The 135 Challenge Blog
Today’s coverage of women’s sports lacks depth and development. We’re missing the narrative. We’re missing the characters. We’re missing the whole story.
Sports coverage needs dynamic characters.
People who love sports love more than just the game. We follow athletes and teams because we can follow the storylines. We know and identify with the characters.
Tom Brady, an underrated underdog turned top dog.
LeBron James, the redeemed king.
Cristiano Ronaldo — hero or heel?
But most people don’t know the characters in women’s sports.
Media coverage of women’s sports is so slim and surface-level that unless you are already a superfan, you probably don’t know much about even the top women athletes in the world.
Without developing the characters and narrative, it’s almost impossible for the average sports fan to become invested in the stories, the characters, and the narrative of the athletes and their teams.
With the 135 Challenge, I’m trying to change that.
For the next 135 days, I’m spotlighting one important woman in sports every damn day while training for the Badwater 135 mile race.
Many of these women inspire me, and I believe that if you knew more of their stories, they’d inspire you too.
My goal is to tell you who these athletes are—their athletic accomplishments & character archetypes—so you follow their stories, long after my race is run.
March 7th - July 19th, 2021
135 Badass women & 135 days of training for the Badwater 135.
While training for this year’s Badwater 135 footrace, I’m spotlighting 135 women in sports.
You better recognize.
Joan Benoit Samuelson - The Unstoppable
Day 121/135. Joan Benoit Samuelson won the first EVER women’s Olympic marathon. And today, at 64 years old she’s STILL going. Still running faster than I could ever dream of. Unstoppable.
Elle Purrier St. Pierre - The Farmer
Day 119/135. Running the 1500m is anything but easy. But in the Olympic trials, Elle Purrier St. Pierre made it look like light work, leading gun to tape. The work ethic came from growing up on a dairy farm.
Caster Semenya - The Exception
Day 106/135. Though Caster Semenya is one of the best 800m runners of all time, she will not be running the 800 in the Olympics this year. The IAAF rules on intersex athletes don’t clarify much. They just seem specifically designed to keep Semenya out.
Bobbi Gibb - The Rebel
Day 100/135. In 1966, Bobbi Gibb was the first woman to finish the Boston Marathon. But you won’t see her in any recordbooks. She wasn’t even allowed to be there.
Deena Kastor - The Brain
Day 84/135. To this day, Deena Kastor still holds 5 American distance running records. That kind of dominance doesn’t come from your legs. It comes from a mastery of the mind.