Many people start the Superior Trail Races. Below is a list of people who did not start or have dropped out of the race. We will do our best to keep this updated through out the races.

100 Mile
Did Not Finish
2 – Doug Allen (Stillwater, Minn.) – Cty Road 6 (44 miles)
13 – Greg Bores (Prior Lake, Minn.) – Cramer (78 miles)
14 – Hugh Bradley (Arden Hills, Minn.) – Crosby (63 miles)
21 – Jeff Carkuff (Cary, N.C.) – Cty Road 6 (44 miles)
32 – Steve English (St. Paul, Minn.) – Crosby (63 miles)
43 – Arika Hage (Lakeville, Minn.) – Temperance (85 miles)
47 – Roy Heger (Medina, Ohio) – Tettegouche (35 miles)
51 – Allan Holtz (Oakdale, Minn.) – Crosby (63 miles)
52 – Ryan Howk (New Ulm, Minn.) – Tettegouche (35 miles)
56 – Nathan Jackson (Eau Claire, Wis.) – Cty Road 6 (44 miles)
62 – Wedge Keeling (Portales, N.M.) – Temperance (85 miles)
64 – Dan Kimmel (Burnsville, Minn.) – Sugarloaf (72 miles)
67 – Jeremy Lindquist (Stillwater, Minn.) – Finland (50 miles)
76 – Geoff Moffat (Crystal Lake, Ill.) – Temperance (85 miles)
78 – Brandon Mulnix (Saranac, Mich.) – Cty Road 6 (44 miles)
79 – Kurt Neuburger (New Hope, Minn.) – Cty Road 6 (44 miles) time cut-off
80 – Nicholas New (Brooklyn Park, Minn.) – Crosby (63 miles)
84 – Tony Oveson (International Falls, Minn.) – Cty Road 6 (44 miles)
92 – Jesse Price (West St. Paul, Minn.) – Finland (Mile 50)
96 – Andrew Sandor (Kenyon, Minn.) – Crosby (63 miles)
102 – Dave Schuneman (Duluth, Minn.) – Sugarloaf (72 miles)
104 – Dallas Sigurdur (Winnipeg, Manitoba) – Cty Road 6 (44 miles)
107 – John Stewart (Shakopee, Minn.) – Findland (50 miles)
118 – Joe Wiley (Nashville, Tenn.) – Tettegouche (35 miles)
119 – Stephen Wilkinson (Cambridge, Md.) – Silver Bay (Mile 25)
120 – Ben Woodbeck (South Fork, Colo.) – Tettegouche (Mile 35)
122 – Pam Wright (Hudson, Wis.) – Finland (Mile 50)
127 – Robert Buglass (Nashotah, Wis.) – Tettegouche (Mile 35)
128 – John Buglass (Nashotah, Wis.) – Tettegouche (35 Miles)
129 – Steve Conn (Crystal Lake, Ill.) – Crosby (63 miles)
136 – Shelly Thompson (Duluth, Minn.) – Unkown

Did Not Start
30 – Jason Doyle (Shorewood, Minn.)
35 – Chris Gardner (Duluth, Minn.)
40 – Harriet Greenie-Hernd (St. Paul, Minn.)
46 – Paul Hasse (Minneapolis, Minn.)
57 – Veronica Jarlehag (Calgary, Alberta)
58 – Wayne Jenderny (Edina, Minnesota)
87 – Jeff Pasternak (Rochester, Minn.)
108 – Adam Sullivan (Manchester, N.H.)
112 – Ali Turfe (Ann Arbor, Mich.)
132 – Mike Wolkowicz (New Lenox, Ill.)

50-Mile Did Not Finish
536 – Sven Hoaglund (La Crosse, Wis.) – Crosby (11 miles)
611 – Jerry Albertson (River Falls, Wis.) – Sonju Lk Rd.

Superior Fall Trail Race
100MI, 50MI, 26.2MI Trail Race(s)
Lutsen, Minnesota
(approx 4hrs North of Minneapolis, MN)
September 11 & 12, 2020
100MI Friday 8:00AM
50MI Saturday 5:15AM
26.2MI Saturday 8:00AM

Registration / Lottery:
Registration via 15 day lottery registration period.
Opens Wednesday January 1st, 2020 – 12:01AM CST
Closes Wednesday January 15th, 2020 – 11:59PM CST
Complete Lottery / Registration Details HERE

Directions:
100MI Start: Gooseberry Falls State Park, MN HERE
50MI Start: Finland Rec Center – Finland, MN HERE
26.2MI Start: Cramer Road – Schroder, MN HERE
Races Finish: Carbibou Highlands – Lutsen, MN HERE

Terrain:
The Superior Fall Trail Races 100MI, 50MI & 26.2MI are run on rugged, rooty, rocky, 95% single-track trail with near constant climbs and descents.  The race is held on the Superior Hiking Trail in the Sawtooth Mountains paralleling Lake Superior in Northern Minnesota / not far from the Canadian border.  The race located approximately 4 hours North of Minneapolis, Minnesota.   The Superior Fall Trail Races are very difficult / challenging races and are probably not a good choice for your first trail or ultra race (see Registration Info for qualifying requirements).

100 Mile:
Point to Point 103.3 Miles
Elevation Gain 21,000 FT
Elevation Loss 21,000 FT
NET Elevation Change 42,000 FT
13 Aid Stations
38 hour time limit
Complete 100MI Info HERE

50 Mile:
Point to Point 52.1 Miles
Elevation Gain 12,500 FT
Elevation Loss 12,500 FT
NET Elevation Change 25,000 FT
7 Aid Stations
16.75 hour time limit
Complete 50MI Info HERE

26.2 Mile:
Point to point 26.2 Miles
Elevation Gain 5,500 FT
Elevation Loss 5,500 FT
NET Elevation Change 11,000 FT
3 Aid Stations
14 hour cutoff
Complete 26.2MI Info HERE

More About the Race:
The Superior Trail 100 was founded in 1991 when there was no more than a dozen or so 100 mile trail races in the USA, back then if you wanted to run a 100, you had choices like Western States, Hardrock, Leadville, Wasatch, Cascade Crest, Umstead, Massanutten and Superior . Superior quickly earned it’s reputation of its namesake today – Rugged, Relentless and Remote and is known as one of the tougher 100 mile trail races.  Superior lives on now as one of the “legacy 100 milers” and is considered by many to be one of the most challenging, prestigious and beautiful 100 mile trail races in the country. Shortly after the inception of the 100, the Superior 50 was started and in the early 2000’s the Moose Mountain Marathon was added. None of the history or tradition of this race has been lost and is a great event for those looking for a world-class event with a low-key, old-school 100 miler feel.  The Superior Trail Race is put on by ultrarunners for ultrarunners.

More About the Area:
The North Shore of Lake Superior runs from Duluth, Minnesota at the Southwestern end of the lake, to Thunder Bay and Nipigon, Ontario, Canada, in the North to Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, in the east. The shore is characterized by alternating rocky cliffs and cobblestone beaches, with rolling hills and ridges covered in boreal forest inland from the lake, through which scenic rivers and waterfalls descend as they flow to Lake Superior. The shoreline between the city of Duluth to the international border at Grand Portage as the North Shore.  Lake Superior is considered the largest freshwater lake in the world by surface area. It is the world’s third-largest freshwater lake by volume and the largest by volume in North America.  The Superior Hiking Trail, also known as the SHT, is a 310-mile long distance hiking single-track hiking trail in Northeastern Minnesota that follows the ridgeline overlooking Lake Superior for most of its length. The trail travels through forests of birch, aspen, pine, fir, and cedar. Hikers and runners enjoy views of boreal forests, the Sawtooth Mountains, babbling brooks, rushing waterfalls, and abundant wildlife. The lowest point on the trail is 602 feet above sea level and the highest point is 1,829 feet above sea level.