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Adventure Races Topple Previous Record in Motatapu

Sunday, March 11, 2012
Leading adventure racers Baz Smith (Queenstown) and Jess Simson (Wanaka) were a force to be reckonedwith in the R& R Motatapu Adventure Run today shaving an incredible 45 minutes off the previous record on the gruelling alpine course.

Twenty teams entered the challenging 49km race which has a four peak traverse on exposed back countryterrain with a total descent of 2790m, before traversing a demanding route over the Motatapu track fromWanaka to Arrowtown via the Motatapu and Soho stations. Four major climbs total 2790 vertical metres with thehighest point being at Jack Hallʼs Saddle (1275m above sea level).

Smith and Simson, representing R&R Sport, clocked 6hr:40m:3s to win the title and clearly beat the record timeset in 2010 by Chris Dagg and Darren Blackhurst of Queenstown in 7hr:25m:06s.

The event started in the early hours of this morning in darkness and Smith said the pair had a strong game plan which they put in place and stuck to.

“That was the secret to our success. Jess is very organised and we have everything finely tuned so that we didnʼt stop during the entire race. We were able to eat and drink as we ran and when we got to the finish we stillfelt pretty good.”

Smith said it was a relief the conditions were cloudy because it made the climbs a lot easier.

The second fastest team of Phil Wood of Queenstown and Russ Rotheram of Christchurch, racing under the banner of Queenstown Ladies Pikelet Club, pushed the winners hard finishing in 7hrs: 05m:03s, also faster than the previous record.

“We were always conscious they were right there,” said Smith.

Wood, who entered the race last year found it a lot harder this year. “It certainly hurt more! But I love the fact therace starts in the dark, thatʼs a really cool feature.”

Third place team was Rationale Ltd were also well up with leaders crossing the finish in 7hrs:07m:27s.

The winners of the female section, Team Wilma and Betty, came home in 11hrs:21m:02s.

Motatapu Event Director Gemma Boyle said the adventure run is seen as “one of the most difficult but one of themost beautiful mountain runs in New Zealand. People who complete it can consider it a great accomplishmentand something they will remember for many years.”

The R&R Sport Adventure Race is one of five Motatapu events held on the same day. The other events are:, theSpeightʼs Summit 47km Mountain Bike race, the UDC Finance Motatapu Xterra Triathlon, the Arrowtown.com Minerʼs Trail and the Icebreaker Off-road Marathon.

Full race results available at www.motatapu.com 

Motatapu Events Attract Record Running Fields

Wednesday, March 07, 2012

A record number of athletes will be running over in the Motatapu course this year, says Motatapu Event Director, Gemma Boyle.

“We will have a record 1264 athletes involved in a running discipline this weekend, which includes the 42.2km marathon, the Arrowtown.com 15km Miners Trail Mountain Run, the R&R Sport 49km Adventure Run and the UDC Finance Xterra off-road triathlon” Gemma Boyle says. “Together they will run over 37,000kms.”

Overall numbers are very close to the record number of entrants the event attracted in 2010 and are 10% up on last year’s earthquake-affected Motatapu.

“While in 2010 we had a record number of bikers, this year we will have a record number of runners,” Gemma Boyle says.

This is not to say the popularity of mountain biking has diminished, she says, pointing out the Mountain Bike sold out as usual this year.

“In 2011 we decided to cut the mountain bike field by 300 people to create space on the course, and to make way for the UDC Finance Motatapu Xterra Triathlon”.

“We think we have a better balance across the events now, 2104 competitors across the five events”, she says.

Gemma Boyle says the UDC Finance Motatapu Xterra Triathlon is a direct qualifier for the World Xterra Championships held in Hawaii in October. “Individual spots for the UDC Finance Motatapu Xterra Triathlon sold out this year and we are expecting close and exciting racing,” she says.

“There has also been strong growth in the shorter but still very challenging Arrowtown.com Miners Trail Mountain Run”, Gemma Boyle says.

“All in all, it is shaping up to be another great Motatapu on Saturday. The recent cooler weather and a bit of rain will be a welcome relief for competitors after this year’s fantastically hot dry summer.”

On your Marks ...

Thursday, September 29, 2011


With the Adventure Racing World Championships just a month away from kicking off in Tasmania, the final line up of teams has been decided…now the serious stuff begins

Last year's XPD offered competitors the chance to tangle with stinging trees, get leaches stuck to their eyeballs and collide with crocodiles in the middle of the night, all as they were negotiating their way through a 700km wilderness-based course in kayaks, on bikes, down ropes and by foot. This year the event – Australia's last true expedition-style adventure race – is doubling as the AR World Championships, and rumour has it that race director Craig Bycroft is taking this rather seriously...

Despite (or perhaps because of) this, public entries into the XPD sold out months ago, with many local teams champing at the bit to pit their wits, stamina and multi-sporting prowess against the world’s best adventure racers.

And it isn’t just locals wanting a slice of the action – this is a genuine world championships and 23 different countries will be represented by teams in Tasmania, setting a new record for ARWC and underlining just how colourful and competitive this race is promising to be.

The stampede for a place on the starting line left a number of elite teams in a gut-wrenchingly nervous situation, however. The easy route into the World Champs slammed shut when open entries sold out, meaning anyone left on the other side would have to fight for their right to party with the adventurous portion of the planet’s population's premier league. Not only that, but the events where they'd have to prove themselves worthy were among the toughest multi-day adventure races on earth – the AR World Series qualifiers.

“During our recent trip it became very apparent just how many top teams have been going to ARWS qualifiers specifically to win a spot at the World Championships,” observed Craig Bycroft after returning from a tour of some of the World Series events.

“We have the winner of every qualifying race attending, plus the defending World Champions. It’s the first time that has ever happened – it is going to be an incredibly competitive race down in Tasmania.”

The final three teams to secure their spots were Team WildernessTraverse.com (who won the Raid the North Extreme in BC, Canada at the end of July), Team Quechua.com (winners of the Raid in France, which took place 28 August–1 September) and Team Tecnu Extreme, who nailed the very last place with a stunning September 11th victory in the Gold Rush Mother lode in central California.

In winning their qualifying events, however, these teams' trials and tribulations have only just begun. Between the dastardly designs of Craig Bycroft and the wildness of the west of Tasmania, whole new levels of competitive challenges are about to be unleashed upon them – and they know it.

"We felt we had a pretty soft run in the Canada race," admits Wilderness Traverse's New Zealander Gordon Blythen. The XPD will have much harder competition, so we`ll just give it our best shot and see how we go."

Exactly what will be thrown at them is totally unknown, but with the starting gun already loaded, the world's finest adventure athletes are now poised to take anything on.

"The calibre of teams that we have competing in the championships this year is so high that it really is impossible to predict who will be in the top 10, let along who will be on the podium," admits Bycroft.

"It will definitely suit the physically and mentally tough teams, and like all XPDs, this will be a true expedition-style race through genuine wilderness conditions. That might cause difficulties for some European teams, whose races are traditionally over more predictable terrain but at much higher intensities. In that sense the course may suit the South American and Canadian teams, as well as teams from Australian and New Zealand, particularly if they've raced XPD before – and know how rough and unpredictable we like to make things. I reckon some of the less high-profile locals are going to shock a few top teams."

The team list is literally a who's who of international adventure racing, from current and previous World Champions like Buff Thermocool (2010) and adidas Terrex (2009) through to top contenders such as Thule Adventure Team, Merrell Adventure Addicts and

Australia's own Team Blackheart, winners of the 2010 XPD. The wild credentials of the race setting are as rock solid as the competitor list lining up to take it on. While areas like Freycinet and the Cradle Mountain region are tourist attractions and have been utilised by many adventure events, the rugged West Coast of the Apple Isle is an altogether wilder and more remote location, and Bycroft has cautioned that teams will need their navigation skills to be stiletto sharp.

Steve Cooper, from the adventure racing website Sleepmonsters, says this element of the race is crucial, and that it will play onto the hands of a number of teams. "I think the Southern Hemisphere teams are going to be right up there – particularly Merrell from South Africa. Mind you, if the weather turns bad in Tassie it will be hard to go past Adidas [from the UK]. And, of course, the defending champions, Buff, can never be underestimated. Either way, the race will be won as much in mental realm as it will in the physical one. Some of the internationals might be struggling after travelling so far too. The local team Blackheart are going to be tough to beat," says Steve. "Their nav skills are as good, if not better, than any of the top international teams."

The Australian teams would be well advised not to put too much faith in the possibility that their competitors will be jetlagged though. At least one outfit from overseas, Team Thule, arrived in Australia to start training in local conditions a few weeks ago, and such dedication to proper preparation will serve them well when the battle for world domination heats up.

For the lucky last qualifiers, such precise planning was never really an option, but that hasn't dampened their enthusiasm.

“We are very pleased to go to Tasmania after our victory in France,” enthused Quechua’s Rudy Gouy, after the realisation that he was going to the World Champs had sunk in. “It [the Raid in France] was a hard but very beautiful race. Now we will recuperate and prepare for some smashing travel in Australia... We have seen the program for the XPD, and we wait for the start impatiently. We know a lot of great teams will come and it's a new country to discover for all of us but we will give the best of ourselves to have no regrets.”

But before they get to give their all in the race, they have to get themselves and their gear sorted, and quickly. “The preparation of material is not simple,” concedes Rudy. “Trunks, bike bags, flights… we are looking for an accommodation near the HQ but I have sent many mails without answer. I will try again next week. We are also looking for someone who speaks English and French to help us during the briefing..."

Team Tecnu Extreme secured their place even later in the piece, and for one of them in particular even Quechua’s quandaries seem a trifle. Brian Schmitz was so taken by surprise by their last-gasp qualification that he'd scheduled his wedding just before the Worlds, and will have to miss the race as a result.

The rest of Team Tecnu Extreme don't seem too overawed by the task ahead though. "I know the competition on the international level is much higher than it is here in the USA, but I think this team has what it takes to compete," claims Kyle Peter.

Ryan VanGorder will be taking Brian's place in the team for the championships in Tasmania. "He will add some more international AR experience, has done an XPD before, is a human kayak, and will be upping our horsepower on the bike."

And wherever they end up placing, finding themselves suddenly heading Downunder makes for a huge adventure by itself. "I have never been to Australia before," says Kyle. "I'm really looking forward to it, but I'm not quite sure what to expect in Tasmania in terms of vegetation, terrain, animals..."

Veteran Australian adventure racer and ultra runner Damon Goerke from Team Blackheart would probably advise Kyle to expect anything but a cuddly welcome from the local flora and fauna. Damon was part of the team that won the 2010 iteration of the XPD in Cairns, which took teams along another course set by Craig Bycroft, and he still has the scars to prove it.

"I'll never forget the pain of those stinging trees," he says. "But that river section [down the remote Walsh River] was the best paddling leg of any adventure race I've ever done. At night you could tell where the fast line down the rapids was by the gleam from the crocodiles' eyes – they'd be sitting there waiting for fish, but they ended up getting us instead."

What exactly Bycroft has in store for competitors this year will stay under wraps for just a few more weeks, but visiting international racers shouldn't be too alarmed. There are no stinging trees and crocodiles down in the wilds of Tasmania – the cold climate and the giant sharks saw them off eons ago...

Written by Patrick Kinsella

For more, see www.arwc2011.com and www.xpd.com.au – where armchair adventures will be able to follow all the action as it happens through live tracker and regularly updated and team blogs direct from the field.

Outdoor Channel Signs Exclusive Partnership with Adventure Racing World Championship 2011

Thursday, August 11, 2011
Singapore, August 10th, 2011, Outdoor Channel (Asia), the world leader in outdoor entertainment, has signed an exclusive partnership with the Adventure Racing World Championship (ARWC 2011) to broadcast the finale of the world’s premier adventuring racing across the Asia-Pacific footprint of Outdoor Channel.

The agreement will see the Outdoor Channel become the exclusive pan regional broadcast partner of the ARWC 2011 – which represents the pinnacle of the adventure racing sport – and provide extensive media coverage of the XPD Adventure Racing World Championship held in Tasmania from 31 October to 11 November, 2011. The partnership will also see Multi Channels Asia, which is the owner and operator of Outdoor Channel (Asia), become involved in co-producing and broadcasting future editions of the Adventure Racing World Series.

Gregg Creevey, Managing Director - Multi Channels Asia said, "Adventure racing is growing rapidly around the world, and epitomizes the energy and exhilaration of Outdoor Channel’s programming mission. With so much action, emotion and drama involved, the Adventure Racing World Championship will bring a new level of entertainment to Outdoor Channel viewers across Asia-Pacific.”

Anthony Gordon, Managing Director of Nothin'ButShorts International (the exclusive media rights holder and producer of the ARWS) said, “We are excited to join hands with Outdoor Channel to present the Adventure Racing World Championship to the Asia-Pacific region. The ARWS and the sport of adventure racing have captured the hearts and imagination of the public, with each and every ARWS event filled with dramatic stories of incredible dedication, sacrifice and teamwork, where athletes grit through pain, fatigue and sleep deprivation to complete the course. Through Outdoor Channel, we have found a strong partner that will help us bring Adventure Racing World Championship closer to the Asia-Pacific region and promote the sport of adventure racing.”

Craig Bycroft, Director of the ARWC 2011 said, "It is a privilege for the championships to have such a well respected broadcast partner throughout the Asia-Pacific. We are excited to bring into the homes of regional viewers the pinnacle of adventure racing calendar as well as the incredible scenery of Tasmania, Australia."

The Adventure Racing World Series is an international circuit of adventure races held in 10 countries in one year, culminating with the Adventure Racing World Championship, with the 2011 edition hosted in Tasmania, Australia from 31 October to 11 November, 2011.

About Outdoor Channel:
Launched in 1994, Outdoor Channel is the world leader in outdoor entertainment television. The channel features traditional and contemporary outdoor sports such as fishing, off-road, water sports, adventure, hunting and more. Whether out on the ocean or on top of a mountain, Outdoor Channel covers a broad range of outdoor activities that thrill, inspire and entertain. Outdoor Channel is available in more than 37 million households worldwide. In Asia, Outdoor Channel is owned and operated by Multi Channels Asia.

About Adventure Racing World Series:
Established in 2001, the Adventure Racing World Series (ARWS) unites the world’s best endurance athletes from around the globe for a spot in the pinnacle event of the adventure racing sport, the Adventure Racing World Championship. Each international Qualifier event in the ARWS sets a unique course to test mixed teams of four for up to 10 days of non-stop racing in the disciplines of trekking, mountain biking, kayaking, navigation and more. The Adventure World Racing Championship has defined the sport of adventure racing and crowned the world’s top adventure racing athletes since 2001. Each year a Qualifier event is chosen to host the championship. They accept the top two placed teams at each Qualifier, including winner of the previous Adventure Racing World Championship, and allocate wild card entries.

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