Ron Hopcroft
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Ronald Frederick Hopcroft (27 February 1918 – 17 March 2016) was a British ultrarunner, who held the world records for 50 miles and 100 miles.


Running


Early years

Hopcroft was born in Cheswick, England and was active in many sports as a schoolboy. At the age of 17, Hopcroft joined Ashcombe AC, and competed on the athletics track and in cross country races. A few years later in 1939, he was called up to military service at the start of World War II. In 1941, he was posted back in London and discovered his athletics club had disbanded, so he joined
Thames Valley Harriers Thames Valley Harriers (TVH) is an athletics club founded in 1887. It is based at the Linford Christie Stadium, in West London, England, which is named after member and Olympic 100 metres gold medallist Linford Christie. In track and field, TVH ...
.


London to Brighton

Hopcroft continued running on the track until 1949 when, at the age of 31, he turned to road running to improve his endurance for the cross country season. He began to increase his weekly mileage going from three runs a week to training seven days a week, and twice a day. By the mid 1950s, he was competing in ultramarathons. In the 1955 London to Brighton Road Race, Hopcroft came third behind
Tom Richards Tom Richards may refer to: * Tom Richards (actor) (born 1948), Australian television actor * Tom Richards (athlete) (1910–1985), British marathon runner * Tom Richards (rugby union) (1882–1935), Australian rugby union footballer * Tom Richards ( ...
and Bill Kelly in a time of 5:47:11. The following year, he won the race in 5:36:26, beating Richards who came second, and Kelly third. But in 1957, he was beaten into second place in 5:40:31 by the South African Gerald Walsh, while Kelly finished third again.


100 mile World Record attempts

Wally Hayward Wallace Henry Hayward BEM (10 July 1908 – 28 April 2006) was a South African endurance athlete with a 60-year career. He became one of the greatest 100-mile runners in history. He won the Comrades Marathon five times and completed ...
set the 100 mile record of 12:20:28 in 1953. Five years later, at 5am on 25 October 1958, Hopcroft set out on the 100-mile route from Hyde Park Corner in central London along the Bath Road to the village of Box. He was accompanied for the first five miles by John Legge and Bill Wortley, who intended to go the whole way, but they dropped off and he carried on alone. He passed the marathon distance in 3:02 and reached the halfway mark in 5:46:37. With five miles to go, Hopcroft had 48 minutes to complete the course inside the world record time. Accompanied by motorists, cyclists and other runners, and cheered on by spectators, with encouragement from
Percy Cerutty Percy Wells Cerutty (10 January 189514 August 1975) was an Australian athletics coach in the 1950s and 1960s. The eccentric Australian pioneered a home-spun system of "Stotan" training, embracing a holistic regime of natural diets, hard train ...
, he pushed on and crossed the finish line in 12:18:16. A year later, almost to the day, on 24 October 1959, the Road Runners Club organised an event to beat Hopcroft's record on twenty laps of a five mile circuit at Walton-on-Thames. Twelve runners, including Hopcroft set out at 4am. Although the leaders were two minutes ahead of Hopcroft's pace at the 30-mile mark, Arthur Mail won the race in 13:17:39. Hopcroft did not complete the race.
Jackie Mekler Jack Mekler (4 March 1932 – 1 July 2019) was a South African long-distance runner. As a boy in an orphanage, he became a self-taught runner. He was boosted by fierce self-determination that grew out of his lonely and harsh childhood experience. ...
, who had come second to Hayward in the 1953 100 mile race, set a new record for the London to Brighton race in 1960. Three weeks later he set out on a solo attempt to beat Hopcroft's 100 mile record, Hopcroft pacing him for the first 10 miles. At the marathon mark, Mekler was just two minutes behind Hopcroft's pace. But he reached the half way mark in 6:08:06, more than twenty minutes behind the pace, suffering with knee and Achilles pain, and gave up.


Retirement

After 20 years competing for Thames Valley Harriers, business, family commitments and an ankle injury ended Hopcroft's running career in 1961. He stayed with the club as Road Running Secretary, developing a strong road running section. He was then President of the club from 1970 to 1973 and again from 1986 to 1988. He also volunteered as a track and cross-country official, acting as timekeeper at Veterans Athletic Club events, until 2007.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Hopcroft, Ron British long-distance runners Members of Thames Valley Harriers 1918 births 2016 deaths World record holders