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Camille Herron

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Camille Herron
Herron in 2017
Personal information
Birth nameJacquelyn Camille Herron
Born (1981-12-25) December 25, 1981 (age 42)
Norman, Oklahoma
Height5 ft 9.5 in (1.77 m)
Websitehttp://www.camilleherron.com/
Sport
Country United States
SportTrack and Field
Event(s)Marathon and Ultramarathon
Coached byConor Holt
Achievements and titles
Personal best(s)Marathon: 2:37:14
50 km: 3:20:58
50 miles: 5:38:41
100 km: 7:08:35
12 hrs: 151.111 km (93.896 miles)
100 miles: 12:41:11
24 hrs: 270.116 km (167.842 miles)
48 hrs: 435.336 km (270.505 miles)
6 day: 901.768 km (560.333 miles)
Medal record
Women's athletics
Representing the  United States
World Championships
Gold medal – first place 2015 IAU 100 km World Championship Individual
Gold medal – first place 2015 IAU 100 km World Championship Team
Gold medal – first place 2015 IAU 50 km World Championship Individual
Gold medal – first place 2019 IAU 24 Hour World Championship Individual
Gold medal – first place 2019 IAU 24 Hour World Championship Team

Jacquelyn Camille Herron is an American ultramarathon runner and scientist.[1] She has 12 world records in ultramarathon distances.[2]

Early life and education

Herron was born in Norman, Oklahoma. She attended Westmoore High School in Oklahoma City, where she was a three-time All-State recipient in cross country, a three-time State Champion in track and field, and valedictorian.[3]

After receiving academic and athletic scholarships, Herron attended the University of Tulsa, where she was a Top 10 Senior and earned a bachelor's degree in Exercise and Sports Science in 2005. She began doing scientific research in college to understand why she had stress fractures as a young runner.[1][4]

Herron obtained a masters degree in Exercise and Sports Science from Oregon State University in 2007. Her research focused on identifying the optimal anabolic stimulus for musculoskeletal health, emphasizing the importance of frequent light mechanical stress interspersed with infrequent high-intensity stress.[5][6]

Personal life

Herron was born with central auditory processing disorder and hearing loss and had a near-drowning incident at the age of three.[7][8][9][10] In 1999, when she was 17, Herron and her family lost their home and possessions during the 1999 Oklahoma tornado outbreak. She stated that she found the event to be a turning point, and began running longer distances on Sundays as a way to celebrate life.[11]

In 2024, Herron was diagnosed with autism and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.[12]

Herron's unusual running gait and arm swing are attributed to an extra bone in her foot and twists in her arm and femur.[9][13]

Career

Herron returned to competitive running as a road racer under the guidance of her husband, Conor Holt, a former elite runner and college coach.[8] She attributes her success in ultrarunning to her scientific knowledge and training approach, which prioritizes short, frequent runs to accumulate high volume consistently.[4]

Herron has worked as a research assistant in bone imaging and osteoimmunology at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, co-authoring several scientific papers.[14]

Herron was partnered with Lululemon Athletica, with whom she collaborated on product development and initiatives such as the launch of a women's trail shoe and the lululemon FURTHER program, which included a 6-day ultramarathon for women in March 2024.[15][16][17] On September 26, 2024 Lululemon ended its association with Herron in the wake of a controversy[18] in which she and/or her husband were found to be removing positive information about other athletes from Wikipedia while adding positive information about herself.[2][19][20]

Herron and her husband manage an online coaching business.[21]

Notable achievements

  • Herron is a 3-time Olympic Marathon Trials qualifier and a 21-time marathon winner.[22]
  • She competed on the 2011 US Pan American Team in the marathon, finishing 9th.[23]
  • Herron set the Guinness World Record for the fastest marathon by a woman in a superhero costume, completing it in 2 hours, 48 minutes, and 51 seconds, dressed as Spiderwoman.[24]
  • In 2017, she became the third American to win the Comrades Marathon.[25]
  • Herron is the only athlete to win all of the IAU Ultra Road World Championships (50 km, 100 km, and 24hrs).[26][27][28][29][citation needed]
  • Since 2015, she has set numerous Ultramarathon World and American Records/Bests between 50 miles and 6 days.[30][31][32]
  • In 2023, she improved the women's 48Hr World Record by 14.8 miles to 270.505 miles (435.336 km), the third best performance in the world behind only two men. She is the first woman to hold an outright American record.[33][34][35][36]
  • In March 2024, she set records between 48 hours and 6 days, including 12 World Records. She broke the 33 year old 6 day World Record set by Sandy Barwick in 1990.[37][38][39][40][41]
  • In April 2022, she became the youngest woman to reach 100,000 lifetime running miles.[42][43][44]
  • In May 2022, she won the Strolling Jim 40 Miler overall, beating the men, and set a new women's course record.[45]
  • In 2023, Herron became the first woman to break 24 hours at the 153-mile Spartathlon, setting a course record of 22h 35min 31s. She is the first athlete to win both the Comrades Marathon and Spartathlon.[46][47]
  • Herron has achieved success in trail running as well, with wins at various races including the JFK 50 Mile,[48] Bandera 100 km, Black Canyon 100 km,[49] Tunnel Hill 100 (course record),[50] Tarawera Ultramarathon 100 km and 100 miles (course records at both), and the Javelina Jundred (course record)[51] She won the Tarawera 100 Miler in a new course record of 17:20:52 two weeks after surviving a rollover car accident.[52]
  • She is a four-time IAU International Ultra Runner of the Year.[53][54][55][56] She is also a six-time honoree of the USA Track & Field Ruth Anderson Ultrarunner of the Year award,[citation needed] eight-time USATF Athlete of the Week honoree,[citation needed] the 2017 Ultrarunning Magazine Female Ultrarunner of the Year,[57] and four-time Ultra Performance of the Year.[citation needed][58][59][60][61][62] In 2022 and 2023, she was voted USATF Master's Runner of the Year and the 2022 RRCA Master's Runner of the Year.[58][63][64]
  • In 2024, she was inducted into the Road Runners Club of America Distance Running Hall of Fame.[65][66]

World records

Camille Herron holds the International Association of Ultrarunners World Record/World Best performances at the following events:

100 miles (160 km) 12h 42min 40s 7:38 per mi (4:44 per km)
24 Hours 270.116 kilometres (167.842 mi) 8:35 per mile (5:20 per km)
48 Hours 435.336 kilometres (270.505 mi) 10:39 per mile (6:37 per km)
6 Days 901.768 kilometres (560.3326 mi) 15:25 per mi (9:35 per km)

She also holds the following Global Organization of Multi-Day Ultramarathoners[31][32] records:

300 kilometres (190 mi) Open and W40-44 (48 Hour split) 31h 7 min 42 s 10:01 per mi (6:14 per km)
200 miles (320 km) Open and W40-44 (48 Hour split) 33h 35 min 31 s 10:05 per mi (6:16 per km)
400 kilometres (250 mi) Open and W40-44 (48 Hour split) 43h 44 min 14 s 10:33 per mi (6:34 per km)
500 kilometres (310 mi) Open and W40-44 (6 Day split) 2d 14:50:17 12:08 per mi (7:32 per km)
600 kilometres (370 mi) Open and W40-44 (6 Day split) 3d 09:23:38 13:06 per mi (8:08 per km)
700 kilometres (430 mi) Open and W40-44 (6 Day split) 4d 02:33:59 13:36 per mi (8:27 per km)
800 kilometres (500 mi) Open and W40-44 (6 Day split) 4d 21:44:55 14:13 per mi (8:50 per km)
900 kilometres (560 mi) Open and W40-44 (6 Day split) 5d 22:40:58 15:19 per mi (9:31 per km)
300 miles (480 km) Open and W40-44 (6 Day split) 2d 11:54:28 11:59 per mi (7:27 per km)
400 miles (640 km) Open and W40-44 (6 Day split) 3d 16:34:26 13:17 per mi (8:15 per km)
500 miles (800 km) Open and W40-44 (6 Day split) 4d 22:19:17 14:12 per mi (8:49 per km)
72 Hours Open and W40-44 (6 Day split) 550.542 kilometres (342.091 mi) 12:38 per mi (7:51 per km)
4 Days Open and W40-44 (6 Day split) 691.755 kilometres (429.836 mi) 13:24 per mi (8:20 per km)
5 Days Open and W40-44 (6 Day split) 807.494 kilometres (501.753 mi) 14:21 per mi (8:55 per km)

References

  1. ^ a b "Alumna Camille Herron finds stardom in running universe". August 11, 2020. Retrieved February 22, 2024.
  2. ^ a b Dickinson, Marley (September 23, 2024). "U.S. ultrarunner Camille Herron involved in Wikipedia controversy". Canadian Running Magazine. Retrieved September 25, 2024.
  3. ^ "Oklahoma Sports and Fitness July/August 2015 Page 18". www.oksportsandfitness-digital.com. Retrieved February 23, 2024.
  4. ^ a b Yu, Christine (January 30, 2023). "Camille Herron's Advice For Ultra Athletes: Skip the Long Run". Trail Runner Magazine. Retrieved February 23, 2024.
  5. ^ Herron, Jacquelyn Camille. "The effects of whole body vibration on bone recovery following hindlimb unloading of adult female rats". ir.library.oregonstate.edu. Retrieved February 22, 2024.
  6. ^ "Coach Camille Herron". Run with Camille Coaching. Retrieved February 22, 2024.
  7. ^ admin (June 27, 2022). "Camille Herron: Crushing World Records, Narrowing The Gender Gap, And The Power of Happiness - Rich Roll". Retrieved February 23, 2024.
  8. ^ a b "No Finish Line: Camille Herron - World Champion Ultra Marathon Runner on Apple Podcasts". Apple Podcasts. Retrieved February 23, 2024.
  9. ^ a b Finn, Adharanand (November 18, 2019). "'I puked, fouled myself and collapsed - it was great': Meet the record-breaking ultra marathon runner fuelled by beer and burritos". The Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved February 23, 2024.
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