WeRunFar Profile: Bob Becker

An in-depth profile of ultrarunner and race director Bob Becker.

By on April 6, 2017 | Comments

In an ultramarathon–especially one that travels point-to-point–the passing miles are marked by aid stations or the next glimpse of your crew. Some races, Florida’s 100-mile Keys100 for example and its inspiration, the Badwater 135, do it a little different.

For Badwater, mile 80 is counted by how close the runner gets to the mountain–that’s how it feels right? For the Keys100, the miles go by with each little green mile marker counting down from 100. Mile 90. Mile 45. Mile 10. Mile 0: Welcome to the Keys, the southern-most point of the United States.

Bob Becker first tried it out himself, running from mile marker 104 all the way to mile marker 0. The pavement road was hard and hot and the drivers flying past him had no idea what this little jaunt down the road would eventually turn into.

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Bob Becker at the summit of Mount Whitney. Photo: Don Nelson

“I had no idea what I was getting into,” Bob said. With five buddies and a seven-man crew, they began the trek down to Key West to map out a possible route for the first ultra in southern Florida. Bob ended up being the only person to finish. “I can run a long way, but that doesn’t make me the smartest guy in the world.”

Bob, now 71, wasn’t always a hot weather, sandal-wearing guy. He grew up on the East Coast before moving to Minnesota for his job in residential and commercial real estate. In 2011, the company he worked for reorganized his job, offering to send Bob and his wife–their three kids were grown and on their own by then–to Ft. Lauderdale, Florida.

Bob was not much of a runner until early 2002, when friends from his Minnesota gym called him up in Florida asking if he was interested in running a marathon with them. “Sounded like a party,” he said. “I went out and bought a pair of running shoes and asked the people at the running store, ‘What do I do next?’” They introduced him to a local running group and in June of 2002 at age 57, he ran Grandma’s Marathon in Minnesota, qualifying for the Boston Marathon and moving up in running-group speeds.

“I thought it would be my first marathon and that was it, one and done. I ended up doing well. I qualified for Boston so I thought Well, I kind of have to do that,” he said. “I was hooked. I started training with a faster group and then a guy I trained with asked if I had heard about the Marathon des Sables (MdS). “It is an ultramarathon,” he said, and I thought, What is an ultramarathon?

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A tire-pulling training session in 2009. Photo: Suzanne Becker

He went home and checked it out. The next day he told his friend as a way to celebrate his 40th birthday and Bob’s own 60th birthday that year, they would run it together. “That’s how I was introduced to ultramarathon running and fell in love with it and fell in love with the camaraderie and the spirit and the mutual support you find in most ultramarathons and in most ultramarathon communities,” he said. Stepping up his training for the MdS, he finished a few more marathons, carrying the gear he would need in the actual race on his back.

He slid into ultras, he claimed, and kept sliding into the position of creator and race director of the Keys100.

So on that day in 2007, when he and his buddies walked out of their Key Largo hotel and started running, he was aiming to create the first ultra race in southern Florida. After finishing the 100 miles, the teammates got together and said, ‘Okay, this could be something.’

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Running the Mt. Gaoligong Ultra. Photo: Alexis Berg

Bob received the blessing from the southern Florida running group, and the following year, 2008, the first Keys100 took place. The race was created to simulate the Badwater 135 with the brutal heat and a pavement route. The first year, he also limited the race to a small size, and made it a crew-supported race without any aid stations.

But after that first year, he learned a few things.

“We set it up in May because it is hotter in May and we wanted heat to be a factor,” he said. “At that time, there are less vehicles on the road and hotels are cheaper so that was why it was also May.”

“We also realized that with the nature of the Keys we didn’t have to limit the number of runners. We could add a 50-mile race. Two years ago, we added a 50k. In addition we could do a 100-mile relay with teams of six people to get more people involved,” he explained. “Then we realized that we didn’t need to insist that each runner have their own support crew, so we added fully stocked aid stations throughout the entire 100-mile point-to-point course with interim water and ice stops.”

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Directing the 2017 Everglades Ultras. Photo: Chris Thompson

This year’s Keys100, which will be held on May 20, marks the race’s 10th anniversary and a party is planned for the weekend. To celebrate, Bob has officially announced that the band Sister Hazel will play at the post-race banquet, after the six-man group each runs a leg of the 100-mile relay.

“They are from Gainesville. They have been training really hard for the race,” he said. “That is going to be really fun. There may be some other surprises too…”

Seventy-five percent of the race is run on pavement but off of the main highway, U.S. Highway 1, on surfaces like bike paths, sidewalks, pedestrian bridges, and side roads. Highway 1 is called the Overseas Highway, named for bridging all of the islands from Key Largo to Key West. The famous Seven Mile Bridge–which is a bit under seven miles in length–makes up the 25% of actual highway running, meaning there is not a pedestrian sidewalk. So, for the seven-mile stretch, the road is coned off for oncoming traffic to watch for the runners.

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With the family in 2001. Photo courtesy of Bob Becker.

If you’re thinking this race is pancake flat and an easy course, don’t be so quick to judge. “Most people see the elevation and say it is all flat so it must be pretty easy,” Bob said. “Well, it is not. Heat is a major factor, and it was built to be a major factor. It is a tough race, no doubt about that.”

Heat. How do you recover after your body temperature rises and dehydration sets in? Ice, Bob swears by ice. There are a few more tips Bob gives on how to train and deal with the Florida heat and humidity.

First, train in the heat or if that is not possible, grab a spot in the sauna. “A sauna is a big help. I know people who put their stationary bike or treadmill in the sauna and get exercise,” he said. “I just build up time in there and drink lots of fluids.”

Second, keep ice on you at all times.

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With 2016 Keys100 winner Alyson Venti. Photo: Cindy Ginsberg Schnell

“I suggest to people to do what I do when I run a hot race. I like to cover up and wear a hat with a neck drape and long-sleeve shirt. I wear a neckband with ice in it and I wear a buff and tie one end and put ice in it and wear it around my neck. When the ice melts, I get more,” he said. “I know people who will put ice in wristbands and on other places of their body. Ice can make a big difference and is a major factor in keeping your body temperature under control.”

Third, of course, is to not try anything new on race day. This is a rule no matter the race, but even more so in the heat. “Your digestive system is not going to be as efficient as if you were running in a cooler climate because your blood supply is at your extremities and trying to cool your body off,” he said. “You want to avoid stomach issues and if you’re having stomach issues at a race like the Keys, it is usually heat related.” So, he recommends digestible calories like gels and fluids as the best things to consume.

Bob’s other race, the Everglades Ultras, which include a 50 mile, 50k and 25k, run every year in February, is yet another unique route through a very Florida-like terrain. It is run in Everglade City, home of Florida’s largest state park called the Fakahatchee Strand Preserve State Park. The road to reach the state park is called, thanks to its main inhabitants, “Alligator Alley.”

“The race is in a nature preserve. It is pretty spectacular, a very unusual and very unique place with lots of firsts,” he said.

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During the 2012 Grand to Grand Ultra. Photo courtesy of Bob Becker.

The state park claims the largest collection of orchids and bromeliads on the continent and houses a panther habitat. Back in the 1950s the area was privately owned to log cypress trees. To get the trees out of the swampy muck, a railroad track was built on raised mounds. “These old trails, which are called trams, have been reopened,” he said. “There are open grassland prairies out there that are pretty spectacular too. There are swamps and hardwood trees too, so the park has a lot of variety.” Bob winds his runners through every part of the varied land and this past February was the race’s sixth year.

Both races are part of what Bob’s established business, UltraSports LLC. Since the beginning of the races, Bob takes a portion of his proceeds and donates it to a different charity. For the Keys100, he donates to The Cancer Foundation of the Florida Keys Inc., a nonprofit that helps the patients and families in the Key West area with financial assistance, educational materials, cancer screenings, and overall support during difficult times. For the Everglades races, he donates to the Citizens Support Organization, “Friends of Fakahatchee, Inc,” so that the donations stay with the park and directly support its public programs, helps with the purchase of equipment, and funds outside services.

“It is great to support these,” he said. “Over the years, we have raised about $18,000.”

He is constantly on the search for the best spot for a new Florida ultra race, but nothing has yet to pop out. However, directing these two races is a busy gig. From coning off the race route to fashioning the much-loved and enjoyed queen conch shell awards for the winners of the 100 miler, his time is consumed. Add in spending time with his wife and family, and traveling the country for his own racing and volunteering, and Bob is a very busy man.

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Bob with his wife and son. Photo courtesy of Bob Becker.

One traveling destination is to Bob’s beloved race setting: the paved, hot, desert-based Badwater 135. Last year was his 10th time heading to the desert to either run, crew and pace, or help the race organization. No matter the job, Bob is right at home in the desert.

It started years ago while Bob was training for the MdS. He attended a camp led by previous WeRunFar profilee, Lisa Smith-Batchen. It was there where he met Nattu Natraj, who asked Bob to crew him for that upcoming summer’s Badwater race. Once again, Bob agreed without a clue as to what he was getting himself into.

“I went there in June for a training run and I loved it,” he said. “The desert is not everyone’s cup of tea, but I loved it. I decided to run it the following year.” He ran in 2008, then another year came back to crew Nattu again, and the annual tradition continued on. He ran the race again in 2014.

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Finishing the Mt. Gaoligong Ultra. Photo: Alexis Berg

In 2015, ate age 70, returning to Badwater was already on the calendar, but he wanted to add something unique for his yet another zero-ending birth year. He decided to master the double Badwater. A double Badwater means running the 135-mile race route between Badwater in Death Valley National Park and Whitney Portal, which is the trailhead for Mount Whitney, as an out-and-back. Double Badwater runners typically add on mileage to actually summit 14,505-foot Mount Whitney, tallying the mileage to 292 miles. In 2015, there were only around 30 people who had finished the 292-mile out-and-back journey.

“I had summited Mount Whitney twice before, so I knew with proper training and coaching I could do it again,” he said. “The more and more I thought about it, the more appealing it sounded and it was something I knew I was up for.”

With Batchen’s coaching, whom he goes to for every big race, he and two different crews started and finished the long journey. One crew started with him for the race, which included a massage therapist, nurse, and “better runners than me” who were his pacers to get him through the first section. He finished the race in 42 hours, and then headed to summit Mount Whitney with one member of the first crew. The two then met up with crew number two and started the trek back to the start.

Ashley Heclo was a member of the crew who helped Bob on the return trip. She first met him while he was directing the Everglades races, which was her first ultra, but she claims she really learned who he was during his amazing double-Badwater journey. “This is where I found Bob to be so inspiring. He set a goal of getting the double done and it was done the moment he took the first step,” she said. “It was a question of how long it would take us, never whether he would finish it.”

Even with gale-force winds at 1 a.m. in the Badwater basin and after he’d been going for seven long days and nights, he never faltered and only complained just a little about his feet hurting, she added. Almost a week after beginning, Bob returned to his starting point, setting a record for being the oldest runner to complete the double.

“They were all heroes and angels,” he said of his crew members. “Oh my God, at the end, it was the most emotional thing. It was so draining. There is a wooden deck and sign at the start and where I finished that says ‘Badwater Basin 280 Feet Below Sea Level’ and when I got there, I almost collapsed on it. I gave it a big hug and started bawling my head off.”

Overjoyed with the finish as much as being overjoyed by having it done, he said he was drained in every respect.

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Resting during the double Badwater. Photo: Ashley Heclo

Bob is one of those guys who doesn’t plan a year of racing, but rather signs up after a friend or race director invites him saying, “Hey, I’m doing such and such race, you should join,” or “Hey, I am starting a race at X, come on out!” This was how Bob competed in the first year of the Grand to Grand Ultra, climbed Mount Kilimanjaro, and will be running the Bad Beaver Ultra in Ottawa, Canada this year, his goal race.

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In 2006, Bob climbed Mount Kilimanjaro with his gym-class instructor. Just a few months earlier, Bob was diagnosed with prostate cancer and was undergoing a gradual recovery. The instructor led the mountain climb as a fun, hiking experience, and Bob, who was cleared by his doctor, joined in, enjoying every step of the way.

He also joined his nephew, Adam Goucher–yep, that Adam Goucher–during the 2016 TransRockies Run. “I love stage races in general and for this, I loved the experience,” he said. “TransRockies is almost a social event because you don’t have to carry gear. They prepare breakfast and dinner. I mean, you’re really spoiled. It was very, very fun.”

He enjoys every race he enters, but his heart will always be with Badwater and its sister races. He recently ran the Badwater Cape Fear in Bald Head Island, North Carolina for the fourth time and he has also finished the other sister race, the Mt. Gaoligong Ultra in China.

These stage races and multiple-day events create the culture Bob loves to incorporate himself into, for his own running and his own race. These races require the support of others: whether it is from your pacer, your crew, or your family of non-runners. “The culture of ultrarunning in general, and specifically Badwater, is just so unique. Running in the desert is a tremendous challenge, but being out there just appeals to me and blows me away,” he said.

Bob has infused the aspects of ultrarunning he most enjoys into the Keys100.

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Finishing the Badwater Double. Photo: Alene Nitzky

“When I did my first ultra, what I noticed then is that the people who run these things are the people I can really relate to and I just love the runners, I really do,” he said. “Over the years, I didn’t know what I was getting into and I have really learned a lot.”

One of his first ultras, his first 100-mile race actually, was the 2007 Rocky Raccoon 100 Mile. It was during Bob’s third loop of the race, running in the pitch-black dark and freezing. “I was ill-prepared for the cold that night,” he said. “My bones were banging together, I was just freezing. Another runner came in behind, saw me shivering, and literally gave me the shirt off his back.”

That is the attitude he sees within the ultrarunning community, and sees on his own race day, standing at the start line with his runners ready to go. The Florida morning still has the night when Bob sets them off, knowing these racers “have trained and worked hard and are going out there, running it, and loving the experience.”

He watches them pass by, stopwatch in hand and that shirt, the long-sleeve shirt from the Rocky Raccoon racer on his back.

“It is my go-to shirt. When I need another layer, I put that one on,” he said.

Call for Comments (from Meghan)

  • Have you run one of Bob Becker’s races? Can you share a story from it?
  • Have you participated in Badwater or another event with Bob? Which one and what was it like?
  • Share your best Bob Becker story!
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Bob and his wife. Photo courtesy of Bob Becker.

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Jessica Campbell
Jessica Campbell began her iRunFar career as an intern. A former 'swammer,' Jessica turned her passion of endurance sports to marathon and ultrarunning. She lives on the shores of Lake Michigan and works as a journalist for a small-town Indiana newspaper.