Hoka OneOne mans up.

If you’re a manny man man looking for your next hardass running shoe, don’t take our advice or listen to the hundreds of endurance athletes and longtime runners singing the praises of our genius design team. Take the advice of your favourite manny magazine, it’s right there in this month’s issue of Men’s Fitness.

We all wore Hoka OneOne trail shoes which have thick padded soles. They cushioned your feet and prevented blisters. Runners in cushioned shoes fared better.

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Lizzy Hawker, world champion, talks summer training.

Lizzy Hawker, The North Face athlete and genuinely one of the strongest long distance runners of all time, talks ultra running and summer training with brandmate Seb Chaigneau.

Team Born to Run prepare for Antarctica

Hi, it’s Roger from Hoka OneOne Australia and Team Born to Run. That’s me on the left, along with my team mates, gear testing on Ushuaia’s Martial Glacier earlier today. This Thursday, we’ll take a 2-day boat trip across the notorious Drake’s Passage to the coast of Antarctica.

Each day, rubber duckies will whisk us from ship to shore as we complete a number of world firsts. In the 9 year history of the 4 Deserts Challenge, we’ll be the first team ever to bag the Grand Slam. That might not sound complicated, but when entering as a team means running as a team, within close proximity every step of the way for each of 4 250-km multiday races under extremes of heat, fatigue, dehydration, and restricted calorie-intake… yeah, at times, it’s been challenging. But now, the mood is of extreme excitement.

We can’t wait to get to Antarctica. We are about to do something amazing in a place where almost nobody has ever been. If you’d asked me 12 months ago whether I’d ever go running in Antarctica, I’d have likely what-the-eff-bombed you. But now it’s happening! Youngest runner, first couple, first father-and-son, and first type 1 diabetic to take out the Slam (assuming no race-ending injuries on the ice).

Endurance running and the power of possibility, longtime partners in juicy life-changing goodness!

See http://www.facebook.com/teamborntorun for more.

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Back from Sahara, off again to Antarctica!

Hello Hoka OneOne readers, Roger here. If you’ve come along to the Hoka stand at any of our shoe demo events over the last few months, I’m the noisy one.

Team Born to Run in the Sahara, pic by James Holman, Hot Knees Media, courtesy of http://www.borntorun.com.au

This year, I’m working alongside 4 other runners from Team Born to Run as we become the first team ever to complete the Racing the Planet 4 Deserts Grand Slam. This means we complete 4 self-supported events, each made up of roughly 4 marathons, an 80km day, a rest day, and a much anticipated final stage that usually ends in hard-earned beer and pizza.

L to R Greg Donovan, Roger Hanney, Jess Baker, Ron Schwebel, Matt Donovan, the diverse runners of Team Born to Run, pic by James Holman, Hot Knees Media, courtesy of http://www.borntorun.com.au

The first event took place in the high altitude and dry air of Chile‘s Atacama salt plains in April of this year. Prior to that, we also spent a week training in New Zealand, because running as a team is a totally foreign concept to most runners and needed practice! We have to stay together over the 250km of each race, which means that we all only run, more or less, as fast as the slowest member.

In Gobi, the slowest member role was passed about the group as both Matt, the youngest and least running-experienced member, and I were beaten up badly by dysentery. It’s one thing to run 40km when you’re feeling ill. It’s another thing entirely to run 40km while feeling ill, go to bed unable to eat, wake up without breakfast, and run all over again.

My humps, pic by James Holman, Hot Knees Media, courtesy of http://www.borntorun.com.au

The Sahara Race which we have just completed took its own toll. Greg Donovan, founder of the Born to Run Foundation, which we are running to launch and promote, did however come to the desert after having been ill with a virus the week before. Never having been one to tolerate heat well, Greg ran himself into a dehydration hole by the 25km mark on the morning of the first day, as temperatures passed 35 degrees and kept on climbing. He narrowly avoided requiring a saline drip, which would have disqualified him from the race and shattered the team, but still had to drink roughly 17 litres of fluid between his 2nd pee of the day and his third.

This meant that by the second day, a day which saw temperatures hit the mid-40s, Greg’s running legs were nowhere to be found. And this, in part, became the team’s defining challenge for the week. With the soft sand surface ranging anywhere from ankle to knee deep, and temperatures rising sharply from 9am, with no shade to be found anywhere on the course, and camp proving elusive until mid-afternoon, how do 5 individual runners of varied ability function as a single unit?

Teamwork, pic by James Holman, Hot Knees Media, courtesy of http://www.borntorun.com.au

Frustration was a daily torment, and having to budget food intake for runs which regularly took 1-2 hours longer than expected did nothing to help. All we could do was gnash our teeth and dread the looming long day, an 87km sun-scorched painfest which we fully expected would take us past the 20-hour mark as fatigue replaced stamina.

Fortunately, this was not to be. With a 7am start, the team crossed the finish line as one and jubilant at 9 seconds to midnight on Day 5. From the very start of the run, the mood had been different. Remnants of illness and even new shades of tiredness were evident but throughout the day, whoever might be weakest invariably pushed the hardest. Satisfied that our buddies were burying themselves, we knew that as a team we could ultimately do our best on the day.

A fast march across the desert floor, under a near full moon, sunglasses at the ready to keep sandblasts out. pic by James Holman, Hot Knees Media, courtesy of http://www.borntorun.com.au

Finishing off an effort like that was a greater buzz than we got from the race finale, running from the Sphinx past the Pyramids to – you guessed it – finish line beer and pizza, on a day when camel riders trying to make a quick Egyptian Pound clearly demonstrated the meaning of the phrase ‘taken for a ride’.

It is now just 10 days until we leave once more, this time to run in Antarctica. However, this departure will be different, because we will come back with a Grand Slam. It has hit individual members of the team at different times throughout the year – just how hard it is to successfully achieve this goal. Even in Sahara, with just a couple of days to go before the event finished, other runners aiming for the Grand Slam this year dropped out from exhaustion and fatigue, almost within sight of their ultimate goal.

Hopefully, we will all ultimately be successful. To succeed will create a great origin story for the Born to Run Foundation, tying personal responsibility and fitness to better outcomes for type 1 diabetics. Our success will also help promote the Big Red Run, a 250km multiday race and fundraiser being held for the first time next year in Diabetes Awareness Week, July 2013, in the Simpson Desert.

Watch this space!!

Flying high! Another desert down, Antarctica next!! pic by James Holman, Hot Knees Media, courtesy of http://www.borntorun.com.au

Latest Review: Jock Athletic

Latest review of some of the new models, pinched from Jock Athletic e-zine.

85/100, not bad. Not bad at all : )

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Team Born to Run, 2,000+km without a blister!

Team Born to Run, Heaven’s Gate, 3,000m ASL, Gobi March 2012. L to R Ron Schwebel, Greg Donovan, Matt Donovan, Jess Baker, Roger Hanney. pic by James Holman, courtesy of http://www.BornToRun.com.au

Between them, the members of Team Born to Run have raced over 2,000km Chile’s Atacama Desert and China’s Gobi so far in the Racing The Planet 4 Deserts series 2012 without yet having a single blister to show for it. Hoka OneOne is the team’s official shoe sponsor.

The Born to Run Foundation is being established with a goal of raising awareness of, and funding for research into juvenile diabetes. So far this year, the newly minted organisation has raised over $60,000. Roger Hanney works for Hoka OneOne in Australia, runs for Team Born to Run, and has type 1 diabetes. He is currently nominated for a significant award in Australia because of his running adventures as a diabetic and the hope that they might inspire others – with or without the condition – to get seriously active.

Public voting is open for one more week. Winning this award will hopefully support the team in future fundraising as they prepare to race in the Sahara and Antarctica just 3 months from now.

Road superiority for endurance athletes: Tarmac

The new Stinson Evo Tarmac is a speedy and responsive joy to run in. Firmer through the sole than other Hoka OneOne models because of reduced foam in the toe and a shaved down durable rubber outsole, we’ve put 100 road kilometres on the pair we unboxed last Thursday and they’re everything that was hoped for and more.

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I would even rate these as a shoe to consider racing groomed firetrail, but they are clearly intended for half and long course triathletes and anyone else running anywhere from 10km and upward on road, pavement, and – believe it or not – tarmac.

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The tongue sits nicely even though it’s quite thin, and the upper breathes beautifully which will be ideal as the capital city half and full marathons kick in over the next few months. The structure is highly stable and well engineered but both the sole and upper are yielding enough to ensure a snug fit becomes a conforming fit over the first ten 10 to 15 hours of wear.

Simply a pleasure to run hard in, these should be the breakthrough shoe for Hoka OneOne, continuing a foray into the wider running population initiated by the Bondi and accelerated by the Stinson Evo Trail.

Available now from future-focussed running shoe specialists and appearing soon on www.HokaOneOne.com.au.

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David Eadie, Badwater: Massive new Aussie Course Record

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congratulations David and crew, especially wife Kim who has kept us so in touch with how his race was going. (pics also by Kim Eadie)

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Last post she sent said,

Sorry for cross posting but hubby is flying home. Running strong overnight and continued to smash through the field today. He caught Pam Reed and will catch the runner in front of her too. The next one after that is Dean Karnazes!!!! Went from about 33rd overnight to about 14th at present. Heading up the mountain to the finish now.

He went into the back half of the 217km course placed in the mid-30s but overnight had an absolute blinder and set himself up for a brilliant 2nd day. 7th fastest on course over the massive 32 mile stage into Lone Pine, 5th fastest over the following 15km and 2nd fastest on course over the final leg, with only the outright 2nd-placed runner finishing faster – literally by a matter of seconds.

And as a measure of his courageous run, David has beasted ultra champion Jo Blake’s 32:05 Australian Course Record of just last year, taking over an hour and a half off and setting a new target of 30:24.

Great ultra running David!! Way to race Badwater!

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Dave has himself posted on Facebook now to say

Job done toughest thing I have ever done, suffering for ever minute of the 30 hrs and 24 sec. Hot and Hilly wow. Could not have done it without my awesome crew Mike Toby, Adrian Panozzo, Casey Cooper, Bonnie Busch, Ian Sharman and of course my wife Kim and Lucas. More info to come just coming back from finish and a quick rest.

Badwater: Final Countdown for Aussie hardcore!!

He’s doing it! David Eadie into 15th place through the final checkpoint in 29:26 with just over 4 hard miles of Badwater Ultramarathon to go. Over the last 9 miles he put 22 minutes into the runner currently 16 minutes in front of him.

Can he pull back another 4 minutes per mile, after already running 210km? It’s a massive ask but we’d back him to.

Predicting 14th place in 30:43. Go Dave!!!!

Great crewing and coverage Kim : )

New Hoka OneOne Arrivals! First Bondi Speeds!!

They’re finally here – the first Hoka OneOne Bondi Speeds to go on sale anywhere in the world!

Check out the all new Bondi Speeds with thinner tongue and speedlaces and MENTAL red n gold colouring, perfect for flashy triathletes, speedy marathoners, and down and dirty ultra runners. Also unloading into the warehouse and straight back out again, we have new women’s Bondi which are classy blue with white and grey trim, and a fresh upload of the ever-popular Stinson Evo Flag.

The Bondi Speed. Need a Bondi? Get em while you can!

Get your orders in fast, to your local running store or to http://www.HokaOneOne.com.au

These babies won’t last long!

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