Latest news with #Nanango

ABC News
7 days ago
- Sport
- ABC News
Outback runner breaks new record
Running is having a moment, with run clubs and park runs booming across the country. In Nanango in Queensland, people take running to the extreme. The Dead Cow Gully Backyard Masters race sees participants run around cow tracks and up and down creek gullies for as long as they can. And as the last runner standing, Phil Gore's just broken a record.

ABC News
25-06-2025
- Sport
- ABC News
Endurance athlete Phil Gore sets Backyard Ultra world record at Dead Cow Gully
Australian endurance athlete Phil Gore has broken the world record for the Backyard Ultra marathon after running almost 800 kilometres in five days on a southern Queensland cattle farm. The West Australian ran 119 laps of the 6.7-kilometre course at the Dead Cow Gully Backyard Masters event outside Nanango, 180km north-west of Brisbane. "It's amazing," Gore said after crossing the line in the early hours of Thursday morning. "The bar keeps getting raised higher and higher and I'm glad that I'm still able to keep up with it. Gore ran 797.3km to break the previous world record of 116 loops, which was held by Belgian Łukasz Wróbel. Billed as a race with no finish line, the Backyard Ultra format has no predefined length or time but requires runners to complete a 6.7km loop every hour. The competition is over when only one runner remains to complete a loop. A field of 263 runners set off at 7am on Saturday and the final two competitors were still running before daybreak early on Thursday. Sam Harvey from New Zealand was the final runner to drop out of the race at the start of the 118th loop, which set a New Zealand national record for the Backyard Ultra distance. "I wanted to get to sun-up … and 500 miles, but gravity wasn't my friend," Harvey said, adding that his Achilles tendon "blew up" on Tuesday night. During the event two female national records were broken. Australia's Holly Ranson ran 61 loops (408km) and New Zealand's Jane McAlpine ran 53 loops (355km). Race director and fourth-generation cattle farmer Tim Walsh said the event, which attracted runners from Japan, Belgium, Spain and the United States, was now a fixture on the international running calendar. After running for five days straight, Gore joked that his next race will be shorter. "I might do a 24-hour instead," he laughed.