Posted on 07/30/2007 5:29:21 PM PDT by SandRat
| WASHINGTON, July 30, 2007 A Navy SEAL recruiter went the extra mile or extra 135 miles, to be exact to reach athletes who may have the fitness and drive to make it through the notoriously difficult SEAL training course.
Goggins was on orders from his directorate to compete in Badwater. He and fellow recruiters are sent to extreme" events across the country in an effort to reach out to athletes who may be good candidates for SEAL training. Because the Navy refuses to lower its standards for passing SEAL training, it must attract already highly trained candidates. The Navy aims to graduate 500 SEALs during the next three years, said Lt. David Hecht, a spokesman for the directorate. The kids who swim, the kids who bike, the kids who run, they have a higher success rate making it through the program, Hecht said. Fallen comrades were especially on Goggins mind as he prepared to conquer Badwater. His participation in the event this year and last helped raise money for the Special Operations Warrior Foundation, which provides college scholarship grants, based on need, along with financial aid and educational counseling to the children of Special Operations personnel who are killed in an operational mission or training accident. The Navy SEAL, who is also a former Army Ranger, took 25 hours and 49 minutes to complete what is considered the most grueling event of its type in the world. The course begins at 282 feet below sea level, the lowest point in the Western Hemisphere in Californias remote southwestern interior near the Nevada border and ends 8,360 feet above sea level on the base of the continental United States tallest mountain. In all these races you stay up a long time, Goggins said. And to train to be a SEAL youre up for hours and days, so that helps out quite a bit knowing that you can go the distance. Badwater participants frequently face temperatures approaching 130 degrees Fahrenheit. During the blazing daylight portion of their journeys, participants run on the white lane markers painted onto the right of the road as opposed to the asphalt itself. That way the soles of their shoes are less likely to literally melt from the heat. Race directors intentionally hold Badwater in the middle of July so that runners will experience the very hottest weather Death Valley has to offer. Unlike most marathons and shorter organized races, Badwater offers no official aid stations. Instead, runners must bring their own support crew, all their own food and any other supplies they may need to survive the trek across Death Valley and up Mount Whitney. Participants become so spread out over the course of the race that many complete most of the 135-mile event completely alone. Many participants stop to catch a few hours sleep along the way, and some have actually fallen asleep while running the race. Goggins attributes his extraordinary performance on his crew, who would drive alongside in a support vehicle. They worked their butt off for me out there, and it showed by the time I had, he said. I mean you saw them out there on that mountain, they were coming off the car and sponging me down. It was a specially designed sock, with individual compartments for each toe, that saved Goggins the agony of last years race, when his feet became so mangled from 30 hours of pounding pavement that they were photographed and posted on Badwaters Web site, a sort of twisted badge of honor appreciated by the events close-knit community. Last year I wore some thin socks, and it was just killing me, Goggins said. This year the pain is not too bad, just on the front of my feet from going downhill. This years event featured unexpectedly cooler weather, with daytime highs only in the 112- to 117-degree range. Because of this, predictions of a possible new course record abounded before the start. While many participants thought of the 24-hour mark as a mythical time that could never be bested, first-time Badwater participant Valmir Nunes, a 43-year-old from of Brazil, smashed the previous record by nearly two hours, finishing in 22 hours and 51 minutes. Nunes spent more than a week living in the Death Valley town of Stovepipe Wells to train on the course and acclimatize to the brutal conditions. Goggins had no such luxury. He lives in Chula Vista, Calif., where daytime high temperatures hover in the comfortable 70s year round. Thats perfect for recreational running, but not for Badwater preparation. Goggins dressed in heavy layers of clothing to simulate the heat he would face in the desert and ran for hours at a time. He even turned the heater full blast in his car to experience sweltering conditions when he drove. Only 90 athletes are allowed to compete in Badwater each year, although hundreds apply. The bare minimum requirement to even be considered for entry into the event is to have officially finished a running race of at least 100 continuous miles in length. Goggins surprised everybody when he placed fifth last year in his first Badwater attempt. He finished nearly four hours faster this year. I've run a few more hundred-mile races this year, he said. It gets your legs used to the distance. (David Mays works at the Pentagon Channel.) |
|
|
||||
|
The best attract the best.
I’m almost sure there is an ancient proverb about that.
;-)
*** Bookmark ***
Dang refugee from the Foreign Legion, no doubt.
Outstanding!
Congratulations Mr. Goggins!
The real Iron Men. Crap, if only I wasn’t introduced to a computer 7 years ago...
These guys and gals that run this thing are to be congratulated for their efforts. The winner in 2005 race Scott Jurek ran the 135 miles in 24:36:08 and won again in 2006 with a 25:41:18. This year they had 85 entries. The results aren’t posted on their web site yet. I don’t see how they keep their body functioning under those conditions for that long. They are certainly some of the elite.
The oldest runner was 70 and he completed the race in 55:52:24. You don't see 20 yr olds in the race, mostly mid/late 30s, 40s, 50s
Thanks for the article. The Seals are an incredible bunch of heros. God Bless them all !!
Thanks for the article. The Seals are an incredible bunch of heros. God Bless them all !!
And all our military. Sorry for the omission. Not our politicians !!
Petty Officer Goggins appears to be over the one kilogram per inch of height that is thought optimal for distance running!
SOCOM Ping
Endurance ping.....
At least he was there.
The Brazilian guy, the winner, had a pace of about 9:47/mi! You’d think logically that runners who can run ultras would tend to win the regular marathons because their endurance is so phenomenally high. I’ve always been intrigued by the fact that apparently it doesn’t work this way. Not to mention the additional oddity that older runners can actually win these ultras.
My dad's been mad at them ever since DeGaulle blocked the export of French wine to the U.S., back in the 60s.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.