Feel-good parkruns have raced past their humble beginnings and now draw
millions for fitness and fun
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[October 03, 2024]
By BRIAN MELLEY
LONDON (AP) — On a weekend morning in the fall of 2004, 13 runners lined
up in a London park for an informal race — unaware they were taking the
first steps in what would become a global movement.
Paul Sinton-Hewitt had simple ambitions: to provide a free, weekly
5-kilometer (3.1 mile) run open to anyone.
“I didn’t know who was going to join me on that day,” Sinton-Hewitt
said. “I didn’t care how many people came. I would be on the start line
every single week for the rest of my life and I would help people to
run.”
Parkrun — as it became known — has far exceeded any vision he had,
marking its 20th anniversary on Saturday with runs now held in more than
2,500 locations, including 25 prisons, in nearly two dozen countries.
More than 10 million people have participated in at least one parkrun
and the organization has recorded more than 100 million finishes.
“We’re the smallest that we will ever be,” Sinton-Hewitt said. “In 20
years time when we come back and have this chat again those numbers are
going to be minuscule. So it’s a bizarre thing.”
Life changing laps in a park
The feel-good fun run is credited with changing countless lives, getting
people up and moving, motivating them to come back week after week and
nurturing lifelong friendships. Testimonials have come from couch
potatoes to people who reversed diabetes and stopped drinking to inmates
who found an escape while serving time.
The World Health Organization has endorsed parkrun for offering an
accessible way to be physically active and more than 2,000 doctor's
offices have partnerships with the organization to promote its health
benefits.
More than 45,000 people who registered for parkrun this year in the U.K.
said they had been completely inactive before signing up, according to a
study published Tuesday in PLOS Global Public Health.
Of nearly 550 newly registered runners studied over six months,
Sheffield Hallam University and the University of Sheffield found their
life satisfaction increased after as few as two parkruns.
“All of us say it’s changed our lives," said Caroline Noon, who started
running around age 50 and has completed more than 320 parkruns.
It's a refrain Sinton-Hewitt hears constantly as the organization's
executive director.
A trip back in time
Had it not been for a springer spaniel named Tim, none of this may have
happened.
Sinton-Hewitt, a lifelong runner, was training for a marathon when he
tripped over his dog and was seriously hurt.
He continued to reinjure himself and he realized that his sub-2:30
marathon dream — once within reach — was dead and his competitive
running career was probably over at age 44.
It couldn't have happened at a worse time. He had lost his job, had
relationship problems and was struggling with his mental health. Running
had been his outlet since he was a ward of the state as a child growing
up in South Africa and now he was sidelined.
Down but not out
Sinton-Hewitt missed the social aspect that came after running and
wanted to give back to the sport. He came up with the idea of a 5K time
trial where the runners would challenge themselves against the clock and
he could join his friends for coffee afterward.
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Runners and their dogs, compete in the parkrun event in Bushy Park,
southwest London, Saturday, Sept. 28, 2024. (AP Photo/Alastair
Grant)
The first run was held in Bushy
Park, once the hunting grounds for Henry VIII and later home to the
headquarters for Gen. Dwight Eisenhower’s D-Day invasion planning in
World War II.
Parkrun didn't initially take the running world by storm.
After its modest start, the second week drew one additional runner.
It shrank to a dozen on the third week. But on Christmas, which
occurred that year on a Saturday, there were 25 runners. It was off
and running.
As it grew in popularity, Sinton-Hewitt resisted pressure to
recreate the event elsewhere until 2007 when a friend presented a
plan to organize a second run in Wimbledon. Once he realized it was
doable, it quickly expanded that year to six places in the U.K,
including Leeds and Brighton, and Zimbabwe, the first international
location.
“I never wanted to sell the concept of, ‘Here’s something that you
should come and do,’" Sinton-Hewitt said. "I wanted it to sell
itself, and it did that because people inherently felt it was good.”
Despite once being labeled a time trial, organizers of parkrun —
yes, it’s all lowercase — are adamant that it’s not a race.
Participants can run as fast or slow as they want. Many walk the
course.
“One of the big barriers that we see from people registering but not
yet participating is this misunderstanding that it’s a race, that
people won’t be fit enough or fast enough,” CEO Russ Jefferys said.
The organization said it sought to remove those hurdles by taking
record times for men and women from its website. Some saw the move
as reaction to criticism of its inclusive policy allowing
participants to register by the gender of their choice.
Policy Exchange, a U.K. think tank, took aim at parkrun and other
athletic events using gender identity, saying three female parkrun
records were set by biological males. It wanted parkrun to collect
information on participants' biological sex and update course
records or have its government funding stripped.
The organization refused, leaning into its inclusivity and mantra of
“free forever for everyone.” Jefferys said that removing the records
had been a long time coming.
Still growing strong
With a running boom that began during the pandemic, the plan is to
continue growing overseas to meet high demand, Jefferys said.
Lithuania became the 23rd country to offer parkrun two weeks ago in
its capital, Vilnius. Uganda, Portugal and Switzerland are likely to
be next, Jefferys said.
The organization is a U.K.-based global charity, but it also
receives public funding in Britain, Ireland and Australia, and also
has commercial sponsors.
On a recent Saturday in Hampstead Heath, a wild mix of rolling
meadows and woods in north London, Noon was one of nearly 500
parkrunners at the heath, a five-fold increase from when she started
in 2014.
“My ambition was only ever not to stop,” she said of her initial
parkrun. “I stopped the first time. ... I just assumed I’d not be
embarrassed and I’d walk home. But I kept coming. Now it’s been 10
years.”
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