Archive April 29, 2025

The runner who went viral and sparked a campaign for change for women

Sophie Power signed up for an ultramarathon before even laced up her trainers for her first run.

What was a new challenge at first as a result of being made redundant has since become a life-changing passion that has enabled positive changes for women in sport.

In 2018, a photograph of Power breastfeeding her then three-month-old son during a 106-mile race went viral.

She could not take her place until she was ready to compete, which highlighted what she thought was a pressing issue facing mothers and women.

A starting dilemma

Shortly after being fired from her banking job, Power signed up for her first 250-kilometer (155-mile) ultramarathon at the age of 26.

A friend recently completed the challenge himself and suggested she try it because he believed she might have the endurance she needed from her time serving the air squadron at university, even though she wasn’t and never had been.

“I went for my first run the next day and realised pretty quickly that I loved ultra-running. The range of incredible people you meet [who] you wouldn’t find in everyday life, the 42-year-old Surrey resident told BBC Sport.

And really, really pushing my body in a whole new direction.

Immediately hooked, Power devoted her time to training and travelling to compete in stage races around world.

Phil Hill/@the_PHBalance

Having given up her entry to the iconic Ultra Trail du Mont Blanc (UTMB) race while she recovered from the birth of her first child, Donnacha, three years before, she was not prepared to do so again.

At the time, UTMB had no policy for pregnant deferral, like many other races.

Power entered the 106-mile race with the intention of starting and possibly walking the first 10 kilometers despite being unable to run so soon after giving birth.

Yet 43.5 hours after setting off she completed the challenge, that included 10, 000m of climbing, inside the cut-off time, walking the whole way except for a short stretch after one of the highest points when she was worried she might get hypothermia. With Donnacha, who was then three years old, she crossed the line.

The image that helped spark change

As he frequently does at his ultra events, French photographer Berg, Alexis was at UTMB to document the 2018 race. And at one of the refueling stations, he discovered something he had never seen at a previous event.

“I knew it was unusual. He claimed that Sophie was the cause of everything that happened at the time, even though it was impossible to imagine the photo’s impact.

Power breastfeeding her son while taking a break from the race, as he captured.

“That photo has undoubtedly changed the course of my life. She said, “I worked out, I should never have crossed that starting line.”

Sophie Power [right] breast-feeding her three-month-old babyBerg, Alexis

Power wanted to make sure that returning mothers faced the same choice and risked harm to their bodies as she had.

She founded the charity SheRaces with the core aim of breaking down barriers preventing women from entering events alongside men and safeguarding returning mothers.

Many male directors contacted her almost immediately after the photo went viral, complaining that their programs had included pregnancy deferrals and that they had never considered it.

She spoke with more than 2,000 women to find out what prevented them from competing alongside men in the first round.

Her research went far beyond elite level sport. Power isn’t a professional athlete herself, and she has a real interest in helping other women and girls who have been similar to her.

“Girls leave sports at such a high rate. There’s a massive dream deficit for girls compared to boys”, she said.

Power believes that the language used to promote sports and sporting events is a significant factor in this.

It’s “the hardest, the toughest, the baddest,” she said, and for many women that’s quite off-putting.

“Driving change and winning battles”

The result of her research was a set of nine principles that organisers could commit to in order to make their events more inclusive for women.

Changes to cut-off times, providing female toilets, period products, changing facilities, and event T-shirts made specifically for female runners, rather than unisex ones for all, and safeguarding and harassment policies were among these measures.

The inclusion of equal coverage for the female race on social media platforms and prizes for the female competition are considered criteria for elite races.

Power has seen change in some of the world’s biggest races.

People who are pregnant, have a pregnant partner, or are adopting or giving birth via surrogacy have the right to a full refund and priority re-entry for up to five years under UTMB’s policy since 2023 for some of its marquee events.

Runners outside Buckingham Palace in the 2025 London Marathon Getty Images

Mothers are now required to pay the entrance fee for a second time when using the deferral scheme, she said, but all of the marathons in New York, Boston, and London now have pregnancy deferrals in place.

According to her organization’s requirements, races are required to implement a two-year deferral to give pregnant women the opportunity to fully recover from their pregnancies.

“The majority of races are commercial, it’s a business. The guidelines’ goal is to almost non-cost, so they’re going to do it if they can get more people on their start lines. She said, “It’s a no-brainer.”

“There are a lot of brands out there who say they are pro-women, yet they’re sponsoring women’s races that don’t have pregnancy deferrals, that don’t treat women equally.

The voice of female athletes is not valued by dinosaurs, as they are.

I put the London Marathon in that category because there are other races that still need improvement. They have listened to us, they are phenomenally inclusive, they’ve got loads of initiatives that they put out for diversity on their start lines, but they still want to make women pay twice for their place when they have a baby.

Many race organisers are changing and improving, but I’ve definitely lost faith in some of them. We’re winning so many battles and causing so much change, but you always feel like you’re going to fail.

pushing her body to new heights

Sophie Power running at nightPhil Hill/@the_PHBalance

As the scale of her work and its influence has grown, Power’s propensity for testing her physical limits has grown with it.

She set a new Guinness world record for the fastest woman to run Ireland’s length last year, breaking her previous record.

Power broke Mimi Anderson’s previous record by more than three hours by completing the grueling 340-mile journey in three days, 12 hours, and eight minutes.

The route took her through Munster, where husband John was born, and to County Cork, where many of the Power family live, running through torrential rainfall, experiencing the early stages of sun stroke and sleeping for little more than two hours, while sustaining herself on a diet of jam-filled tortilla wraps, gels, chews and ice cream.

After consuming nothing but fruit and sweets for two days, she had two burns on her tongue. She pushed herself to the point of exhaustion.

” I was seeing nativity and Christmas scenes everywhere in this town. Additionally, the trees were completely plastic. She said, “The hallucinations were phenomenal, crazy.”

She has since gone on to set a second world record for the longest distance covered on a treadmill by a female in 48 hours and will be hosting her own women-only ultra races in the Peak District in August.

How will she be able to tell when she has succeeded in her goals?

She continued, “My ultimate goal for SheRaces is that we don’t exist because every woman can get on the start line,” she continued.

Sophie Power asleep on gravel during her Ireland challengePhil Hill/@the_PHBalance

related subjects

  • Athletics

The runner who went viral and sparked a campaign for change

Sophie Power signed up for an ultramarathon before even laced up her trainers for her first run.

What was a new challenge at first as a result of being made redundant has since become a life-changing passion that has enabled positive changes for women in sport.

In 2018, a photograph of Power breastfeeding her then three-month-old son during a 106-mile race went viral.

She could not take her place until she was ready to compete, which highlighted what she thought was a pressing issue facing mothers and women.

A starting dilemma

Shortly after being fired from her banking job, Power signed up for her first 250-kilometer (155-mile) ultramarathon at the age of 26.

A friend recently completed the challenge himself and suggested she try it because he believed she might have the endurance she needed from her time serving the air squadron at university, even though she wasn’t and never had been.

“I went for my first run the next day and realised pretty quickly that I loved ultra-running. The range of incredible people you meet [who] you wouldn’t find in everyday life, the 42-year-old Surrey resident told BBC Sport.

And really, really pushing my body in a whole new direction.

Immediately hooked, Power devoted her time to training and travelling to compete in stage races around world.

Phil Hill/@_thephbalance

Having given up her entry to the iconic Ultra Trail du Mont Blanc (UTMB) race while she recovered from the birth of her first child, Donnacha, three years before, she was not prepared to do so again.

At the time, UTMB had no policy for pregnant deferral, like many other races.

Power entered the 106-mile race with the intention of starting and possibly walking the first 10 kilometers despite being unable to run so soon after giving birth.

Yet 43.5 hours after setting off she completed the challenge, that included 10, 000m of climbing, inside the cut-off time, walking the whole way except for a short stretch after one of the highest points when she was worried she might get hyperthermia. With Donnacha, who was then three years old, she crossed the line.

The image that helped spark change

As he frequently does at his ultra events, French photographer Berg, Alexis was at UTMB to document the 2018 race. And at one of the refueling stations, he discovered something he had never seen at a previous event.

“I knew it was unusual. He claimed that Sophie was the cause of everything that happened at the time, even though it was impossible to imagine the photo’s impact.

Power breastfeeding her son while taking a break from the race, as he captured.

“That photo has undoubtedly changed the course of my life. She said, “I worked out, I should never have crossed that starting line.”

Sophie Power [right] breast-feeding her three-month-old babyBerg, Alexis

Power wanted to make sure that returning mothers faced the same choice and risked harm to their bodies as she had.

She founded the charity SheRaces with the core aim of breaking down barriers preventing women from entering events alongside men and safeguarding returning mothers.

Many male directors contacted her almost immediately after the photo went viral, complaining that their programs had included pregnancy deferrals and that they had never considered it.

She spoke with more than 2,000 women to find out what prevented them from competing alongside men in the first round.

Her research went far beyond elite level sport. Power isn’t a professional athlete herself, and she has a real interest in helping other women and girls who have been similar to her.

“Girls leave sports at such a high rate. There’s a massive dream deficit for girls compared to boys”, she said.

Power believes that the language used to promote sports and sporting events is a significant factor in this.

It’s “the hardest, the toughest, the baddest,” she said, and for many women that’s quite off-putting.

“Driving change and winning battles”

The result of her research was a set of nine principles that organisers could commit to in order to make their events more inclusive for women.

Changes to cut-off times, providing female toilets, period products, changing facilities, and event T-shirts made specifically for female runners, rather than unisex ones for all, and safeguarding and harassment policies were among these measures.

The inclusion of equal coverage for the female race on social media platforms and prizes for the female competition are considered criteria for elite races.

Power has seen change in some of the world’s biggest races.

People who are pregnant, have a pregnant partner, or are adopting or giving birth via surrogacy have the right to a full refund and priority re-entry for up to five years under UTMB’s policy since 2023 for some of its marquee events.

Runners outside Buckingham Palace in the 2025 London Marathon Getty Images

Mothers are now required to pay the entrance fee for a second time when using the deferral scheme, she said, but all of the marathons in New York, Boston, and London now have pregnancy deferrals in place.

Races are required to implement a two-year deferral in accordance with her charity’s criteria to give pregnant women the opportunity to fully recover from their pregnancies.

“The majority of races are commercial, it’s a business. The guidelines’ goal is to almost non-cost, so they’re going to do it if they can get more people on their start lines. She said, “It’s a no-brainer.”

“There are a lot of brands out there who say they are pro-women, yet they’re sponsoring women’s races that don’t have pregnancy deferrals, that don’t treat women equally.

The voice of female athletes is not valued by dinosaurs, as they are.

I put the London Marathon in that category because there are other races that still need improvement. They have listened to us, they are phenomenally inclusive, they’ve got loads of initiatives that they put out for diversity on their start lines, but they still want to make women pay twice for their place when they have a baby.

Many race organisers are changing and improving, but I’ve definitely lost faith in some of them. We’re winning so many battles and causing so much change, but you always feel like you’re going to fail.

pushing her body to new heights

Sophie Power running at nightPhil Hill/@_thephbalance

As the scale of her work and its influence has grown, Power’s propensity for testing her physical limits has grown with it.

She set a new Guinness world record for the fastest woman to run Ireland’s length last year, breaking her previous record.

Power broke Mimi Anderson’s previous record by more than three hours by completing the grueling 340-mile journey in three days, 12 hours, and eight minutes.

The route took her through Munster, where husband John was born, and to County Cork, where many of the Power family live, running through torrential rainfall, experiencing the early stages of sun stroke and sleeping for little more than two hours, while sustaining herself on a diet of jam-filled tortilla wraps, gels, chews and ice cream.

After consuming nothing but fruit and sweets for two days, she had two burns on her tongue. She pushed herself to the point of exhaustion.

” I was seeing nativity and Christmas scenes everywhere in this town. Additionally, the trees were completely plastic. She said, “The hallucinations were phenomenal, crazy.”

She has since gone on to set a second world record for the longest distance covered on a treadmill by a female in 48 hours and has once again been selected for Great Britain in the 24-hour World Championships in France this October.

In August, she will also hold her own women-only ultra races in the Peak District.

How will she be able to tell when she has succeeded in her goals?

” My ultimate goal for SheRaces is that we don’t exist because it’s not needed anymore and every woman is able to get on the start line, “she added.

Sophie Power asleep on gravel during her Ireland challengePhil Hill/@_thephbalance

Related topics

  • Athletics

Gormley ‘doesn’t lose sleep’ over last year’s final omission

Inpho

Joe Gormley, a Cliftonville striker, claimed he “does not lose sleep” over not appearing in the Irish Cup final last year.

Only Gormley was the Reds’ only substitute who didn’t play in Windsor Park’s 3-1 extra-time victory over Linfield.

Gormley says he looks back fondly on the day and is proud that Ronan Hale scored Cliftonville’s third goal despite not making it off the bench.

You do occasionally consider not featuring, he said, but I wouldn’t be up for it, he told BBC Sport NI.

It would “would mean the world would score.”

The 35-year-old will face Dungannon Swifts in Saturday’s fourth Irish Cup final against the Reds.

In contrast to last year, Gormley almost certainly will start the match with 20 league goals, the winner of the BetMcLean Cup final, and the opener against Ards in the Irish Cup semi-final defeat.

Gormley is hoping the Reds can beat a high-flying Swifts side and keep the Irish Cup, despite his desire to play in the final while his family is watching in the stands.

“I’ve lost two Irish Cup finals, and they’re still amazing, but last year we won,” he continued. “It’s amazing how you feel now that you’ve been through it for 45 years,” he continued.

“It would mean the world to me to score this year, but I always believe that Cliftonville’s main goal is to win.”

The man never lets you down, he says.

Rory Hale with the Irish CupInpho

Rory Hale, the captain of Cliftonville, praised the forward’s mentality and said he was eager to see Gormley make an impression in the cup final.

The man never let you down, he said, “I can’t recall the last time he let us down during a training session.”

He says, “He wants to make an impact regardless of whether he plays for 90 minutes or just one minute.”

“It would be wonderful to win the cup final, but it would be even more satisfying to see that man have a significant influence.”

After a 45-year wait for an Irish Cup triumph, Hale was named man-of-the-match in the final of last year’s final thanks to an all-action display.

Due to their difficult league campaign and desire to qualify for Europe, he says there will likely be “a lot more pressure” on this year’s cup final than it did last year.

“We finished the year with a really strong league campaign, and we qualified for Europe before the split. This year’s situation is very different; we’ve dropped to the bottom six, which is disappointing, so this game means a lot to European football, he said.

After a difficult campaign both on and off the pitch, Hale wants to achieve a cup double, which he thinks would be great.

related subjects

  • Irish Football

Annagh reaching Irish Premiership would be ‘unbelievable’

Press of Peacemaker

It would be “unbelievable” for Annagh United to defeat Carrick Rangers in the promotion/relegation play-off and advance to the Irish Premiership, according to Ciaran McGurgan, the manager.

After a successful run of eight straight league victories, Annagh moved up to second place in the championship and a place in the play-offs with a 2-0 victory over Ards on Saturday.

McGurgan hopes they can cross the line at the third attempt after losing to Portadown and Dungannon Swifts in their previous play-offs.

He told BBC Radio Ulster’s Sportsound, “It would be unbelievable if we could reach the Irish Premiership.”

“We’re not under any illusions that this will be a difficult task, but we can hopefully put on a performance.”

This is our third play-off in four years, so I’m hoping it’s lucky to win.

On Tuesday, Annagh hosts Carrick at Tandragee Park before taking on the Premiership side in Taylors Avenue.

McGurgan thinks the Premiership side will benefit from Carrick’s home advantage in the second leg.

We’ve just kept our attention on ourselves because we know what Carrick is all about, because they’re a strong physical team with different characteristics, and because of that, he said.

Unfortunately, these ties seem to favor the Irish Premiership team, but all we can do is try to hold on to something for Friday and see how it goes.

related subjects

  • Irish Football

Butler, Warriors beat Rockets in Game 4; take 3-1 playoff lead

In Game 4 of their first-round playoff series in San Francisco, Jimmy Butler III made a 14-of-27 points comeback from a one-game absence to help the Golden State Warriors defeat the Houston Rockets 109-106.

In the best-of-seven Western Conference gameup on Monday, Brandin Podziemski made six 3-pointers and added 26 points for the Warriors, who led 3-1.

Quinten Post had 13 points off the bench for seventh-seeded Golden State, while Stephen Curry had 17 and Buddy Hield had 15.

Fred VanVleet made eight 3-pointers for the second-seeded Rockets while Alperen Sengun finished with 31 points and 10 rebounds. Houston scored 17 points under the guidance of Men Thompson.

In the final second, the Rockets were able to tie the game, but VanVleet’s long 3-point attempt was off-target.

On Wednesday night in Houston, Game 5 will be played.

Due to a pelvic injury, Butler missed Game 3 and scored just four points in Game 4. The second half of the game ended up being better. He finished the game with 12 free throw attempts and scored all of Golden State’s final five points from the line.

With 58.7 seconds left, Butler made all three of his free throws to give Golden State a 107-104 lead.

With 40. 8 seconds left, the Rockets were within one with Sengun’s driving hoop.

With 6.4 seconds left, Sengun’s 11-footer was off the mark and off-balance for Houston. With four seconds left, Butler made two free throws before VanVleet airballed his shot to the end.

Golden State shot 41.9 percent from the field, including a 3-pointer from range of 17 of 46.

The Rockets shot 49% of their shots from behind the line, and they were 48% of their total. Steven Adams blocked four shots for Houston while Dillon Brooks added 11 points.

Before beginning the third quarter with an 18-1 run, the Warriors had a seven-point lead at half-time.

With 2 minutes, 35 seconds left, the Rockets scored the next seven points before finally knotting the score at 74 with Sengun’s basket.

Podziemski started the quarter with a 3-pointer as Golden State extended its lead to 82-80 heading into the final stanza. With 7:33 left, Houston scored 14 of the next 19 points before scoring Thompson’s basket for a 94-90 lead.

With 2:12 remaining, Golden State had a three-point lead before Butler added four points in a 7-0 run.

With one and a half minutes left, VanVleet then scored a third 3-pointer to make it 104.

Houston held a 57-point lead into the second half thanks to VanVleet’s 12 points in the first half. Before intermission, Podziemski led Golden State by 13.

In Game 4, Jimmy Butler (#10) was the Golden State Warriors’ leading scorer. [Jesse D. Garrabrant/Getty Images via AFP]

Heat is swept by the Cavaliers in a record-setting blowout.

The Cleveland Cavaliers won the NBA playoff game by a 4-0 first-round sweep with a 138-83 victory over the host Miami Heat, which is the fourth-largest winning margin in a playoff game. Donovan Mitchell added 22 points in a prior playoff game on Monday.

De’Andre Hunter led the way with 19 points, 19 rebounds, and 19 first-half steals, while Jarrett Allen added 19 and 19 points.

Bam Adebayo posted 13 points and 12 boards for Miami while Nikola Jovic had a career-high 24 points after missing the first quarter.

The first-seed Cavaliers advanced to the Eastern Conference semifinals with a 6-3 victory, and the eighth-seeded Heat humiliatedly ended their season.

Miami’s biggest postseason defeat came with a 55-point advantage, surpassing the previous 37-point mark set for Game 3 two days earlier.

“We were humbled, but they [the Cavalier] had a lot to do with our appearance,” said Miami coach Erik Spoelstra. “None of us would have anticipated that this series would have ended up this way,” said one viewer. They only added more depth to the situation. These final two games left us without hope.

In the second round of the Eastern Conference playoffs, Cleveland will face either the Indiana Pacers or the Milwaukee Bucks. The Pacers currently lead their best-of-seven series 3-1.

Donovan Mitchell in action.
On April 28, 2025, in Game 4 of the first round of the NBA Eastern Conference playoffs at Kaseya Center in Miami, US, Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell (#45) dribbles the ball.

Cavaliers thrash Miami to win play-off series 4-0

Images courtesy of Getty

Cleveland’s first-round play-off series victory over the Miami Heat earned them a 4-0 victory and a spot in the Eastern Conference semifinals.

The visiting Cavaliers won by the fourth-largest winning margin in an NBA play-off game with the help of Donovan Mitchell, who added 22 points, De’Andre Hunter, who added 19 points, Ty Jerome, who added 18 points, and Evan Mobley, who added 17 points.

Mitchell told TNT television, “We came out here with a goal in mind, to keep our foot on their throat and neck and continue to play 48 minutes of basketball.”

The 55-point victory overpowered the previous best-of-seven series record of 37 points set in the third game.

We were applauded, but Erik Spoelstra, a Miami coach, said, “We were humbled, but they had so much to do with how we looked.”

“None of us would have anticipated that after our two play-ins, this series would have turned out this way.” They only added more depth to the situation. These past two games left us without.

In the following round, the Cavaliers will face either the Milwaukee Bucks or the Indiana Pacers, with the latter having a 3-1 series lead.

The Golden State Warriors defeated the Houston Rockets 109-106 at home to take a 3-1 lead over the Warriors in the Western Conference first-round play-off series in San Francisco.

After missing Game Three with a pelvic injury, Jimmy Butler returned for the Warriors, scoring 14 of his 27 points in the fourth quarter. Teammate Brandin Podziemski also made six three-pointers in his 26 points.

The Warriors’ first half-time lead was seven, before the Warriors went on an 18-point run at the start of the third quarter, but the game was tied at 104 with one minute, 20 seconds left.

For the Rockets, Fred VanVleet scored 24 of his 25 points from three-point range, but he missed a long-range shot that would have tied the game in the closing seconds.

related subjects

  • Basketball