Race the Lake
Race the Lake is less a single neat circuit than a label for the endurance-race world built around Lazarus Lake, the Tennessee race designer Gary Cantrell. His events sit deep in ultrarunning: long road ultras, mountain navigation tests, and backyard ultras where runners repeat the same 4.167-mile loop every hour until almost everyone quits. The oldest piece is the Strolling Jim 40, an annual 40-mile race named after a Tennessee Walking Horse and counted among the older ultramarathons in the Southern United States. The most infamous piece is the Barkley Marathons, a 100-mile race with orienteering, off-trail scrambling, and a reputation captured by its nickname, “the race that eats its young.” The courses are built to expose weak spots rather than flatter runners. At Barkley, entrants must find their way through rough backcountry instead of following a simple marked trail. In the backyard format, the math is the trap: 4.167 miles per hour equals 100 miles in a day, and the winner is the last runner who can complete one more loop after everyone else has stopped. Big Dog’s Backyard pushed that format into a remote team contest, with national squads of up to 15 runners and dozens of countries involved. Lake’s races draw elite ultrarunners, stubborn amateurs, and people curious enough to test themselves against rules that sound simple until the sleep loss, terrain, and repetition start doing the real work.