![]() Mikhaylove: For all Guinness records, there are two ways you can do it. IRunFar: Can you talk a little bit about that-what the rules and regulations are for a world record on the treadmill? One half of the record is to run, the other half of the record is to get all the requirements met, to get all the paperwork, to adhere to all the strict rules. I’m not being too public about it so far I’m a little superstitious. Mikhaylove: Thanks! I’m still waiting for the official confirmation. ![]() Let’s talk about the world record-congratulations, by the way! IRunFar: Yeah, I’m sure that’s a big change. Before that it was six years of pretty intense office work in Manhattan doing financial analysis. I’m lucky that I’m able to sustain myself so far in doing that. There are a mix of people who work with me: some athletes who want to improve their performance and some people who just want to feel better, who want better health, who want to lose weight and get in shape. It’s a pretty unique combination: being a strict raw vegan and at the same time being a competitive ultrarunner. I am a raw vegan for the last five years and there are lots of people interested in that. I’m coaching as well-I’m a certified running coach, I have certification in plant-based nutrition. Mikhaylove: Now I’m running full time, since last year, that’s all I’m doing. IRunFar: Where are you now, New York City?ĭenis Mikhaylove: Yes, right about-right next to New York City. In the following interviews, Mikhaylove, Carter, and Wardian disclose their strategies, discuss the various difficulties associated with running on a treadmill for so long, and detail the requirements that must be met in order to establish an official world record. resident, Denis Mikhaylove, covered 80.54 miles in 12 hours on a treadmill in New York City, thereby setting a new treadmill 12-hour world record. Yet this is what happened two weekends ago: on March 6, Brit Gemma Carter established a women’s treadmill 50k world record in London at 3:55:28 on March 7, Michael Wardian, ran a 50k time of 3:06:24 on the treadmill of a cruise ship returning to the United States from the Bahamas, missing the world record by 47 seconds, but the racing fanatic had tireless resolve and 36 hours later, he quite amazingly bested the record with a 3:03:56 on March 8, Russian citizen and U.S. The probability that one of those three individuals would attempt the world record twice within that same 60 hours is lower still. The probability of three different individuals in three different places each setting world records-two official records, pending Guinness approval, and one unofficial record-within a 60-hour span is infinitesimally low.
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