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National Ultra Endurance Series

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The National Ultra Endurance Series (NUE) is an ultra-endurance mountain bike race series in the United States. It was established in 2006 in order to bring national visibility to ultra-endurance mountain bike racing.[1]

The number of races has varied from year to year. Each of the races is approximately 100 miles (160 km) long and primarily off-road. The title of series champion is awarded to the racer with the four best results in each of the following categories: Men's Open, Women's Open, Men's Masters (age 50+), and Single speed. Any ties are broken by the placing results in the final race of the series.[2]

History

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In the past there were requirements to finish at least one race West of the Mississippi River and one race East of the Mississippi. That requirement has been dropped. The list below includes those races that will be in the 2017 series.[3] Some of these races were run before joining the NUE series.

Typical Date Event Name Location Years in Series
Mid-March True Grit Epic St George, Utah 2010 to present
Late April Cohutta 100 Ducktown, Tennessee 2006 to present
Early June Mohican MTB 100 Loudonville, Ohio 2006 to present
Mid June Lumberjack 100 Wellston, Michigan 2006 to present
Early July Tatanka 100 Sturgis, South Dakota 2013 to present[4]
Mid July High Cascades 100 Bend, Oregon 2010 to present
Late July Wilderness 101 Coburn, Pennsylvania 2006 to present
Late July Breckenridge 100 Breckenridge, Colorado 2006 to 2012, 2017–present
Early August Pierre's Hole 100 Alta, Wyoming xxxx to present
Late August Hampshire 100 Greenfield, New Hampshire xxxx to present
Early September Rincon Challenge 100 Liberia, Costa Rica 2012 to present
Early September Shenandoah 100 Stokesville, Virginia 2006 to present
Mid September Fool's Gold 100 Dahlonega, Georgia 2008 to present
Late September Big Bear Grizzly 100 Big Bear Lake, California 2017 to present

The series used to include the following events:

  • Syllamo's Revenge 125k in Arkansas - 2011 to 2013
  • Tahoe-Sierra 100 in California - 2008 to 2009
  • The Endurance 100 in Utah - 2007
  • Bailey Hundo in |Bailey, Colorado 2006 to 2016 (Now in the shorter NUE series)
  • Fool's Gold 100 in Dahlonega, Georgia 2008 to 2016

Series Champions

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Year Men's Open Champion Women's Open Champion Men's Master Champion Men's Single Speed Champion
2020[5] Greg Golet Justin Holle
2019 [6] Dylan Johnson Chase Edwards Tom Stritzinger Eli Orth
2018 Bryan Lewis Larissa Connors Cary Smith Gordon Wadsworth
2017 Dylan Johnson Carla Williams Greg Golet Gordon Wadsworth
2016 Dylan Johnson Carla Williams Jeff Clayton Gordon Wadsworth
2015 Keck Baker Brenda Simril Roger Masse Gordon Wadsworth
2014 Jeremiah Bishop Brenda Simril Roger Masse Gordon Wadsworth
2013 Christian Tanguy Cheryl Sornson Gerry Pflug Marland Whaley
2012 Christian Tanguy Cheryl Sornson Gerry Pflug Ron Sanborn
2011 Christian Tanguy Amanda Carey Gerry Pflug Doug Andrews
2010 Jeff Schalk[7] Amanda Carey Gerry Pflug Robert Herriman
2009 Jeff Schalk[7] Betsy Shogren
2008 Jeff Schalk[7] Cheryl Sornson
2007 Chris Eatough Carey Lowery
2006 Harlan Price Hillary Harrison

See also

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References

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  1. ^ LaConte, John (November 20, 2016). "Eagle's Karen Jarchow wins National Ultra Endurance series". Vail Daily. Eagle, Colorado. Retrieved 2023-07-12.
  2. ^ "NUE Series Rules". NUE Series. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
  3. ^ "NUE 2017 Series Calendar". National Ultra Endurance Series. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
  4. ^ July 2013, Ryan O'Dell 01 (July 2013). "National Ultra Endurance (NUE) Series: Tatanka 100 2013: Results". cyclingnews.com. Retrieved 2020-06-09.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ "2020 NUE Standings". Retrieved 11 August 2021.
  6. ^ "2019 NUE Results and Standings". Retrieved 11 August 2021.
  7. ^ a b c Conrad, Curt (2011-06-03). "Endurance race series to make way through Loudonville". News-Journal. Mansfield, Ohio. pp. 1B, 3B – via Newspapers.com.
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