7 Ian Livesey 2:49:13
92 Christopher Whitfield 32:23
204 Kristian Clayton 50:44
Another win for Lucille Pickles
U11
18 Oscar Clayton 08:36
U13
5 Lucille Pickles 06:52 ( 1st Girl )
27 Jody Whitfield 08:20 ( 8th Girl )
32 Lily-Grace Clayton 08:54 (11th Girl
U15
17 Ciara Duffy 14:09 (6th girl)
U17
3 Jack Villiers 13:47
U11 Girls
2 Lucille Pickles 7:05
40 Annabelle Hoyle 8:22
43 Delliah Wilson 8:26
52 Bella McCredie 8:35
66 Lily-Grace Clayton 8:56
71 Isabelle Teal 9:07
80 Summer Fitzpatrick 9:30
91 Eva Summer 10:59
U11 Boys
32 Logan McCredie 7:26
41 Michael Rigg-Moya 7:35
42 Garth Duffy 7:36
51 George Fitzpatrick 7:42
65 Will Pease 8:02
91 Oscar Clayton 8:39
98 Kai Paton 8:59
100 Zac Beresford 9:02
102 Alfie Muller 9:14
U13 Girls
26 Ciara Duffy 10:28
U15 Boys
4 Jack Villiers 12:52
36 Callum Whiteley 15:26
U17 Boys
21 Alex Mason 21:33
A trip out to Belfast for young Jack Villiers where he came home in 15th place in the U15 Boys race.
Jon Cleaver had a cracking run at Inskip Half marathon, finishing 2nd to an excellent runner in Dave Rigby of Salford. His new PB of 72.32 is an improvement of four and a half minutes.
Brilliant win for Emma Taylor in this race.
26 Emma Taylor 1:29:04 (1st lady)
27 Connor Fitzpatrick 25:21
120 Gary Bailey 29:32
121 Emma Bailey 29:32
John Boothman has already taken part in some serious ultra challenges, but this was his most serious challenge to date. A race of 268 miles from Derbyshire through mountainous country along the Pennine way and finishing almost at the Scottish border. Not only that, but in the short wintry days of January. A daunting challenge for anyone, let alone a chap in his fifties. Early on, John started to suffer with his feet and it was not long after that that he started to lose toenails. However, at each checkpoint, he had them re-bandaged up and he continued with his amazing resilience despite the pain and discomfort. However, this prevented him from doing a bit of gentle jogging on the easy downhill stretches. Not only that, but he was using walking poles and he started developing blisters on his hands from using those. As he went through nearby Horton in Ribblesdale, he was looking quite determined and cheerful, but after walking through the night after only having one and a half hours sleep on the floor at Dufton, he was looking very tired when he arrived at the checkpoint at Alston. However, a few hours sleep in the afternoon seemed to perk him up and he set off on the next long stretch which took him 20 hours to complete. By this point, John was getting out of synch with the daylight hours. At Alston, he slept during the day and he did the same at Bellingham. In each case, he was only there around five hours, so his sleep time in each case must have been around four hours. However, sleeping during the day meant that he was navigating some serious mountain routes in the dark. From Alston, John seemed to pick up a new lease of life and from Bellingham, he set off with grit and determination, knowing that these last two legs could be crucial. He was at that point in 8th position, but he was starting to close in on the runner in front. At the last normal check point before the mountainous stretch to the finish, John was still lying in 8th position, but the chap in front was starting to tire, whilst John kept going. By the climber's mountain hut just six miles from the finish, John was in 7th position and he left there at such a pace, no one was going to catch him. So after six days on his feet with just over 21 hours rest, John came home where he had a shower and the medics once more gave some attention to his bleeding feet. It was an amazing feat of endurance from an amazing athlete.
This was also an amazing race for another reason. The winner was a woman, who not only won the race but she also beat the men's record by twelve hours. In addition, she had recently given birth and was still breast feeding and she was expressing milk each day to keep her baby going until she completed the race. When asked to comment on setting the new record, she allegedly said that she had to get the race finished with so that she could get home to feed her baby! Her name is Jasmin Paris. She is a truly remarkable woman and she is an inspiration to women everywhere.
Following the resignation of Andy Berry from the role of team captain, the committee decided to split the role, awarding the job of road captain to Scott Boardman and that of fell captain to Luke Maude.
The aim of the Barlick Fell Runners results service is to list the full results of all fell running events in which our members have been involved and to archive these for future reference. If any have been missed, please let us know.
The main aims of the club are to increase the participation of running in Barnoldswick and to keep organised running as accessible as possible.