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Midnight Sun Run

Coordinates: 64°51′21″N 147°49′53″W / 64.85583°N 147.83139°W / 64.85583; -147.83139
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Midnight Sun Run
DateSaturday in late June
LocationFairbanks, Alaska, United States
Event typeRoad
Distance10 kilometers (6.2 miles)
Primary sponsorFairbanks Daily News-Miner
Established1983
Course recordsM: 29:14 (1984 - Tom Ratcliffe)
F: 33:57 (1987 - Kellie Cathey)
Official sitemidnightsunrun.net

The Fairbanks Daily News-Miner Midnight Sun Run is a ten-kilometer (6.2 mi) road running event, held annually since 1983 in Fairbanks, Alaska, it attracts participants from across the United States and from around the world. The race takes place on the third Saturday of June each year, starting at 10 p.m. with the boom of a cannon that can be heard throughout Fairbanks. Despite its late evening start, there is no need for streetlights or flashlights, as the summer solstice sun shines brightly from start to finish and beyond. Proceeds from the race benefit Fairbanks Resource Agency and local student athletes through scholarships. In recent years the race has attracted over 3,000 participants, due in part to its special feature of running under the light of the midnight sun.

Course

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The Midnight Sun Run, which has started at the University of Alaska Fairbanks Patty Center ever since the event's debut, winds through a number of Fairbanks neighborhoods and along the Chena River, and finishes at Pioneer Park. Despite the late hour, spectators line the streets to cheer the runners onward. Temperatures ranging into the high 70s and sometimes even into the 80s in the dead of night can be a bit warm, especially for entrants from northerly latitudes, so to avoid overheating many runners are hosed down by residents along the race course.

Race history

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Close to 350 runners participated in the inaugural Midnight Sun Run, which started at 9:05 a.m. the morning of June 25, 1983, rather than at midnight. The course was slightly different from what it is today, finishing in downtown Fairbanks at the corner of 11th and Turner. Kent Karns was the first runner to cross the finish line, with a time of 32:28. Tricia Livingston was the first woman finisher, with a time of 40:29. The founder and race director in the event's early years was Mike Styles.[1]

The Midnight Sun Run became an actual midnight sun event in 1984, when the start time was moved to 10 pm. Elite runners Tom Ratcliffe and Ron Gilooly recorded the first and second fastest times in the race with times of 29:14 and 29:19, respectively, records which still stand today. In 1986, top Californian marathoner Nancy Ditz won the women's division, while elite American marathon stars Benji Durden and Pete Pfitzinger dominated the men's field that year.

In 1987, Scott Williams and Gary Fanelli, dressed impeccably as the Blues Brothers, firmly established themselves in the wacky lore of the Midnight Sun Run's costume division, finishing tied for second overall with a time of 32:50. In 1988, the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner Midnight Sun Run was born, as the newspaper became the event's title sponsor. With around 2,200 participants, the run had firmly established its current reputation as one of the premier running events in Alaska.

In conjunction with the race, The first Midnight Sun Run Runner's Expo was staged in 2000, and featured former Olympian and renowned running guru and author Jeff Galloway, who conducted a seminar before a standing room only crowd at the UAF Patty Center. He talked about his experiences as a runner in the 1972 Summer Olympics, and answered a variety of questions on nutrition, injuries, training methods, marathon running, and spoke at length about his widely successful and influential marathon training strategies.

In 2006, some fifty United States Army soldiers, members of the 4th Battalion, 11th Field Artillery with the 172 Stryker Brigade Combat Team from Fort Wainwright, would not let their deployment in the Iraq War prevent them from participating in the Midnight Sun Run. They held their own 10 kilometer event in northern Iraq where they are part of Operation Iraqi Freedom. In a press release, 1st Sgt. Antonio Boone said it was "Quite a bit different than the last couple times I have run it. There was no forest fire smoke, no costumes and no one cheering." The soldiers wore official Midnight Sun Run bibs bearing the number 411, and received T-shirts donated and shipped from Fairbanks by race organizers. "Keeps getting easier every time I run it", said Sgt. Chad McFall, who helped push and pull a 2,300-pound howitzer along the 10 K course in the 2004 and 2005 Midnight Sun Runs in Fairbanks, "[T]his year there was no howitzer. It made running the race a snap."

The race went virtual in 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Top ten fastest finishing times

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Men's division time year Women's division time year
1. Tom Ratcliffe 29:14 1984 1. Kellie Cathey 33:57 1987
2. Ron Gilooly 29:19 1984 2. Nancy Ditz 34:03 1987
3. Ron Gilooly 29:48 1985 3. Nancy Ditz 34:23 1986
4. Jed Hopfenserger 30:10 1988 4. Leslie Lewis 34:50 1989
5. Pat Cross 30:14 1984 5. Pam Clifford 35:24 1988
6. Benji Durden 30:16 1986 6. Mara Rabinowitz 35:49 1984
7. Pete Pfitzinger 30:20 1986 7. Susan Faulkner 36:57 2002
7. Rick Wilhelm 30:20 1992 8. Heather Hunt 37:04 1998
9. Andy Ferguson 30:29 1988 9. Lisa Keller 37:20 1993
10. Kris Mueller 30:47 1988 10. Lisa Keller 37:37 1995

Collateral contests

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Beginning in 1984, costumes have been a central theme for the Midnight Sun Run, and awards are given to the best coifed entrants. The costumed division is perhaps one of the most anticipated aspects of the race. Mike Styles said the idea of the costumed division was to create a Fairbanks version of San Francisco's Bay to Breakers race.

Photos

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References

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  1. ^ Styles, Mike (2020-12-20). "The early days of the Midnight Sun Run: How a race became the pinnacle of summer solstice". Fairbanks Daily News-Miner.
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  • News-Miner.com - 'Run takes on a global flavor', Margaret Friedenau, Fairbanks Daily News-Miner (June 18, 2006)

64°51′21″N 147°49′53″W / 64.85583°N 147.83139°W / 64.85583; -147.83139