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Video: Woman plans to run 2,620 miles across the length of the UK completely barefoot 

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Video: Woman plans to run 2,620 miles across the length of the UK completely barefoot 
News

News

Video: Woman plans to run 2,620 miles across the length of the UK completely barefoot 

2019-05-25 20:08 Last Updated At:20:09

Anna McNuff started to run barefoot after witnessing people in New Zealand doing it – and decided to give it a go herself.

A female adventurer and former GB rower, who claims to have been “feral” as a child, has shared her plans to run 2,620 miles across the length of the UK, completely barefoot.

A Girl Guides ambassador and motivational speaker, Gloucester-based Anna McNuff, 34 – whose parents also rowed for Great Britain in the Olympics – has been running extreme distances across the world since 2013 – but usually in top-of-the range £100 Brooks sports shoes.

Her barefoot epiphany came during a 2015 trip to New Zealand, when she ran 1,911 miles across the country over 148 days and, inspired by the number of barefoot runners she encountered, after 1,000 miles kicked off her shoes.

A tomboy through and through growing up, she immediately fell into the barefoot running groove, saying: “I was a little bit feral as a child and used to like running around with grazed knees and muddy feet.

“I was always mucking in with my brothers and the boys at school – I think it was only when I was about 20 that I realised I was female!

“My instinct had always been not to wear shoes and I remember my mum always telling me to put them on.”

She continued: “Now, while I’m not a barefoot evangelist, I love it and it has made such an impact on my running style.”

Despite her love of going shoeless as a youngster, growing older, Anna began to conform.

But, inspired by her New Zealand trip, she said: “People there are much happier to run and play sport barefoot, so I thought to myself, ‘Why am I wearing trainers when our feet are built to be free?'”

On returning to the home she shares with her partner Jamie McDonald, 32, a fellow adventurer and motivational speaker, she continued to jog barefoot.

Now, speaking of her next UK running challenge, which will take from June to November, she said: “Feet are amazing, complex machines with over 7,000 nerve endings in each sole and 26 bones in each foot.

“So, in this adventure I’m looking to see if I can coax my feet into doing what they were truly built to do, after a lifetime of being squidged up in shoes.”

Despite her rowing coach mum Sue, 62, and consultant dad Ian, 62, being incredibly sporty, Anna – who has two brothers, accountant Jonty, 32, and project manager Jamie, 36, – recalls her mother’s displeasure at her barefoot antics as a child.

Anna laughed: “In typical mothering fashion, she was always telling me to put some shoes on and keep my feet warm in case I caught a cold.”

A GB rower, although not an Olympian, Anna stopped competing aged 23 and went to work in marketing before getting the sporting itch again and setting off to cycle 11,000 miles around America in 2013.

Since then, her love of adventure has only grown and has seen her complete some ambitious escapades, like a cycle along the Andes mountains and running the 86-mile length of Hadrian’s Wall dressed as a Roman soldier.

Anna, who earns a living giving motivational talks to companies and schoolchildren, then set her sights on running across New Zealand – where she finally freed her feet.

She explained: “It was really liberating to realise that I didn’t have to wear trainers and that this was a way of exercising that people in other parts of the world actually did.”

In England, she graduated her descent into barefoot running, working down from trainers, to shoes, to socks and finally daring to go bare.

Even the inevitable – and often unpleasant – hazards she has encountered have not put her off.

She continued: “I have occasionally stepped on broken glass and in dog mess. But that’s all part of the experience and you pretty quickly grow hard callouses and thick skin on the bottom of your feet.”

Not everyone understands her running style, however, and she has received everything from snide comments to strangers offering to give her their shoes.

She said: “It took a little while to rebalance my muscles  and there were times, at first, when I’d stagger home after running barefoot.

“It feels great now, though. I am lighter on my toes, my joints are under less strain and my thigh and calf muscles have become a lot more toned.

She added: “As for my feet – they’re like panther paws!”

In June, Anna will be starting her next mammoth challenge in the Shetland Islands and will finish in London –  covering the distance of a full marathon most days for 155 days.

“I think it’s something I know I would be able to do wearing shoes, but going barefoot will be a real challenge – which makes it all the more exciting,” said Anna, who is encouraging others to join her at various stages along the way.

She continued: “I admit it’s pretty daunting, too, and I’m terrified that some sort of showstopper event will happen along the way that may prevent me from running.”

But Anna, who will be speaking at girl guiding units along the way, hopes to encourage girls to push themselves beyond their comfort zones.

“The world has become very sanitised these days and people are wrapped up in cotton wool,” she said.

She concluded: “I’m not saying that everyone should be like me and run around with no shoes on, but sometimes doing things that are a little unusual and which stand outside societal norms are the most rewarding of all.”

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Jeremiyah Love is expected to be ready for 7th-seeded Notre Dame in the Orange Bowl

2025-01-05 09:12 Last Updated At:09:20

Notre Dame running back Jeremiyah Love is expected to start Thursday in the Orange Bowl against sixth-seeded Penn State, enabling the seventh-seeded Fighting Irish and their trademark ground game to operate at — or near — full capacity in the first College Football Playoff semifinal.

Love re-injured his ailing right knee late in the third quarter of Notre Dame's 23-10 victory over second-seeded Georgia in the Sugar Bowl. He went into the medical tent twice before returning to the sideline with a hefty brace protecting the knee.

But when coach Marcus Freeman spoke with reporters Saturday, Love did not make the team's injury report.

“The only injury update from the game is Cooper Flanagan will be out for the remainder of the College Football Playoff with a foot injury,” Freeman said, referring to a backup tight end. “We'll miss Coop and love him, but other than that, everybody else was clean. Pretty clean game in terms of injuries.”

That means Love and quarterback Riley Leonard are expected to continue to lead the ground game while backup running backs Jadarian Price and Aneyas Williams provide reinforcements as the Irish (13-1, No. 3 CFP) chase their first national championship game appearance since the end of the 2012 season.

Love did not speak with reporters Saturday and is not scheduled to address the media before facing the Big Ten runner-up Nittany Lions (13-2, No. 5). Price is expected to talk later Saturday.

How critical has Love been to Notre Dame's offense?

He leads the Irish with 1,076 yards and 16 touchdown runs, averages 7.3 yards per carry and set a school record by rushing for scores in 13 consecutive games. The streak ended against Georgia.

Love also set the tone in Notre Dame's first-round victory over 10th-seeded Indiana when he sprinted 98 yards for the first score. It was the longest TD run in playoff history and came on a day Love when was fighting both the flu and the sore knee he hurt in the team's regular-season finale at Southern California.

But stats and his on-field feats don't provide a complete accounting of Love's impact.

He has hurdled 10 defenders this season, including an attempt against the Hoosiers on which he aggravated the knee injury, and his ability to play well despite injury or illness has given the Irish a toughness that resonates throughout the locker room. And his strength and breakaway ability only make Leonard a more dangerous option on the ground.

The result: Notre Dame needed just 90 yards passing to beat the Southeastern Conference champion Bulldogs in New Orleans.

So having Love on the field seems like a must if the Irish are to end their national championship drought at 36 years — the longest gap between title-winning seasons since the Irish captured their first in 1924.

But even if Love isn't at full strength, the Irish have other options.

Leonard already holds the single-season school record for TD runs by a quarterback (15) and needs 169 yards rushing to record his first 1,000-yard season. Price also can be both a breakaway threat and a workhorse back and Williams, a freshman, has worked his way into more action by logging half of his 32 carries over the last four games.

Price promises to be ready for whatever is asked of him.

“I always feel like I could do more every game,” Price said. “The good thing about our victory is that we have another opportunity to do it, so we want to do everything we can to have a better performance.”

The combination has caused plenty of consternation for Notre Dame opponents during a 12-game winning streak that already has produced the first 13-win season in the school's history.

Now Penn States faces another concern — the health of All-American defensive end Abdul Carter. He left the 31-14 Fiesta Bowl victory over third-seeded Boise State with an apparent left arm injury. Coach James Franklin indicated Saturday that Carter could play, though he may be limited.

“He’s doing great, his attitude is great, his mentality has been really good,” Franklin said. “Really it’s going to come down to how he feels and how much practice he gets. I don’t think at this point there’s anything stopping him from playing; it’s how he is able to play.”

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Notre Dame safety Xavier Watts (0) celebrates with teammate Armel Mukam (88) during the second half against Georgia in the quarterfinals of a College Football Playoff, Thursday, Jan. 2, 2025, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

Notre Dame safety Xavier Watts (0) celebrates with teammate Armel Mukam (88) during the second half against Georgia in the quarterfinals of a College Football Playoff, Thursday, Jan. 2, 2025, in New Orleans. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

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