On the same day, Colorado runners Alex Nichols and Joe Grant set supported and unsupported records, respectively, for the grueling Nolan’s 14 challenge.
Nolan’s 14 is a crazy personal challenge. It’s a point-to-point route that links 14 consecutive 14,000-foot peaks in Colorado’s Sawatch Range over the course of 80 miles, with 44,000 feet of elevation gain. Only about 15 percent of people who attempt the route complete it.
Nichols, of Colorado Springs, Colorado, set the fastest-known-time supported record in 46 hours, 41 minutes on June 29. He ran the route northbound, beating Spaniard Iker Karrera’s previous record by about one hour.
Joe Grant of Gold Hill, Colorado, near Boulder, set the unsupported marker the same day. Running the route southbound, he finished in 49 hours, 38 minutes. That crushed the previous crewless record by four hours.
We talked to Nichols about the feat. For additional context with Grant’s run, listen to the snippet below from Billy Yang’s podcast.
Grant started about 12 hours before Nichols.
“I was able to get an update once [Grant] had finished and set the unsupported record. When I heard that, it really motivated me to keep pushing when I was feeling terrible,” Nichols said.
“Even though we went in different directions and only saw each other for a few minutes along the way, I feel like we are somehow connected by what we experienced during those long hours in the mountains. I’m still incredibly impressed with what he did and glad we can share a page in the record book of Nolan’s 14.”
What It Takes to Finish (and Win) Nolan’s 14
