This is the story of the 1983 mountain running championship. It looks at two very different athletes' lives, Kenny Stuart and John Wild. The Championship in 1983 was much tougher than it is now, and after 15 races, the title was decided by just 20 seconds at the final race.
Steve Chilton is a committed runner and qualified athletics coach with considerable experience of fell running and a marathon personal best of 2-34-53. He is a long-time member of the Fell Runners Association (FRA). In a long running career he has run in many of the classic fell races, as well as mountain marathons and has also completed the Cuillin Traverse. He worked for 42 years at Middlesex University where he was Lead Academic Developer.
Steve's work has been published extensively, particularly in his roles as Chair of the Society of Cartographers and Chair of the ICA Commission in Neocartography. He is heavily involved in the OpenStreetMap project (osm.org), having co-authored OpenStreetMap:Using and Enhancing the Free Map of the World. https://itsahill.wordpress.com/curric...
Had been busy, so it took longer than it should have to finish this book. A tale of "rivalry" between two extraordinary athletes, and the other exceptional runners who participated in fell running's heyday. Fell running never gets the credit it deserves for the calibre of athletes that partake in it. Maybe it's not cool or commercial enough for corporate greed to get its grimy claws into, and therefore don't get publicity or plaudits it should. It is conversely then portrayed as a bit of closed shop to outsiders. Sometimes though to protect the simplicity, honesty and integrity of something, it is necessary to make it seems as such. That's no bad thing in my book.