Tag Archives: Blake Benke

Diane Benke’s Swedish Swimrun: Not For Slackers

On September 2, Diane Benke will run 11 miles on a rocky trail, from one end of a Swedish island to another.

But that’s not the half of it.

Or even 1/46th.

The cross-island run is just one element in the day-long Ötillö Swimrun World Championship.

The endurance sport combines open-water swimming and trail running. Two competitors — tethered together — swim from one island to the next. They clamber ashore, untie themselves, run across that isle, then jump in the water to do it again.

The Ötillö event in the Stockholm archipelago involves 46 transitions: water to land, and vice versa. She’ll race across 24 islands in all.

I’m exhausted just writing about it.

Swimming in the Ötillö swim run …

For Diane — a Westport mom of 2 teenage boys — it will be a walk in the park.

Well, maybe not quite. But Diane is not plunging into this unprepared.

The Short Hills, New Jersey native swam in high school. She got into marathons and triathlons as “an outlet, and something social” while building her career in marketing and consulting.

Her coach introduced her to a Marine he’d served with, Blake Benke. They had a mutual interest in endurance sport: He was an Ironman competitor.

They married, moved to Danbury for his job, then 15 years ago came to Westport.

The Benkes discovered this is “an amazing, active community for athletes.” They run, swim and bike with friends.

And, Diane notes, “Westport has its own triathlon, point-to-point open water swim, and summer running series.”

… then transitioning to an island …

Diane loved the open water swimming portion of triathlons. But though she wold emerge from the water in the lead, she was soon passed by bikers.

When a triathlon friend told her about swimrun, she thought, “Perfect! No bikes!”

She did her first swimrun in Boston Harbor before COVID. She was intrigued that — in contrast to triathlon, with its “hardcore competitors and fancy bikes” — this was “more about the environment, being in nature, with lots of camaraderie.”

Though fast-growing, swimrun is still in its infancy, Diane says. The community is “tight and friendly, from all over the country. We get a lot of joy from this.”

As a wife and mother with many responsibilities, leading a fast-paced life swimrun is “uniquely mine,” Diane says.

The physical demands are great. But so is the mental aspect. She must focus hard, on ever-changing tides, currents, weather, shipping lanes, “things you can’t control” — and of course the grueling, quick transitions from water to land, then back again.

… and trail running.

Competitors must carry everything they need. In Maine, she lost a water flash when she forgot to zip up her wet suit.

Earlier this month, to prepare for the Swedish swimrun, Diane headed to Casco Bay, Maine. She felt good.

But, she notes, that event was only half the distance of the upcoming one. In Sweden she’ll swim 5.6 miles, and run 38 miles.

They’ll start around 6 a.m. Cut-off points are at 9 and 11:15 a.m. If a competitor has not reached that spot, they cannot continue. Everyone must finish by sunset; if they don’t, their swimrun ends then.

After tearing a hamstring in March, Diane has been training more than 15 hours a week, all summer. She runs all over Westport and Fairfield — often wearing a wet suit — and swims and runs from Compo Beach to Sherwood Island, then back.

She trains with Pete Roper, a Fairfield resident who is also going to Otillo.

But he’s not Diane’s partner. She’ll run and swim with Chrissy Halioris, who lives in Louisville, Kentucky.

Diane Benke (right) with her partner Chrissy Halioris, at the Casco Bay Swimrun earlier this month. (Photos courtesy of Ötillö USA)

“She does mostly lake swimming. She doesn’t have cold water and ocean experience,” Diane says. “But she’s a very strong runner.”

The women met for the first time at a swimrun this past November, in Austin, Texas. Since then they’ve developed a friendship — and a high level of trust.

Diane will bring 3 different wet suits to Sweden. The Baltic Sea can be cold, and she has no idea what the weather will be like the day of the event.

She’ll be buoyed by her husband Blake.

Blake Benke

He’s no slouch in the endurance sports world himself. Click here to read an “06880” story about his 2013 adventure: a 153-mile (that’s right) Spartathlon race in Greece, tracing the epic journey of Pheidippides from Athens to Sparta.

Benke — with 2 young kids, and a full-time job on Wall Street — finished in 28 hours, 29 minutes and 34 seconds. He was the top US finisher (13th overall).

This time, he’ll be in a support role. He’s recovering from hip resurfacing in June.

Their 2 sons — Max, a sophomore who runs cross country at Staples, and Alex, a Hopkins 8th grader — will stay home, for school.

“I think they like what I do. It keeps me from bugging them about other things,” Diane says.

“They’re used to what Blake and I do. It seems pretty normal in our household.”

So normal, in fact, that sometimes on a training run, Diane will see Max with his Staples track teammates.

She has prepared well for next month’s 24-island, 13-hour swim-and-run in the Swedish archipelago.

But she is realistic.

“My goal is to not die, and finish happy,” she says.

“Look. I’m over 50. I’m 5-foot-nothing. I’m just treating this as an epic adventure.”

It sure is.

Good luck, Diane Benke. We’ll be following your Ötillö swimrun avidly.

From the comfort of our homes.

(To learn more about the Ötillö swimrun, click here.)

(Where else but “06880” would you learn about remarkable Westpoters like these? Please click here to support our work — and keep stories like this one coming. Thank you!) 

Blake Benke, Pheidippides And The Wall Street Journal

On Thursday, the Wall Street Journal took a break from covering the government shutdown, to run a sports story.

Not just any sports story, though — a Q-and-A on Blake Benke. He’s a 37-year-old ultramarathoner from Westport, who “trains by running 31-mile loops of the entire island of Manhattan.”

Last month, Benke competed in his longest race ever: “the 153-mile (153 miles!) Spartathlon in Greece, which traces the epic journey of Pheidippides from Athens to Sparta.”

Blake Benke

Blake Benke

Benke — who has 2 kids, and still manages to find time to work on Wall Street — finished in 28 hours, 29 minutes and 34 seconds. He was the top US finisher (13th overall).

I got tired just reading about his accomplishments. But I rallied, and with the adrenaline pumping managed to pick out the best parts of the WSJ interview.

OK, so how you feeling for a man who ran 153 miles in basically one day?

Good. For the most part, I feel pretty recovered. My legs…they’re relatively good. The only real issue is a little fatigue from jet lag, which usually takes a couple of days.

You’ve done a lot of endurance events in the U.S. How was Spartathlon different?

The international feel was a really amazing feeling, being one of a few Americans. And then this one’s considered kind of like the Mount Everest of road ultramarathons. My strength is the road ultramarathons, not so much high-altitude, trail 100-milers, just because I don’t train up there. But roads can be very unforgiving, too. It takes usually someone that can take the pounding.

But the landscape of this one was amazing. You start in the city, but then you’re going along the coastline. You’re going through olive groves, goat farms—you really got to see the country. Even my crew, they were amazed at what they saw along the way and the people they met. It was amazing how many people had spent time in New York.

Did you get lonely at all?

Oh, yeah. Absolutely. There’s always self-doubt. There were times when you feel off. For the most part, I felt pretty good. The night [running] went fairly well for me because I had a lot of downhill too, which helped. Really the worst part for me was the second day when the sun comes up and you start to feel that heat again. That heat was just pulverizing. Luckily I finished early.

What was crossing that line like?

Amazing. First of all, when you come down, you make a turn that’s probably a quarter of a mile. The streets are lined with people and kids, and the kids come and they’re right alongside of you. Then all of a sudden they played “Chariots of Fire” and you officially finish when you touch [a statue of] King Leonidas. I have never experienced anything like that.

Blake Benke, finishing a normal race.

Blake Benke, finishing a normal race.

Now do you have a newfound appreciation for Pheidippides?

Oh yeah. Total appreciation for the distance and the history of the race.

How many pairs of shoes do you go through?

I went through 1½ pairs. I started running in a pair of shoes and my big toe kept hitting the front of the shoe. It really hurt. So I swapped [one] out. I always bring a half-size bigger, so I’m like, “Give me a left shoe.” I was the man with one blue shoe. I swapped out the left shoe and it made all the difference in the world.

Have you gone on a run since you got back?

No. I think I’m going to try not to run for a month. Now I have some time to get a physical and take care of some other items. It’s a good time to rest and let the body heal up. I’m energized. I think there will be some type of return, but not for maybe a year or two.

Are you going to lie on the couch and eat a zillion potato chips?

I don’t think so. I’ll probably just do some more cross-training. I’ll stay fit. But I’m definitely going to back off!

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“06880” readers: If you have the energy to read the entire interview, click here.