No stroller, no problem at Spartan | Local Sports | Squamish Chief, Squamish, BC


Saturday May 18, 2013


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No stroller, no problem at Spartan

Squamish Days world record setter returns to Squamish to win female division
Photo by: Ben Lypka/The Chief

Runners make their way through the fire leap near the start of the Spartan Race on Saturday (Sept. 22).

This time, Allison Tai didn't have her daughter in a stroller holding her back.

Back in August, the Vancouver resident competed in the Squamish Days 10K run, pushing her 18-month old daughter in a stroller to a Guinness World Record time.

But competing at the first ever Spartan Race in Squamish, Tai left her child with her husband and jumped through fire, crawled through mud and climbed her way to the best female time.

"It was awesome," she said at the finish line. "The course was really well marked, the volunteers were helpful and the competitors were all just there to have fun."

Tai said the 12 kilometre course was challenging.

"The obstacles were just hard enough," she said, noting that the most difficult part was some of the hilly trail running in Smoke Bluffs Park and that the javelin toss was an obstacle that slowed her down. Tai qualified for the Squamish race after a second place showing at the Spartan Race in North Vancouver this past May and said she's still waiting on official confirmation from Guinness on her 10K stroller record.

 - Allison Tai (left) poses with her daughter Amelita Tai and husband John Tai after finishing with the top female time at the Spartan Race on Saturday (Sept. 22). - Photo by: Ben Lypka/The Chief
Photo by: Ben Lypka/The Chief

Allison Tai (left) poses with her daughter Amelita Tai and husband John Tai after finishing with the top female time at the Spartan Race on Saturday (Sept. 22).

The top finisher overall was Seattle's Kris Brown, who completed the course in just over an hour. Brown won a Spartan Race event in Malibu earlier this year to qualify for Squamish and agreed with Tai that the hills were tough.

"It wasn't too bad but hill climbing is always tough," he said. "It can be pretty hard to stay motivated when you realize you have 8 miles to go and you don't know how they're going to torture you next."

The course, which race organizers managed to keep secret, saw racers start off at the Loggers Sports Grounds by jumping over flames before heading down the trails on Loggers Lane. From there, competitors crossed into the Smoke Bluffs before circling throughout Valleycliffe's trails and returning back to the grounds.

In between all the trails, racers had to climb a number of different walls, pull heavy items like cinder blocks and crawl through mud under razor wires to finish. The penalty for not completing an obstacle was 25 burpees.

Results from the race have not yet been made available. Check the print edition of The Chief for more on this story.


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