Pushing the limit with Apple Watch Ultra and The Speed Project
Friday, 04:00:08 a.m.
Palisades Park, Santa Monica, California
Early Friday morning, the team’s 12 runners and eight support crew members are already running on adrenaline and very little sleep. Everyone is excited to watch teammate Annie Cun — who is here at the starting line despite a recent cancer diagnosis — kick off the very first segment. “This is a journey that we’re doing together,” says Le, reminding the runners in the huddle to stay in the moment and not just focus on their final destination. “Like in life, there’s not really a finish line. There’s only this present moment over and over and over again.”
Friday, 10:08:06 a.m.
Santa Clarita, California
As Angelo Antonio heads along Soledad Canyon Road, the clouds have finally opened up.
Friday, 12:38:30 p.m.
Palmdale, Mojave Desert
Anthony Trần takes a breather after making the handoff to teammate Paulsta Stanczuk.
Friday, 06:36:41 p.m.
Oro Grande, Mojave Desert
At sunset, Antonio runs along a single-lane dirt road in Oro Grande. For the runner, who grew up in the Mojave Desert, the moment is particularly special, representing a homecoming of sorts.
Saturday, 12:15:11 a.m.
Newberry Springs, Mojave Desert
At night, Tecson says Apple Watch Ultra 2 provided the team with an extra sense of safety: “I would always turn my flashlight setting on, because there were a lot of really aggressive drivers on the road.”
Saturday, 12:36:15 a.m.
Newberry Springs, Mojave Desert
Sleep deprivation is an inescapable part of The Speed Project experience. “A lot of people, when you get into ‘I’m hungry, I’m tired, I’m cranky,’ you can really lose who you are a little bit,” says team co-captain Will Eckman. “You have that shared experience with everyone else, and how do you all push each other up to get through? I think everybody was certainly feeling it in the overnight moments between midnight and 7 a.m.”
Saturday, 09:10:12 a.m.
Death Valley Road, Baker
Though many of the runners from the two clubs hadn’t met in person until the night before the race, it doesn’t take long for a sense of camaraderie to build on the road. “It just felt so natural, everybody coming together and really building a friendship,” says Will Eckman. “It almost felt like we had been friends for a very long time. That was amazing to see very quickly.”
Saturday, 09:25:48 a.m.
Baker, Mojave Desert
Out on the road, the runners use Apple Watch Ultra 2 to stay in touch with the crew back in the RV. “If something comes in that I have to answer, I use voice to text to continue my run and not break stride,” says co-captain Kim Yee, shown here during a one-mile repeat on Death Valley Road.
Saturday, 01:47:48 p.m.
Boron, Mojave Desert
By the time the team reaches the gruelling 26-mile stretch known as Power Line in the late afternoon, the weather has changed, and the team is concerned about their SUV getting stuck in the mud. “We started to feel some drizzle, and then we heard the rain hitting the power lines,” says Tecson. “You could just feel this crackling sound with the wind — it sounded beautiful and scary at the same time.”
Saturday, 06:08:43 p.m.
Goodsprings, Southwest Extreme Triangle
While they’re on their feet completing their segments, Apple Watch Ultra 2 offers the team’s athletes the ability to multitask. “As a runner, there’s so much going on,” says Tecson, pictured here waiting for teammate Cun. “You’re also concerned about everyone else, but you can also see through the watch that it got executed and checked off the list.”
Saturday, 06:23:10 p.m.
Jean, Southwest Extreme Triangle
Silhouetted against the backdrop of the desert mountains along State Route 161 — still capped in snow after a brief storm hours earlier — Jenny Peng finishes another segment. As the team delves deeper into the Mojave Desert, they rely on the precision dual-frequency GPS of Apple Watch Ultra 2, which provides precise distance, pace, and route data. “Having GPS dial in quickly so you can just tag and go was really critical,” says Will Eckman.
Saturday, 07:05:16 p.m.
Jean, Southwest Extreme Triangle
As night falls along the California-Nevada border, fatigue starts to set in for all of the runners, including Peng.
Saturday, 07:26:07 p.m.
Sloan, Southwest Extreme Triangle
With Las Vegas and its bright lights slowly coming into sight, Will Eckman stretches and prepares to embark on his final one-mile segment.
Saturday, 09:53:40 p.m.
Las Vegas, Southwest Extreme Triangle
On Saturday evening, the KRC x OMRC team crosses the Speed Project finish line in Las Vegas, with a final time of 41 hours and 51 minutes — cue the celebratory champagne shower, a well-deserved real shower, a hot meal, and a comfy hotel bed. “I love doing this race because you get to see what the human spirit is capable of,” says Le. “You see people go through their lows and really struggle to get out of their rock bottom in that moment to show up for each other and show up for themselves, and do something a previous version of themselves would have never thought was possible.”
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