ATM Championship Update: Steven Ong and Lily Suryani feel the heat
Lily Suryani has already finished 6 ATM races this season, plus 1 Candidate Race

Lily Suryani has already finished 6 ATM races this season, plus 1 Candidate Race

With the Vietnam Mountain Marathon last week the 2017 ATM Championship got back on track after the summer break and caused quite a bit of movement in the top of both male and female rankings. While Steven Ong and Lily Suryani continue to lead, they feel several others breathing down their necks now. The upcoming MesaStila Peaks Challenge could result in a new situation as others also reach the plateau of five race results - which Suryani already did a while ago. 

MEN’S TOP 25

* Abroad Bonuses included

* In brackets is number of race results in 2017

1. Steven Soonseng Ong (MAS) 2125 (4)

2. Yim Heng Fatt (MAS) 2000 (5)

3. Arief Wismoyono (INA) 1900 (4) &

    Cao Ngoc Ha (VIE) 1900 (4)

5. Isaac Yuen Wan Ho (HKG) 1850 (4)

6. Manolito Divina (PHI) 1500 (3)

7. Hendra Siswanto (INA) 1490 (4)

8. Pablo Diago Gonzales (ESP) 1420 (3)

9. Gaspard Dessy (BEL) 1300 (3)

10.Aleksis Capili (PHI) 1205 (3)

11. Yohanis Hiareij (INA) 1190 (3)

12. Norman Koh (SIN) 1090 (3)

13. Sefli Ahar (BRU) 1000 (2)

14. Quang Tran (VIE) 950 (2)

15. Jun Kaise (JPN) 925 (2)

16. Rexell Aguirre (PHI) 875 (2)

     Arnold Lozano (PHI) 875 (2)

18. Kris Van de Velde (BEL) 867 (4)

19. Ari Masrudi (INA) 820 (2)

      Quang Duc Nguyen (VIE) 820 (2)

21. Joseph Sibal (PHI) 797 (3)

22. Jan Nilsen (NOR) 795 (2)

23. Jared Teves (PHI) 775 (2)

      Liew Tho Fatt (MAS) 775 (2)

25. Rudy Irwan Shukaime (MAS) 766 (3)

WOMEN’S TOP 25

1. Lily Suryani (INA) 2200 (5+)

2. Ruth Theresia (INA) 2075 (4)

3. Kim Matthews (AUS) 2070 (4)

4. Tahira Najmunisaa(MAS) 2050 (4)

5. Cheryl Bihag (PHI) 1820 (5+)

6. Adelinah Lintanga (MAS) 1800 (4)

7. Shindy Patricia (INA) 1750 (4)

8. Siawhua Lim (MAS) 1325 (3)

9. Vy Le Phuong (VIE) 1145 (3)

10.Ina Budiyarni (INA) 1125 (3)

11. Mila Marlina (INA) 1110 (3)

12. Sandi Menchi Abahan (PHI) 1000 (2)

     Yelena Mitrofanova (RUS) 1000 (2)

14. Christine Loh Woon Chze (MAS) 995 (2)

15. Jassica Lintanga (MAS) 900 (2)

16. Thi Duong Nguyen (VIE) 875 (2)

17. Manilyn Mamugay (PHI) 850 (2)

18. Bo Young Jan (KOR) 825 (2)

19. Patricia Ann Morota (PHI) 790 (2)

20. Irah Hernandez (PHI) 770 (2)

21. Thi Tieu Phuong Nguyen (PHI) 740 (2)

22. Moana O’Sullivan (NZL) 725 (2)

      Siokhar Lim (MAS) 725 (2)

24. Wai Teng Lew (SIN) 675 (2)

25. Tan Hongping (MAS) 660 (2)

The complete ranking can be consulted via Race Timing Solutions on:

http://m.racetimingsolutions.com/rankings/2017

Any comments or missing points, please contact info@asiatrailmaster.com 

 

Kris Van de VeldeComment
VMM - Triumph for Quang Tran & Kim Matthews
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The Vietnam Mountain Marathon in Sapa saw quite an upset on the main 100K race as local runner Quang Tran had the better of current Asia Trail Master champion Manolito Divina. In the women's, Kim Matthews delivered on her role as favourite to take her third ATM race victory of the season. 

After finishing second in the Vietnam Jungle Marathon last May, Quang Tran had only one focus in the last months and that was to prepare himself for the Sapa race. While everyone was  pointing to Cao Ngoc Ha as Vietnam's best bet to compete against the pinoy tandem of Divina and Arnold Lozano, Quang Tran was at the front early on. Manolito Divina was able to resist for a long time, but eventually had to admit the Vietnamese runner was simply too fast last weekend. In the end, the gap at the finish had even built up to 1 hour and 15 minutes, which is impressive. Finish time: 13 hours and 17 minutes. Cao Ngoc Ha completed the podium in third place another full hour back. It illustrates the dominance displayed by Quang Tran. SIngapore's Chua Ying Zhi came very close to the podium in fourth place only a few minutes behind Cao Ngoc Ha. Arnold Lozano - winner of this year's Cordillera Mountain Ultra - came home in fifth place. 

While Quang Tran collects 500 ATM championship points and now totals 950 in two races, Manolito Divina moves up into the ranking's top 10 with this third points score of the season. Cao Ngoc Ha improves to 4th place, equalling the total score of Isaac Yuen Wan Ho, who will be in action next at the Mesastila Peaks Challenge. Steven Ong still heads the championship ranking.

Kim Matthews was not really under pressure last weekend and ran a solid 17 hours 52 to claim the victory. The Australian, who recently moved to Ho Chi Minh City,  is becoming a real challenger now for the Asia Trail Master women's title. Her VMM victory propels her to second place in the ranking with four races, just five points behind Ruth Theresia but also 20 ahead of Tahira Najmunisaa! Lily Suryani continues to lead the championship ranking with five results in the bank. In fact, after completing the tough Bandung Ultra 100 last week, the Indonesian finished sixth on the 100K of VMM as well! However, her points total does not increase further as VMM was her sixth race and only the best five results count. Lily needs to do better than 4th place in a regular trail race, as that was her placing in both Tahura Trail and Merapoh Trail. 

On the podium beside Matthews was Hoa Banh, running with Australian nationality as well, and Nguyen Thi Duong from Vietnam, who will move up to the top 20 of the championship ranking with her third result of the season. 

There was also a 70K in Sapa, and that race was won by Britain's Graham Knight ahead of Hanoi's Quang Nguyen after a good battle. In the women's France's Nadia Koucha took a strong victory ahead of Malaysia's Penang Eco 100 winner Christine Loh. 

 

 

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VMM - Asian trail stars unite in Sapa
Kim Matthews

Kim Matthews

The Vietnam Mountain Marathon launches the final part of the 2017 Asia Trail Master Championship series this weekend. In style, because not only has VMM grown to be one of Asia’s finest trail races over the years, it also has attracted a quality field of Asian runners including our defending champion Manolito Divina. The Philippines’ running star still has some work to do in the final quarter of the year to defend his title. After an unfortunate DNF in Tahura Trail in January, Divina won the Rizal Mountain Run and the Sungai Menyala Forest Trail, but while others already have four or five results he is still down to two. Manolito has remained in good shape, though, as he proved in the Candidate Race in Bali two months ago. Manolito dominated the race and never even had to push to claim victory. This weekend in Vietnam, however, he will face some stiff competition on a hilly and often technical course that may match less with his characteristics as a trail runner. Manolito Divina, ironically enough, may have to fear another pinoy runner most in Vietnam: Arnold Lozano. The man from the Cordillera is known as a mountainbiker mainly outside Philippines, but then he won Cordillera Mountain Ultra last March, ahead of Marcelino Sano-Oy, Al Telias and Jan Nilsen! Lozano has his own ambition for the ATM Championship, so we could get a very interesting dual on the mountains around Sapa this weekend. 

The local stars of course also want a say in the battle. Cao Ngoc Ha in first place. The tall Vietnamese runner has been doing great in the ATM Championship this year and is determined to finish the year on a high note as well. Currently ranked in 6th place with three race finishes, Cao Ngoc Ha has home advantage this weekend and will be cheered on by the ever-growing Vietnamese trail community. Trail running is coming of age in Vietnam, indeed, and Cao Ngoc Ha is one of the pioneers. With also BTS Ultra on his agenda, it looks like he will definitely claim a top 10, if not top 5 or even higher position in the final championship ranking. 

In the women’s 100K, ATM Championship leader Lily Suryani will be at the start to defend her position. The Bali-based Indonesian  is unstoppable and very consistent this year. Only last weekend she finished the Bandung Ultra 100, a very technical and tough ATM Candidate Race. Lily has five results in the bag already, and her aim is of course to improve on her “fifth result”. This weekend, she will for sure leave Vietnam still as the Championship leader, but Australia’s Kim Matthews is set to move up. Matthews, in fact, is the women’s race favourite. She won UTKC 70 and Tam Dao Mountain Trail, and also scored second in the Penang Eco 100k earlier this year and is one of the top favourites for the ATM Championship at the end of the season. In Sapa, Matthews will be competing with Suryani, but also with Montha Suntornwit and local stars Tu Nguyen, Nguyen Thi Duong and Vy Le Phuong. Moana O’ Sullivan from New Zealand is the dark horse for the women’s race this weekend. 

As always in trail running, there may be guest runners claiming the spotlight as well. In Sapa we can expect some solid runners from South Korea, Thailand and France. 

Shinjo Hiruzen Super Trail is 2018 ATM Candidate Race!
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We are happy to announce a second 2018 Asia Trail Master Candidate Race in Japan. The Shinjo-Hiruzen Super Trail (no link with our SuperTrails) is an exciting introduction to Okoyama Prefecture, which is situated between Hiroshima and Kyoto/Osaka. The event features a 73 km long main race on Sunday, 1 October and has an elevation gain of 3200 hm. An experienced trail running committee is behind the organisation, which expects more than 500 participants this year. The race starts in the early morning at 5 a.m. and has a cut-off at. 8 p.m. in the evening. In other words, you are required to cover the 73 km within 15 hours.

You can expect magnificent mountain vistas and you will run through cedar and cherry trees for an excellent trail experience with sufficient runable sections as well. 

Please stay tuned to our website and social media channels in the next weeks to find out a lot more about this Candidate Race. 

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Asia Trail Master - Editorial September 2017
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Every new season around the summer months we put the entire Asia Trail Master project under a magnifying glass and try to identify areas where we can twist and tweek the set-up, so everything becomes even more attractive for all parties concerned. Now in its third year, ATM still continues to grow on a constant basis according to all our internal parameters, for which we are of course very grateful to all of you. From the get-go in 2015, Asia Trail Master was the pet project of our Hong Kong-based mother company Kuai Sports Promotions with as main ambition the development of trail running, and runners, in Asia. We have hit turbulent weather at times and for sure not everything has gone the way we had imagined it, but we are confident to claim that ATM mid-2017 is a much bigger animal than mid-2015. Our champions like Arief Wismoyono, Manolito Divina and not in the least Tahira Najmunisaa Muhammad Zaid clearly value their championship titles, and today do their utmost best to retain or regain them. The competiton in 2017 is bigger than ever and we are looking forward to a fantastic conclusion of this year’s championship in the next few months, hopefully with a showdown of the best runners at the Izu Trail Journey in Japan on 10 December. Still, Asia Trail Master has never been only about the fastest of runners out there. Our Grandmaster Quest is an individual challenge for every type and level of runner. Today, six athletes have achieved the first level of six races of 70+ km in two years, and Thailand-based Filipino Aleksis Capili has even managed to score his second Grandmaster star already for finishing ten such long distance races. It has pleased us to hear all around the ATM circuit that people now have the Grandmaster Quest in focus. 

We are grateful to each of our sponsors and promotional partners of the Asia Trail Master Championship series and hope we can continue to cooperate in 2018 and beyond. Trail running remains a niche in the overall running business, which means it is still not easy to obtain large financial support but some brands do see the potential now of strategic regional marketing to increase their share in the trail industry, and indeed the running industry as a whole.  As of the second half of 2017 already, ATM will boost its media services to unprecedented heights creating new brand exposure opportunities for brands and companies, either pan-Asian or national. Traditional sports are in crisis worldwide - just look at the difficulty of finding olympic host cities nowadays as just one example -, and trail running belongs to a new wave of popular activties that, perhaps, fits the 21st century better than what we thought a few years ago. Along with that comes the opportunity for innovative and creative marketing and sales ideas to blossom using the latest available technologies. 

As our social media community has grown bigger than any regional trail media platform, we have recently also opened a closed community group on facebook called ‘ATM Trail Talk’  for runners and trail running insiders with opinions. ATM Trail Talk is not meant for publishing news about events, but rather as a discussion forum for organisers, runners and other stakeholders. At Asia Trail Master, we are always open for new suggestions - or founded criticisms - and happy to discuss them with all of you keeping our core ambition close to heart. So, if you have any well-founded ideas or arguments, we are happy to hear them on ATM Trail Talk. The floor is open for all registered members.

Last but not least, a big thank you to all event organisers and all dedicated runners in the Asia Trail Master Championship series. Without you no races, and no Championship. It is fantastic to see that events have matured and gotten ever better since the beginning in 2015. Likewise, many trail runners have become household names in trail families outside their native countries. All of this to the extent that some global trail running stakeholders, such as UTWT, have taken notice. All things considered, that is a very positive development and shows that Asian trail running is moving up. One of our goals remains getting the top of the ATM Championship into the annual trail world championships organised by IAU and ITRA. For a variety of reasons, Asia is largely absent from that competition. But as institutional matters go, it takes time, unfortunately. 

We keep on working, we keep on running, we keep on making new friends and enjoying ourselves on the magnificent trails of Asia!

- KVDV

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2018 ATM Preview - Precious little gems & the Malaysia SuperTrail
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In part 4 of our 2018 calendar preview we highlight three perhaps lesser known races, but little gems they are for sure: the Mount Apo Sky Race on Mindanao in the Philippines, the Ultra Trail Nepal in Kathmandu and Batase, and the Tengri Ultra Trail in Tamgaly Tas, Kazakhstan. All three take place back-to-back from 22 April to 6 May, and are followed by the big Malaysia SuperTrail, Penang Eco 100! 

The 3rd edition of the Mount Apo Sky Race is organised by the Vertical 2 Sky Team, which has set up several nice races in Davao and on Mindanao island. In 2018 the main points race will be upgraded from 70K to 100K, yet remains an out-and-back route to the summit of the highest mountain of the Philippines. The registration is open earlier than ever soon, and with Air Asia now flying directly from Kuala Lumpur to Davao, the event has become more accessible than ever as well! 

One week later we travel to Nepal for the Ultra Trail Nepal event, which commemorates the devastating earthquake of 2015. Running from Kathmandu to the Batase Valley, also this course has been extended from 86K to a full 100K for the next edition of 28 April. Although this is Nepal, this event actually has quite some runable sections as well. 

Meanwhile a classic on the ATM calendar is the Kazakhstan pioneering race in UNESCO World Heritage Site Tamgaly Tas, 100K from Almaty. The 4th Tengri Ultra Trail is scheduled to retain its 70K main course, which is characterised by grasslands with snowcapped peaks on the horizon, and a rocky canyon to be traversed. Registrations for non-Kazakhs will be open in due course. 

Finally, Penang Eco remains the Malaysia SuperTrail on 12/14 May 2018. This is a big event with the first 100 miler of the season, along with a 100K as main race as well. Less ambitious runners can also do the 50K or 35K, but those do not offer any ATM Championship points. The courses are expected to stay as they are more or less. As everyone who has done Penang Eco knows, this one is not about the elevation, but about the humidity and mental resilience as the techical sections come at the end and after a very runable first part. 

Tengri Ultra Trail

Tengri Ultra Trail

Penang Eco 100

Penang Eco 100

the 2018 ATM Calendar so far

2018 ATM Preview - The Points System
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As every year we have been evaluating our points attribution system for the Asia Trail Master Championship. Without changing too much and always sticking to the principle of "easy to calculate, easy to follow" , the 2018 system sees a few modifications that may be relevant for those fast runners gunning for a top placing in the championship. The most significant of these amendments is that B-races of 70K will no longer offer the full 400 performance points for the winner, but only 300. In our attempt to harmonise everything across the whole event calendar, we felt that B-races of a few events were overvalued - points-wise - in 2017. 

While the 'five-best-count' rule remains for the final classification at the end of the season, it should be noted that we require one of those five races to be a SuperTrail in 2018. If no SuperTrail is among the races run by an individual, his or her points total will be reduced by 250 points. This amendment is being introduced to avoid a situation whereby a runner collects high doses of points in some of the more remote or less competitive races on our calendar. 

There will be six SuperTrail races in 2018, whereby UTKC in Thailand, the 9 Dragons Ultra in Hong Kong and the Penang Eco 100 in Malaysia have already been confirmed. The allocation of the SuperTrail event for Indonesia, Japan and Philippines will be done soon. 

The Asia Trail Master Championship series continues to offer challenges and opportunities for runners of all levels and characteristics, mountain goats and quick rabbits. 

In a nutshell: 

2018 ATM Championship Points System - The key facts

  • The best 5 results in terms of points count for the final classification after the last race
  • Standard races: 500 championship points for winners:
    • 100 finisher points + 400 performance points
  • Performance points for winners:
    • A races: 400 
    • B races of 100K: 400
    • B races of 70K or C-races of 70K: 300
    • B races of < 70K: 200
    • Exceptions to this rule possible in selected cases
    • Performance points overview table link
  • Bonus finisher points:
    • SuperTrail bonus: 50 
    • 100 Miles bonus: 50
    • Abroad bonus: 50 (when 1 of minimum 3 races outside of resident country)
  • NEW: SuperTrail requirement
    • To avoid fast runners collecting high doses of points in very remote or less competitive races, we introduce the SuperTrail requirement, which says that 1 of the - minimum - five races that count for the final classification must be a SuperTrail for the runner to keep all his or her points. If the runner did not compete in a SuperTrail, his or her points total will be reduced by 250 points after the last SuperTrail race of the year has taken place. 
  • There will be 6 SuperTrails races in 2018. Thailand, Hong Kong and Malaysia are already confirmed. Japan, Indonesia and Philippines will be announced in due course
2018 ATM Preview: speedways & green mountains
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In part 3 of our 2018 Asia Trail Master Championship series preview, we highlight four more great races in four different countries. Starting with 23/24 March, we have the first of two superspeed trail courses and it's a classic one: the Beach Bunch Trail Challenge in Brunei has firmly established itself on the Asian trail calendar thanks to its solid organisation and wonderful atmosphere. The event takes place a month later than usual, but retains most of its characteristics. That means the 100k is still the main race, with a 50K as intermediate distance that also qualifies for ATM Championship points. Beginning runners can also opt for 30K in Brunei, which is nonetheless quite a challenge given the heat and humidity inherent to the small country on Borneo island. The Beach Bunch is of course still an event where environmental protection is a key aspect: the beaches around Jerudong suffer a lot from waste being spilled into the sea in other countries, which all comes ashore here. The local volunteers clean up as much as possible for the event weekend, but you would be stunned to see what amounts of trash actually all arrives there on the beach. 

Fast-legged runners should in any case mark this period on the ATM Calendar as two weeks later there is another trail speedway in nearby Malaysia: the Sungai Menyala Forest Trail is a 50k race without much elevation gain neither. Still, as with the Beach Bunch, be prepared as the DNF rates are quite high also in Port Dickson. In fact, Sungai Menyala can be a little muddy also, which seriously tires you down. 

Time to hit the mountains again. On 14/15 April we have a big return to the Asia Trail Master calendar: Ultimate Tsaigu, a tough 100k race in Linhai, Zhejiang Province, China is back! Previously known as Tsaigu Tangsi Plus, the popular Chinese race had a sabbatical this season after being a points race in 2015 and 2016. Races in China are usually not the easiest to enter, but if you want to make the effort (and we help you!) Ultimate Tsaigu is an excellent opportunity given the relative proximity of major cities Shanghai, Hangzhou and Ningbo. Event town Linhai is a tourist spot with ancient city wall and tea plantations, and linked to the aforementioned cities by train. Come prepared, however, as the 100K has over 6000m of elevation gain and the 70K is serious business as well. Of course, both 100k and 70k are Grandmaster distances.

Not a Grandmaster distance, but quite tough nevertheless is the Korea 50k race near Seoul a week later. In 2018, the course officially measures 58km and has an elevation gain of close to 3000 hm. The country's premier trail event is hitting its 4th edition already and is a hill forest race pur sang with traditionally quite an international field of runners. There's a shorter distance available as well , which makes the event in Dongducheon, in the northern suburbs of Seoul, accessible to everyone. 

The calendar so far...

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Kris Van de VeldeComment
2018 ATM Preview: here come the SuperTrails
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Yesterday we highlighted the first quartet of races in the forthcoming 2018 Asia Trail Master Championship, and today we are happy to announce the first SuperTrails next year. UTKC, short for Ultra-Trail Unseen Koh Chang, in Thailand is again the first event where runners can score 50 bonus points for the championship if they finish the 100k or 70k race. Making a fantastic debut on the Asia Trail Master scene last February, UTKC stood out for its great atmosphere, challenging course,hot weather and the high-level of the participants. On 16/17 February 2018, we expect no less. You can already sign up, too, via the new event website by the Teelakow crew. 

Only one week later we already have the next SuperTrail. And it's a brand new one: the 9 Dragons Ultra in Hong Kong! After great reviews of the inaugural edition, we are delighted this young event has joined our Asia Trail Master Championship. The 9 Dragons Ultra merits its SuperTrail status for exactly the same reasons as UTKC. There is an additional challenge in Hong Kong, though. The main race is de facto a stage race, with a 50 miles race on Saturday and a 50k on Sunday. ATM points will be scored on the basis of the general classification after the two stages, but runners can also collect if they finish the 50 miles-only. This race goes beyond the usual trajectory of Hong Kong races with the many steps and stairs, and will surprise you of how much beautiful natural trail there still is in the New Territories. 

For the seventh race of the 2018 season we return to the Philippines for the 50k classic Cordillera Mountain Ultra. Hailed year-after-year as one of our championship's highlights, the CMU race will reward runners even more in 2018...stay tuned. Mount Ugo is the centrepiece of this race that starts and finishes in the small town of Dalupirip, where citizens are very enthuastic about the event and will do everything to make you feel at home. You should try the locally produced coffee as well, and if not for anything else, just to support the NGO Cordillera Conservation Trust, which does important environmental and social work in this remote mountain area. 

With the CMU event we have arrived in March, which currently still has two vacant weekends. While that is not necessarily a bad thing, we are still open to receive event applications for the weekends of 10/11 March and 17/18 March. But not for 24/25 March, as then we have the next one of our meanwhile classic events. Which one? Find out tomorrow! 

The 2018 Asia Trail Master calendar so far:

Kris Van de VeldeComment
2018 Asia Trail Master Championship: the first quartet
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ANNOUNCEMENT - While we are all anxiously awaiting the conclusion of the 2017 Asia Trail Master Championship  in the fortcoming three months, we are also already planning ahead for next year. In the next days we will be making several announcements related to the 2018 championship, including some points regulation changes and of course the race calendar for the first semester of 2018. 

The calendar promises to be even more filled and as varied as this year with a number of exciting newcomers, a big returnee, and of course our young classics. Beginning on the weekend of 20/21 January, trail runners can look forward to Asia Trail Master action nearly every weekend till the end of June. Points will be collected throughout the season, and at the end of the year still the best five results per runner, in terms of points, will be taken into account for the final championship classification. The foundation of the championship therefore will remain the same as this year. A few details will be amended and these will be announced in a separate announcement later this week. 

The 2018 Asia Trail Master Championship series will again take off in Indonesia and Philippines, two countries that have witnessed a large growth of their domestic trail running scenes over the past years, which naturally also has resulted in a number of runners gaining fame and prestige throughout the Asian continent. Just think of Manolito Divina and Ruth Theresia, to name two only. 

The Tahura Trail in Bandung, West Java, is the ideal race to get into gear on 21 January. It's not too long at 42 km, it's not too hard neither, but it does have technical sections that will separate the trail runner from the road runner, especially when it's wet and muddy like in 2017. For those who have not been in Bandung, it's a city surrounded by green mountains where Jakartians flock to on weekends. The tourism and hotel industry is therefore well-developed and you can easily spend a brilliant weekend with the family in the area. 

As in 2017, the next event has a similar set-up in that the Rizal mountains are close to Manila, capital city of the Philippines. Participants for the Rizal Mountain Run on 28 January can stay in Manila and grab transport to the event site on Saturday night and return to the city after the race. The Rizal Mountain Run will be the first of two back-to-back pinoy points races because the following weekend we have the Pilipinas Akyathlon, as introduced last week. The Akyathlon takes place around Mount Ugo in the Cordillera mountains, and a full week travel package including the two ATM points races is currently being designed for runners who like to spend a whole week in the Philippines! Stay tuned for more details on this special travel option in due course. 

With three races of 42 km, 50 km and 46 km in the bag, runners will be warmed up for the first genuine ultra race of the 2018 season: the Coast To Coast Night Trail Ultra in Central Java's Yogyakarta. If you thought the 70 km was tough this year, be prepared then for 10 February as the local organisers have announced a 100 km course as main race distance in 2018. Final confirmation of that is still pending, though. The 70 km also remains on the programme, which means CTC offers the first 2 Grandmaster point collection options of next year's season. Coast To Coast Night Trail takes place mostly at night - obviously - and can safely be considered a race suited for in-shape trail technicians. However, there's quite long runable sections, too, which makes for a well-balanced course appreciated by experienced runners. 

With these four great events we are confident the 2018 Asia Trail Master Championship series will start with a bang. And wait for tomorrow... when we announce the next quartet of races and the first SuperTrails for next year! 

The First Four: 

Hakuba Trails in Nagano latest ATM Candidate Race
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With three races in the 2017 Asia Trail Master Championship series, Japan is more than ever open to the international trail running community. The country arguably being the centre of Asian long distance running, we can only applaud this and we are looking forward to discovering more of all these gems of events that have so far been elusive if not outright mysterious. Introducing Hakuba International Trails: a new 2018 Candidate Race taking place this coming weekend 9/10 September in Nagano, former host city of the Olympic Winter Games. 

It will be the second edition of the event after a very successful premiere last year. Hakuba offers a scenic and spicy 53 km course with 2800 metres of elevation gain. As you can see from the images below, the race takes place in the mountains. Several rivers need to be crossed as well. About 1700 runners are expected to take part in the event that also offers three shorter distances to cater for the whole family. The first start is at 7:00 a.m. and the COT for the 53km is 10 hours, which does imply participants need to move on during the race. 

The event is organised by the Hakuba International Trail Run Committee, which includes several experienced ultra runners. We are looking forward to next week's Candidate Race edition, and are confident Hakuba International Trails will also be a great points race in next year's Asia Trail Master Championship. 

Please take a look at the website of Hakuba International Trails for more details (currently only in Japanese). 

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UTKC 2018 opens registration!
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UTKC, aka Ultra Trail Unseen Koh Chang, made quite an impression on runners last February as the Thailand SuperTrail in the Asia Trail Master Championship series. The organising team Teelakow of course has quickly gathered a reputation for delivering well-organised and designed events like also the Ultra Trail Panoramic and Ultra Trail Chiang Rai. We are happy to announce that also in 2018 these three great races will be part of the Asia Trail Master Championship, and UTKC will again be the first SuperTrail race of the season on 16/17 February 2018. 

The event again features tough 100k and 70k Grandmaster distance races, along with two shorter races for beginning runners. For the championship, the two long distances count for points. 

The registration has just opened today for UTKC 2018. While the organisers accept high numbers of runners, better do sign up relatively quickly as the events do sell out beforehand in Thailand. 

Go to the new website www.utkcthailand.com for info on 2018 and the online reg form. 

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