Jasmin Paris
Personal information
Full nameJasmin Karina Paris
NationalityBritish
BornNovember 1983 (age 40)
Sport
Country Great Britain
SportSkyrunning
Medal record
Skyrunning
World Championships
Bronze medal – third place2016 LleidaUltra SkyMarathon

Jasmin Karina Paris (born November 1983[1]) is a British runner who has been a national fell running champion and who has set records for the Bob Graham Round and the Ramsay Round.

She is well known in Great Britain as a fell runner, but became known on the international stage as a sky runner after her victory in the 2016 Skyrunner World Series (Sky Extreme)[2] and bronze medal at the 2016 Skyrunning World Championships (Sky Ultra).[3] She received significant media attention for her overall win in the 2019 Spine Race.[4]

Biography

She is the daughter of mathematicians Jeff Paris and Alena Vencovská.[5]

While at the University of Liverpool, Paris was a member of the Open Air Club which encouraged outdoor pursuits.[6] However, she did not start running until she left university in 2008 and was working in Glossop near her home town of Hadfield in Derbyshire, although she had done some backpacking and walked a lot in the fells. After a twelve-month sabbatical in Minnesota, she returned to the UK, moved to Edinburgh in 2010 and began to take running more seriously.[7]

She has performed particularly well in the longer fell races. Her wins include Wasdale, the Three Peaks Race, Borrowdale, the Langdale Horseshoe, the Isle of Jura and the Ennerdale Horseshoe[8] and she has won the Lakeland Classics Trophy series.[9]

Paris won the Scottish Hill Running Championships in 2014 and 2015[10] and in 2015 and 2018 she won the British Fell Running Championships.[11]

In 2015, Paris began to be more prominent in ultra distance running. In April that year, she set a new women's record of 11:09 in the Fellsman, finishing fourth overall,[12] and in June, she was the first female finisher and second overall in the five-day Dragon's Back Race in Wales.[13]

On 23 April 2016, Paris completed the Bob Graham Round in a time of 15:24, taking more than two-and-a-half hours off the women's record previously held by Nicky Spinks.[14] The record stood until July 2020 when Beth Pascall ran the Bob Graham Round in 14:34.[15]

Paris ran the Ramsay Round on 18 June 2016 in a time of 16:13. This was not only a new women's record, but an overall fastest known time for the route.[16] It remained the overall record until 2019, when Es Tresidder ran the Round a minute quicker.[17]

In July 2016, Paris took third place in the Buff Epic Trail 105K which was the 2016 Skyrunning World Championships race for the ultra category.[18] In August, she finished sixth at the UTMB, her first 100-mile race.[19]

In September, Paris was crowned champion in the Extreme series of the 2016 Skyrunner World Series, having won both the Tromsø SkyRace and the Glen Coe Skyline.[20] In October, she set a new women's record for the Paddy Buckley Round with a time of 18:33.[21]

Paris set a new race record in the 2019 Spine Race along the Pennine Way, finishing the 268 miles (431.3 km) on 16 January in 83 hours 12 minutes and 23 seconds. Becoming the first woman to win the event overall, she surpassed the previous record of 95 hours 17 minutes set by Eoin Keith in 2016 and the previous female record of 109 hours 54 minutes achieved by Carol Morgan in 2017.[22] During breaks in the race she expressed milk for her baby.[23]

Paris completed a circuit of twenty-nine Munros in the Cairngorms in July 2021, setting a women's record for climbing the most Munros and returning to the starting point within twenty-four hours.[24] Later the same year, she won the Ultra Tour Monte Rosa in Switzerland.[25]

In March 2022, Paris competed in the Barkley Marathons in Frozen Head State Park, Tennessee. She completed a "Fun Run" of three loops, the first time for nine years that a woman had done so.[26] In March 2023, she was only the second woman ever to attempt a fourth loop but couldn't complete it within the time limit.[27]

Paris was sponsored by Inov-8 until 2022, when she opted to run for the Green Runners, an environmental group of which she is a co-founder.[28]

In 2016, Paris married Konrad Rawlik who is also a runner with a win in the Fellsman.[29] They have two children.[30] Paris is a small-animal vet working at the University of Edinburgh and studied acute myeloid leukaemia.[31]

References

  1. Companies House: Carnethy Hill Running Club.
  2. "Jasmin Paris and Jonathan Albon are EXTREME Champions". skylinescotland.com. Retrieved 26 October 2017.
  3. "Skyrunning World Championships 2016 ULTRA – Images and Summary". iancorless.org. Retrieved 26 October 2017.
  4. Ingle, Sean (17 January 2019). "Jasmin Paris becomes first woman to win 268-mile Montane Spine Race". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  5. jasminfellrunner.blogspot.co.uk: Bob Graham; Who’s Who: Paris, Prof. Jeffrey Bruce; University of Manchester: Alena Vencovská.
  6. University of Liverpool: Alumna Becomes First Woman to Win the Spine Race.
  7. Ben Abdelnoor, "Jasmin Paris", The Fellrunner, Spring 2013, 68-69; Adharanand Finn, "Jasmin Paris: 'I Rarely Run on Roads, Only to Get to the Hills'", The Guardian, 20 May 2016.
  8. Lakeland Classics Trophy: Race Results; Three Peaks Race: Winners 1954-2015; Archived 2016-10-22 at the Wayback Machine 2015 Jura Race Report.
  9. Bill Johnson, "Lakeland Classics Trophy 2012", The Fellrunner, Spring 2013, 64-65.
  10. Carnethy Hill Running Club: Hall of Fame.
  11. Fellrunner.org.uk: British Champions.
  12. Grough: Adam Perry Posts Third Fellsman Win as Jasmin Paris sets New Women's Record; Fellsman: 2015 Results.
  13. Grough: Jim Mann and Jasmin Paris Triumph in Five-day Dragon's Back Race; Dragon’s Back Race: 2015 Results.
  14. Jasmin Paris, "Raising the Bar", The Fellrunner, Summer 2016, 48-51; Talk Ultra: Episode 110 – MDS Special and Jasmin Paris.
  15. Trail Running Magazine: Damian Hall and Beth Pascall Look Back on Trail Records.
  16. UKClimbing.com: Jasmin Paris Breaks Ramsay Round Record; Inov-8: Jasmin Paris: A 16:13 Ramsay Round Record.
  17. UKClimbing: Interview: Es Tresidder on his Ramsay Round Record.
  18. International Skyrunning Federation: Hernando and Chaverot Ultra Champions. Spain, Czech Republic and Japan Take the Medals.
  19. iRunFar: Jasmin Paris Post-2016 UTMB Interview.
  20. Skyrunner World Series: Albon and Paris are Extreme Champions.
  21. Inov-8: Jasmin Paris Rewrites the Mountain Running Record Books.
  22. "Jasmin Paris becomes first woman to win 268-mile Montane Spine Race". The Guardian. 17 January 2019. Retrieved 17 January 2019.
  23. "Sabrina Verjee sets record for running 214 Wainwright peaks in less than six days". The Guardian. 17 June 2021. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
  24. iRunFar: Jasmin Paris and Kim Collison Set 24-Hour Munros Records in July.
  25. iRunFar: This Week In Running: September 7, 2021.
  26. Inov-8: Jasmin Paris completes Barkley Marathons ‘Fun Run’.
  27. Running Magazine: Jasmin Paris bows out of Barkley Marathons after four loops
  28. Runner's World: How the Green Runners are making the planet fitter.
  29. iancorless.com: Tromsø SkyRace 2016 Preview – Skyrunner Extreme Series; Fellsman: 2016 Results.
  30. Inov-8: Meet Jasmin Paris - the record-breaking ultra runner, mum and vet.
  31. Kendal Mountain Festival: Jasmin Paris; University of Edinburgh: Jasmin Paris.
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