Sweat Elite Podcast

Sweat Elite

Interviews with Elite Athletes, Professional Coaches, Sport Scientists and Thought Leaders in the Sport of Running.

  1. 6H AGO

    London Marathon Shockers: Sub 2:00, Mixed Results, and an Irish Legend

    Matt and Mick break down the London Marathon chaos, training consistency, and the reality behind elite and everyday running. LINKS Matt Coaching: www.sweatelitecoaching.com/matt-fox/ Matt Instagram: www.instagram.com/mattinglisfox/ Matt Strava: www.strava.com/athletes/6248359 Mick Instagram: www.instagram.com/runningfox26.2/ Mick Strava: www.strava.com/athletes/9571709/ Matt Fox (2:18 marathoner) and Mick Fox (2:19 marathoner) talk through the idea of filming a "day in the life" series to show how everyday runners, especially parents, can still train at a high level and improve their marathons. They then dive into the London Marathon, breaking down the shock of two men going under two hours and multiple athletes dipping under the previous world record, while many sub-2:20 runners struggled late in tough conditions. They unpack how weather, pacing, and race dynamics can completely shift outcomes across the field. They also analyze the women's race and the context around women-only world records, before getting into prize money, sponsorship dynamics, and how negotiations can shape race execution. The conversation moves into broader topics like influencer narratives around heart rate training and fueling, questioning what's real versus what's being pushed, while highlighting standout performances including Ireland's Peter Lynch running 2:06:08 for a national record and Vinny Morey's surprise 2:05:54 debut at Glass City. They finish by pointing listeners toward a more training-focused companion episode. CHAPTERS 00:00 - Podcast Return 00:17 - Family Filming Chaos 00:48 - Everyday Runner Series 02:01 - London Marathon Shockwaves 02:59 - Weather And Midpack Struggles 05:14 - Women Race And Records 07:26 - Prize Money And Sponsorships 09:30 - Is London Really Fast 13:18 - Sub Two Reaction Stories 16:23 - Disneyland Race Tracking 21:27 - British Champs Breakdown 25:01 - Sam Griffiths Spotlight 27:04 - Heart Rate Racing Debate 28:28 - Influencer Honesty Debate 30:27 - Heart Rate Pacing Skepticism 31:31 - Brands and Authenticity 34:21 - Influencer Obligations Pre Race 36:32 - Peter Lynch Irish Record 38:28 - Why Irish Athletes Overlooked 43:31 - Progress and Tech Arguments 49:21 - Vinny Morey Surprise 205 54:50 - Wrap Up and Next Episode

    56 min
  2. 4D AGO

    The Reality of Balancing Marathon Training, Fatherhood & Full-Time Physiotherapy - Coach Kyle Weise

    Matt and Kyle recap the Boston Marathon, discussing standout performances, strong Australian results, and how favorable tailwinds can make Boston far faster than many expect despite the course profile. They break down race execution, fast early splits, and why Boston can sometimes race more like a flat fast marathon than people assume. Matt's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mattinglisfox/ Matt's Strava: https://www.strava.com/athletes/6248359/ Kyle's Strava: https://www.strava.com/athletes/3517976/ Kyle's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kyle_weise/ Supporters Club: https://www.sweatelite.co/supporters-club/ Coaching: https://www.sweatelitecoaching.com/matt-fox The conversation then shifts to Kyle's Gold Coast Marathon build, balancing fatherhood and full-time physiotherapy work while preparing for a strong marathon performance. They discuss recent 10K racing as a turning point for confidence and fitness, current weekly mileage, a key 4 x 2K workout, and how shorter races can be used as valuable marathon build checkpoints without needing to be in PB shape. They also cover influencer culture versus elite running performance, tall poppy syndrome, and why attention and actual results often do not align. Kyle explains how to manage niggles, when to seek professional help, and applies that thinking to Matt's calf issue during his return from a sacral stress fracture. The episode finishes with thoughts on doubles versus singles, training cycles beyond the traditional seven-day week, group training benefits, and why learning how to race matters just as much as fitness itself. Timestamps: 00:00 Boston Marathon Recap 02:50 Tailwinds and Fast Times 04:04 Gold Coast Training Update 07:37 Balancing Kids and Mileage 10:06 Recent Workouts and 10K Plans 12:28 Influencers vs Elite Runners 18:50 Handling Niggles and Injury Risk 24:19 Return to Running Philosophy 27:37 Calf Strain Check In 29:24 Hiking And Fatigue Risks 30:09 Doubles Versus Singles 33:57 Easy Run Time Limits 37:04 Beyond The Seven Day Week 40:39 Group Training Versus Solo 43:38 Racing Without PB Pressure 49:59 Short Races In Marathon Builds 53:09 Wrap Up And Next Episode

    54 min
  3. APR 23

    Running Robots - What Actually Happened in China? Boston Marathon Recap and London Marathon Preview

    Mick Fox (2:19 marathoner) and Matt Fox (2:18 marathoner). Boston Recap, London Forecast, and Why Runners Overthink Data (Plus a Robot Race Detour) In this week's episode of the Sweat Elite Podcast, Mick Fox and Matt return with another episode of the Fastest Fox series. They break down Boston Marathon results, preview London Marathon conditions, discuss why so many runners overcomplicate training data, and somehow end up deep in a conversation about robot racing in Beijing. Train with Matt Fox here: https://sweatelitecoaching.com/matt-fox/ Join the Supporters Club and private podcast feed here: https://www.sweatelite.co/shareholders/ Contact Matt Fox here: matt@sweatelite.co Matt Fox Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mattinglisfox/ Matt Fox Strava: https://www.strava.com/athletes/6248359 Mick Fox Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/runningfox26.2/ Mick Fox Strava: https://www.strava.com/athletes/9571709/ Mick Fox and Matt open the episode with some light banter around balding, hats, and race-week nerves before moving into what has been a rare gift for marathon runners - genuinely ideal weather conditions. They discuss Boston's unusual tailwind and cool temperatures, and how much weather often matters more than course profile itself. London also looks promising, leading into excitement around another major weekend of racing. They recap the Boston Marathon in detail, covering John Korir's win, the depth of the men's field, and standout performances from athletes like El Bilal, Charlie Hicks, Rory Linkletter, Clayton Young, and Abdi Nageeye, whose 2:08 for 21st place shows just how deep the race was. On the women's side, they touch on Hellen Obiri's win and Emily Sisson's strong late-race move into ninth place. The conversation moves into reflections on Ryan and Sara Hall, Boston's unusual 1897 short-course history, and how much marathon racing has changed over time, especially around fuelling and preparation. Mick and Matt compare older-school approaches to the modern obsession with precision and metrics, questioning whether some athletes now rely too heavily on devices instead of learning how to truly run by feel. That opens up a wider discussion around influencers, Strava culture, and the tendency for runners to overanalyse pace, heart rate, and training numbers. They argue that too much data can create unnecessary anxiety, especially for everyday runners trying to compare themselves to elite-level content online. Simplicity, consistency, and self-awareness remain the bigger performance drivers. They also preview the London Marathon, touching on British and Irish athletes to watch, and discuss the value of documenting the life of the everyday runner rather than only chasing polished elite content. Mick highlights creators and relatable runners who make the sport feel more accessible and honest for regular people balancing training with normal life. In true Fastest Fox fashion, the episode takes a sharp turn into a discussion about robot racing in Beijing, AI, and what life could look like if robots become increasingly normal in everyday society. From convenience to discomfort, they debate where technology helps and where it starts to feel like too much. They close by circling back to London Marathon hype and the reminder that sometimes the best race plan is simply trusting your effort and racing without overthinking it. Timestamps: 00:00 - Balding Banter 01:04 - Boston Marathon 02:50 - Weather Beats Courses 04:37 - Boston Winners Talk 06:10 - Ryan and Sarah Hall 09:36 - Old School Racing 13:13 - Boston Standout Runs 20:20 - London Marathon Preview 24:27 - Influencers vs Real Amateurs 29:58 - Fly on the Wall Filming 34:09 - Shoutout to Tony 34:45 - Finding Relatable Runners 34:55 - Michael Sison Recommendation 37:30 - Robot Race Rant 39:10 - Flying to Beijing for Robots 44:02 - AI Convenience vs Fear 45:42 - Robots Running in China 51:45 - London Marathon Hype 52:20 - Race Without a Plan 56:17 - Heart Rate Obsession 58:53 - Influencers and Watch Data 01:01:05 - Old School Feel Training 01:04:38 - Strava and Social Burnout 01:07:08 - Wrapping Up and Private Pod

    1h 8m
  4. APR 21

    2:46 Marathon to 2:07 Marathon in 5 years - Ethan Shuley

    Ethan Shuley on His Rapid Marathon Rise to 2:07 in Osaka, Training in Japan, and What's Next Matt Fox speaks with runner and YouTuber Ethan Shuley about his rapid rise from a 2:46 marathoner to 2:07 in Osaka. Ethan shares how injuries, ultras, Japan's running culture, high mileage, better fueling, and more structured coaching helped drive one of the most interesting marathon progressions in the sport right now. Matt coaching www.sweatelitecoaching.com/matt Matt Instagram www.instagram.com/mattinglisfox Matt Strava www.strava.com/athletes/6248359 Contact Matt matt@sweatelite.co Ethan Shuley Instagram www.instagram.com/ethanshuley Ethan Shuley Strava www.strava.com/pros/13986450 Ethan Shuley joins Matt Fox to unpack one of the most dramatic recent jumps in marathon running - from 2:46 at Provo Marathon off minimal training to 2:07 at Osaka. Ethan explains his background as a strong high school runner in Kentucky, injuries at BYU, two years living in Ukraine on an LDS mission, and how moving to Japan after studying Japanese opened the door to a completely different running culture. The conversation dives into Ethan's return to serious training through ultras, mistakes that taught him key lessons, self-coaching, Strava pressure, and how more structured marathon preparation changed everything. Ethan talks through breakthrough races at Nara, Kobe, and Osaka, including mileage progression, shoe adaptation, first-time bottle fueling with Maurten and gels, and the practical details that helped him close the gap to 2:07. Matt and Ethan also discuss the differences between Japanese and American distance running systems, why Japan has such depth in the marathon but less focus on middle distance, the pressure of sharing training online, YouTube filming challenges, sponsor considerations, and what comes next with pacing duties at Gold Coast and a target race at the Launceston Half. Topics: 00:00 - Meet Ethan Shuley 01:17 - Post Osaka Life Changes 02:44 - Early Running Background 05:15 - Ukraine Mission Years 06:27 - First Marathon Breakthrough 08:10 - Ultras Spark Comeback 09:41 - Why Japan Matters 12:31 - Ultra Mistake Lessons 14:15 - Self Coaching Training Philosophy 18:17 - Mileage Strava Pressure 22:41 - Injury Nara Turning Point 25:45 - Getting A Coach 28:21 - From 2:11 To 2:07 31:00 - Shoes Fueling Race Details 32:33 - Marathon Bottles and Carrying 33:01 - Fuel Plan for 2:07 33:51 - Japan vs US Carb Mindset 37:15 - Next Races and Goals 39:35 - Strava Privacy and Sharing 40:18 - YouTube Filming Challenges 42:36 - No Vlogging Style 43:49 - Creative Influences 50:03 - Sponsors and Staying in Japan 54:17 - Japan Training System Debate 57:11 - Japan Culture Rule Stories 01:00:55 - Dating Apps and Wrap Up

    1h 2m
  5. APR 20

    IMO #33 - How To Race Boston Marathon & London Marathon, Chinese Shoe Brand Updates, Palestine Marathon and more

    Some final thoughts ahead of Boston and London Marathon weekend, including why I believe effort matters more than obsessing over numbers, how I would approach Boston tactically, and why fueling properly can make a huge difference on race day. I also talk about what I'm doing in Hong Kong, coaching while travelling, Chinese shoe brands, and a few workouts you can use in your own training. Links Matt coaching: www.sweatelitecoaching.com/matt-fox/ Matt Instagram: www.instagram.com/mattinglisfox/ Matt Strava: www.strava.com/athletes/6248359 Recording this one from Hong Kong, I go through my last-minute thoughts for Boston and London Marathon runners and explain why I think most athletes race better when they stay locked into effort rather than rigid pace or heart rate targets. I talk through the Boston course, the likely weather, how I'd think about carb loading in the final days, and why arriving at the key hills under control matters so much more than chasing a split too early. I also get into fueling in more detail, including the importance of drip feeding carbohydrates and caffeine throughout the race rather than waiting until you are already in trouble. From there, I talk a bit about what I'm doing in Hong Kong, the running-related app project I'm involved in, and some of the Chinese shoe brands and factories I've been looking into, including the balance between affordability, durability, and performance. Elsewhere in the episode, I touch on London logistics, some thoughts on the pro scene, my own recent body composition results and return from injury, coaching while travelling, a possible Beating Bester rivalry idea, and a few practical workouts for 5K, 10K, half marathon, and marathon runners. Topics 00:00 - Hong Kong Coffee Intro 00:55 - Effort Over Numbers 03:02 - Boston Weather And Carbs 04:29 - Why I'm In Hong Kong 05:58 - Chinese Super Shoes Deep Dive 09:06 - Boston Course And Pacing 12:43 - Fueling Plan During Race 16:00 - Heartbreak Hill Execution 17:11 - London Marathon Notes 22:56 - Pro Field And Podcasts 24:44 - Palestine Trip Plans 26:45 - Shoe Prices And Durability 29:23 - Weight Loss And DEXA 31:50 - Body Scan Reality Check 32:49 - Calf Niggle And Shoe Testing 34:16 - Beating Bester Rivalry Idea 39:56 - Coaching While Traveling 45:49 - Rapid Fire Q And A 52:00 - Workouts Of The Week 57:42 - Coaching Versus AI Guidance 58:28 - Wrap Up And Boston Pep Talk

    59 min
  6. APR 16

    The Fastest Marathon Courses, China's Emerging Shoe Tech, Great Instagram Accounts and more

    Mick Fox (2:19 marathoner) and Matt Fox (2:18 marathoner) return with another episode of the Fastest Fox series. They cover the current marathon period with Rotterdam complete and Boston and London just ahead, before moving into debates around race weather, hydration policy, shoe technology, underrated running creators, and where the sport is heading. Train with Matt Fox here: https://sweatelitecoaching.com/matt-fox/ Join the Supporters Club and private podcast feed here: https://www.sweatelite.co/shareholders/ Contact Matt Fox here: matt@sweatelite.co Matt Fox Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mattinglisfox/ Matt Fox Strava: https://www.strava.com/athletes/6248359 Mick Fox Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/runningfox26.2/ Mick Fox Strava: https://www.strava.com/athletes/9571709/ Mick Fox and Matt open the episode by looking at the heart of marathon season, with Rotterdam just completed and both Boston and London coming up next. They discuss how different forecasts can shape not only race-day execution but also the appeal of one event over another, noting that Boston looks relatively cool while London may be much warmer. That leads into a broader reflection on how unpredictable weather remains one of the biggest variables in marathon racing. The conversation then shifts to the Paris Marathon and its controversial trial of removing cups at aid stations. Mick and Matt question whether the policy, while environmentally motivated, creates unnecessary inconvenience and potential risk for runners trying to hydrate properly during a marathon. They also discuss Paris winner "Cripp," and use the race to make a wider point that events outside the Abbott World Marathon Majors can still offer fields, atmosphere, and performances that rival the biggest races in the sport. From there, they explore what really makes a marathon feel "major," including the influence Abbott has had in shaping perception and expansion. They also touch on some of the most popular European races for fast times, especially from an Irish perspective, with Valencia, Seville, Dublin, and Frankfurt all mentioned as strong options depending on goals, timing, and conditions. The episode also includes discussion around Rotterdam's 2:03 to 2:04 winning standard and whether modern marathon performances are being driven primarily by shoe advancements. Mick and Matt acknowledge that training, depth, and professionalism all matter, but argue that shoe technology has clearly played a major role in lifting the level of the event and the sport more broadly. Matt then shares updates from China, where he is researching a shoe brand referred to as "QD," while also thinking through broader ideas around business, running culture, and product access. That includes discussion of a paid group-run app, the possibility of an online shoe store, and what it might look like to help people access performance footwear that is less visible in Western markets. Later in the episode, the discussion becomes more personal, moving into the tension between travel and family life, the way sleep and routine are affected by constant movement, and the wider shift on social media toward short-form content. Mick and Matt also spotlight underrated running creators including Dan Nash, Ryan Creech, and Caroline Hassett, before briefly debating Josh Kerr's mile world record ambitions and whether he could eventually be a serious marathoner. They wrap up by pointing listeners toward the private podcast and deeper training discussion. Timestamps: 00:00 - Marathon Season Kickoff 00:42 - Boston And London Weather Talk 02:25 - Paris Hydration Controversy 04:21 - Kipruto Wins Paris 05:28 - What Makes A Major 07:05 - Best Races For Fast Times 09:24 - Frankfurt And Dublin Plans 11:00 - Rotterdam And The Shoe Era 12:02 - China Trip And New Shoe Brands 14:59 - Run Meetup App Idea 18:17 - Business Ideas And Family Tradeoffs 20:19 - Travel Struggles And Sleep 23:01 - Parenthood Sleep Stories 24:04 - Sharing the Hard Moments 24:42 - Short Form Takes Over 26:37 - Attention Spans and Algorithms 29:07 - Watching Runners Grow Up 32:21 - Underrated Creator Shoutouts 33:36 - Dan Nash Spotlight 36:44 - Ryan Creech and Real Talent 40:49 - Caroline Hassett Relatable Running 43:20 - Josh Kerr Mile Record Debate 47:36 - Wrap and Private Pod Plug

    48 min
  7. APR 12

    Marty (2:46 Marathoner) Begins His Gold Coast Marathon Build - Training Talk

    Matt Fox and Marty Bordignon talk through Marty's first marathon-specific block for the Gold Coast Marathon, his rough post-Osaka patch, and how things have started to turn around as training settles back near 100 km per week. They also discuss Marty's MTHFR-related folate/B-vitamin issue, tapering philosophy, group training in the heat, preferred YouTube running content, fueling economics, and Boston Marathon predictions. Train with Matt: https://sweatelitecoaching.com/matt-fox/ Private Podcast Feed + Discord: https://www.sweatelite.co/shareholders/ Contact Matt: matt@sweatelite.co Matt Fox Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mattinglisfox/ Matt Fox Strava Training Log: https://www.strava.com/athletes/6248359/ Marty Bordignon Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/martybordignon/ Marty Bordignon Strava: https://www.strava.com/athletes/martybordignon/ In this episode, Matt is joined by Marty Bordignon from the Gold Coast, a 2:46 marathoner beginning a focused marathon block with less than three months to go until the Gold Coast Marathon. Marty reflects on a difficult three-week stretch after Osaka where fatigue, low motivation, and even easy runs felt unusually hard, before things started to shift again as he returned to roughly 100 km per week and gained confidence from a session of 3K, 5 x 60 seconds, and 3K. The conversation also explores Marty's discovery that an MTHFR gene variant was affecting his ability to absorb folate and certain B vitamins properly, and how getting back on the right supplement made a major difference. Matt and Marty discuss early-morning group runs to manage the heat, training rhythm, pacing options, and realistic goal setting heading toward race day, with 2:40 framed as a stretch and 2:38 sitting more in the realm of possibility if training continues well. They also break down Steve Magness's recent tapering video and share their preference for shorter tapers that maintain intensity, before moving into a broader discussion on running YouTube, filming ideas, watch time, monetization, sponsor dynamics, Ben Felton's content, Jake Barraclough injury speculation, Cole Givens, Nick Bare's move away from data obsession, and the ever-growing cost of fueling - including DIY carb mix ideas versus gels. The episode closes with some Boston Marathon predictions and a bit of shoe talk. Timestamps: 00:00 - Marathon Block Begins 00:50 - Goals and Pacing Plans 02:33 - Post Marathon Struggles 04:57 - B Vitamin Breakthrough 06:17 - Early Morning Training Life 10:15 - Coach Kyle and Volume Focus 13:23 - Workout Breakdown and Confidence 16:14 - Tapering Advice Debate 28:56 - Running YouTube Favorites 30:12 - Clayton Young Series Hype 35:23 - Behind the Scenes Filming Ideas 37:38 - YouTube vs Short Form Attention 38:13 - Watch Time Monetization 38:51 - YouTube Ads vs Sponsors 39:41 - Instagram Sponsor Appeal 40:17 - Ben Felton Video Breakdown 42:34 - Jake Injury Conspiracies 46:50 - Cole Givens Appreciation 48:06 - Nick Bare Ditching Data 51:59 - Supplements and Gel Economics 53:47 - DIY Carb Mix Recipes 01:01:15 - Instagram Follows and Motivation 01:05:55 - Boston Marathon Predictions 01:08:25 - Wrap Up and Shoe Talk

    1h 10m
  8. APR 9

    Jimmy Gressier's 12:51 5km + Kiprun Decathlon Shoes & The Rising Threat of Chinese Running Shoe Brands

    Mick Fox (2:19 marathoner) and Matt Fox (2:18 marathoner) return with episode 4 of the Fastest Fox series. They break down Jimmy Gressier's 12:51 European 5K record, the rise of Kiprun and Decathlon's premium ambitions, and the growing pressure Chinese running shoe brands could place on the major Western companies. Train with Matt Fox here: https://sweatelitecoaching.com/matt-fox/ Join the Supporters Club and private podcast feed here: https://www.sweatelite.co/shareholders/ Contact Matt Fox here: matt@sweatelite.co Matt Fox Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mattinglisfox/ Matt Fox Strava: https://www.strava.com/athletes/6248359 Mick Fox Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/runningfox26.2/ Mick Fox Strava: https://www.strava.com/athletes/9571709/ Mick Fox and Matt open episode four of Fastest Fox by reacting to Jimmy Gressier's 12:51 European 5K record, run in Kiprun shoes. That result leads into a broader discussion about Kiprun as Decathlon's more premium performance sub-brand, and how Decathlon appears to be repositioning itself from a budget reputation toward greater credibility in serious running. From there, the conversation expands into the wider running shoe market. Mick and Matt compare the pricing, branding, and marketing power of major Western companies like Nike, Adidas, and ASICS with the growing presence of Chinese brands based near Hong Kong and mainland China, including Li-Ning, Anta, 361 Degrees, Xtep, and smaller online names like Diner Fish. They argue that some of these brands are already producing shoes with performance levels that appear comparable to the established giants, but at significantly lower prices. The episode explores why those Chinese brands still face major barriers despite strong product development. Trust, brand perception, and global distribution remain the biggest hurdles, but Mick and Matt discuss how that could change quickly if more athletes, creators, and consumers begin taking the products seriously. They also examine how marketing can create the illusion of premium value, and why Western brands may eventually face real pressure on pricing if cheaper high-performance alternatives continue to improve. They also touch on Hugo Fry switching from Boston to the London Marathon, with some speculation around whether Jake Barlow's apparent illness or injury may have influenced that shift. As the episode progresses, the discussion becomes broader and more reflective, moving into topics like validation-seeking, overanalysing data, and the tendency for runners to overcomplicate training. Mick and Matt argue for a more grounded approach to both coaching and self-improvement, emphasizing accountability, simplicity, and consistency over chasing endless metrics or external approval. They discuss how social media can distort expectations around training, identity, and progress, and why sharing the journey still matters when it is done honestly. The episode closes with Mick describing a run with his coach, a humble two-time Olympic marathoner, which leads into a final conversation around perspective, mentorship, sponsors, and missed opportunities in the sport. It is another wide-ranging Fastest Fox episode blending current events, shoe industry insight, and honest reflections on running culture. Timestamps: 00:00 - Show Kickoff 00:41 - Gressier Record Buzz 01:32 - Kiprun Origins Explained 02:05 - Decathlon Value Gear 04:44 - Premium Brand Strategy 08:20 - Chinese Shoe Boom 13:38 - Marketing Hype Pricing 19:08 - Influencers Premium Illusion 21:38 - Hugo Fry Switches London 22:39 - Jake Barlow Infection Drama 25:00 - Identity High Mileage Talk 26:42 - Relatable Racing Fails 26:55 - Why Share Your Journey 29:28 - Ego Data And Validation 32:32 - Strava Run Stolen 35:46 - Instagram Story Breakdown 36:38 - Modern Coaching Expectations 38:10 - Accountability Over Programs 43:41 - Coaching Boundaries 45:19 - Humble Olympic Mentor 48:43 - Sponsors And Missed Chances 52:44 - Closing And Private Pod

    54 min
4
out of 5
132 Ratings

About

Interviews with Elite Athletes, Professional Coaches, Sport Scientists and Thought Leaders in the Sport of Running.

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