first block of running while it was still dark. From there, he would break up the distance ahead of him into roughly seven-mile blocks, pausing at the end of each one to refuel. That might be a high-calorie smoothie, cake, sandwiches, rice, pasta or yogurt with fruit and honey. At the end of the day, Goodge would aim to have shower and eat dinner with his crew, even indulging in a beer or two. 'It adds a layer of normality to what you're doing, rather than the madness of wake up, eat, run, eat, run, eat, run, shower, eat, sleep,' says Goodge. And the beers? 'It's like a small celebration,' he adds. 'If you went out and ran 110, 111k (around 68.5 miles) on any other day, you'd probably do the same.' Goodge describes the run as 'more of a mental battle' than a physical one, 'because your body's always going to fail doing stuff like that.' When it did fail, the results were often gruesome: huge blisters, an injured Achilles that inflamed to twice its size, right shin pain, and ankle issues. In a recent Instagram post, he estimated that he lost more than 10 kilograms (22 pounds) in weight over the course of the run. 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Specifically, some members of the ultrarunning community think that Goodge's endurance runs, his pace and the accompanying heart-rate data he posts online, are too good to be true. The most vocal skeptic, runner and athletics writer Will Cockerell, even flew from the United Kingdom to the US during Goodge's run across America to check that the 31-year-old was completing the runs himself, not sharing the watch tracking his progress between members of his team. The encounter and allegation from Cockerell, described as 'watch muling,' is captured on video, though Cockerell found no direct evidence of cheating. Goodge has strenuously denied the claims, hitting out against 'self-proclaimed experts' who 'say they know everything about heart rate.' He also points to the reason that he's running in the first place. 'It's so intertwined with the passing of my mom and trying to make that more than just a sad story,' says Goodge. 'It kind of disgusts me that people would think I would cheat and use my mom's death as a reason to either build my profile, say I'm getting a record, or profit from it. I find that extremely disgusting and probably not everyone knows that. 'But also, I can appreciate the fact that people probably don't like me, which is totally fine. I definitely don't fit in the ultrarunner box. I don't kind of look like one, and I certainly don't act like one. So it's going to come with the territory, and that's fine.' Another criticism Goodge often faces is that his performances in solo challenges seem superior compared to where he has placed at races – though that's something he says he hopes to address. To date, his best race result is an 11th-place finish at last year's Moab 240, a notorious 240-mile ultramarathon in Utah. 'I'm a better athlete now than I was then,' says Goodge. 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If he does take on another, he says that the memory of his mother will motivate him above anything else. 'In these things, the connection (with her) feels really true and really deep,' adds Goodge. 'It's probably why I keep going back and doing it more.'

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