Ida Nilsson

Ida Nilsson (born 8 February 1981) is a Swedish long-distance runner who also competes in ski mountaineering. In 2003 – 2006 she won a total of ten gold medals in Swedish championships in track & field and cross country running, plus two NCAA gold medals. After many years away from training Nilsson won the Swedish championship in ski mountaineering in 2016 and a couple of months later won the prestigious Transvulcania ultramarathon.

Ida Nilsson
Ida Nilsson in December 2016
Personal information
NationalitySwedish
Born (1981-02-08) 8 February 1981 (age 43)
Home townRauma, Norway
Medal record
Track and field
NCAA Outdoor Championships
Silver medal – second place 20023 000 m steeplechase[1]
Silver medal – second place 20033 000 m steeplechase[2]
Gold medal – first place 20043 000 m steeplechase[3]
NCAA Indoor Championships
Gold medal – first place 20055 000 m[4]
Cross country running
Nordic Championships
Bronze medal – third place 20074.6 km[5]
Bronze medal – third place 20087.5 km[6]
Trail running
World Championships
Silver medal – second place202280 km[7]

Childhood and youth

Nilsson hails from Kalmar in the flat southern Sweden.[8] She grew up in a sports family where both her father Carl-Gustaf "Calle" and mother Katarina competed at an elite level. Two brothers, Marcus and David, and a sister, Johanna, have belonged to the Swedish national team in athletics. At the 2002 Swedish cross country championships the family walked home with four gold medals, one silver and one bronze.[9]

In 2001–2005 Nilsson studied at the Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff, USA. She and her sister, Johanna Nilsson, ran for the Northern Arizona Lumberjacks collegiate team and had much success. Nilsson won the 2004 NCAA collegiate outdoor championships in 3000 m steeplechase and 2005 indoor championships in 5000 m. The two sisters were both ranked in the top three of a 2014 poll of greatest women's athletes in the Big Sky Conference. Nilsson won four cross country titles in that regional conference.[10][11] Both were inducted into the Northern Arizona Lumberjacks hall of fame.[12]

Track and field and cross country

Top years

During the first years of the 21st century Nilsson was the Swedish dominant in 5000 metres and 3000 m steeplechase, then a relatively new sport for women. In 2003, she was awarded the prestigious Stora grabbars och tjejers märke for her sports achievements.[13] She finished seventh in the 3000m steeplechase at the 2006 European Athletics Championships in Gothenburg, where she set the Swedish national record at 9:39.24, a personal best. She also participated in the 2005 World Championships in Athletics in Helsinki. In the summer of 2006 Nilsson ran 3000 m in 9:01.01, the fastest time by a Swedish athlete in more than 10 years. Nilsson's personal best for 5000 m is 15:33.18.[14]

Injuries

After leaving college in Arizona Nilsson had a series of injuries, including a stress fracture in her hip joint in 2009. The injury didn't fully heal until the summer of 2013, and Nilsson gave up her track & field career.[10] After this she basically didn't run at all for five years.[15]

Personal bests

The following list is based on information from Nilsson's club Högby IF.[16]

EventYearResult
400 m20001:01:81
800 m20032:12:87
1 500 m20064:18:54
3 000 m20069:01:01
5 000 m200415:33:18
Half marathon201601:18:22
3 000 m steeplechase20069:39:24

Nilsson has never run an official 10 000 m on a track; her best similar performance is 35:03 in a 2016 road race.[17]

Mountain running and ski mountaineering

Chamonix 2016

After many years of serious injuries Nilsson was finally able to run again in 2013. Nilsson: "Now even my body feels better than 10-15 years ago. Now I feel like young again."[18]In 2015 Nilsson won the Swedish mountain marathon Fjällmaraton. Later the same year, in her ultramarathon debut, she placed second in the 90-kilometer Ultravasan in Sweden.[19] In early 2016 she became ski mountaineering Swedish champion at Keb Classic (with Jenny Råghall) and won the Transvulcania mountain ultramarathon in the Canary Islands.[20][21]

Nilsson, who during her track & field career seldom ran as far as 10 km (6.2 mi), now competed in a number of longer races. In 2016 and again in 2017 she became Swedish road running champion in the masters athletics class for women 35 years.[22][23] In the summer of 2016 Nilsson won the Marathon du Mont Blanc in Chamonix, France, proving that the unexpected Transvulcania win was not a fluke and planting Nilsson firmly in the world elite.

During the winter 2015 – 2016 Nilsson lived in Chamonix, France, and trained ski mountaineering with Emelie Forsberg. According to Nilsson it was Forsberg who inspired her to test more ultratrail.[8][24][25] In running events Nilsson competes for Högby IF in Sweden, Måndalen IL in Norway and Salomon Running internationally.[26] In ski mountaineering her club affiliation is Fjällframfart in Swedish events.

Nilsson has trained as a cook, a wilderness and adventure guide and as masseur.[27]For a living she has run a small company registered in 2015 as a sole proprietorship called Running soul – Ida Nilsson, that according to the Facebook site with the same name offered "massage, sports massage, yoga classes, workshops and training camps for runners".[28]As of 2018 Nilsson lives in Måndalen in the Rauma municipality in the Norwegian county Møre og Romsdal, and makes a living from skyrunning and ski mountaineering.[29]In 2018 Nilsson together with fellow athletes Emelie Forsberg and Mimmi Kotka started Moonvalley, an on-line shop dedicated to organic energy bars and sportsdrinks.[30]

Results

Cross country and sky running

Shangri-La 2017

The following list includes only results after Nilsson's comeback after her five-year injury period. A fair number of the races, in particular in her native country Sweden, are asphalt races or otherwise not strictly cross country or mountain running.

2014

  • 1st, Spring en mil vinn en bil 10 km (6.2 mi), Sweden[31]

2015

  • 2nd, Kungsholmen Runt 10 km (6.2 mi), Sweden[32]
  • 2nd, Spring en mil vinn en bil 10 km (6.2 mi), Sweden[33]
  • 1st, Böda Beach run 10 km (6.2 mi), Sweden[34]
  • 2nd, Malkars halvmara 21 km (13 mi), Sweden[35]
  • 1st, Hornindal runt 38 km (24 mi), Norway[36]
  • 3rd, Vetenløpet VK, Norway[37]
  • 1st, Victorialoppet 9 km (5.6 mi), Sweden[38]
  • 1st, Hornsjön Runt 11 km (6.8 mi), Sweden[39]
  • 6th, Peak Performance Vertical K, Sweden[40]
  • 1st, Fjällmaraton 44 km (27 mi), Sweden[41]
  • 1st, Salomon Trail Tour Järvsö 21 km (13 mi), Sweden[42]
  • 2nd, Ultravasan 90 km (56 mi), Sweden[19]
  • 2nd, Lidingöloppet 30 km (19 mi), Sweden[43]
  • 1st, Salomon Trail Tour Sälen, Sweden 21 km (13 mi), Sweden[44]

2016

  • 1st, Nordic Classic Running 21 km (13 mi), Sweden[45]
  • 1st, Salomon City Trail 14 km (8.7 mi), Sweden[46]
  • 1st, Transvulcania 73 km (45 mi), Spain[21]
  • 15th, Göteborgsvarvet 21 km (13 mi), Sweden[47][a] (personal best for the half marathon distance)
  • 1st, Mönsterås Stadslopp 10 km (6.2 mi), Sweden[48]
  • 3rd, Sthlm 10 10 km (6.2 mi), Sweden (also Swedish championship in road running, won the masters athletics class for women 35 years, personal best for the 10 km road running distance)[17][22]
  • 1st, Öland Ultra 51 km (32 mi), Sweden[49]
  • 6th, Marathon du Mont Blanc Vertical km, France[50]
  • 1st, Marathon du Mont Blanc 42 km (26 mi), France[51]
  • 1st, Böda Beach run 10 km (6.2 mi), Sweden (2nd straight victory)[52]
  • 10th, Dolomites Sky Race, 22 km, Italy[53]
  • 4th, Buff Epic Trail 42 km (26 mi), Spain (also World Championship in the Sky discipline)[54]
  • 1st, Salomon 27K 27 km (17 mi), Sweden (course record)[55]
  • 3rd, Peak Performance Vertical K, Sweden[56]
  • 1st, Fjällmaraton 44 km (27 mi), Sweden (2nd straight victory, course record)[57]
  • 1st, The Rut 50K, 50 km (31 mi), Montana, USA[58]
  • 1st, Nordic Extreme running, 12 km (7.5 mi), Sweden[59]
  • 2nd, Trail de l'Arclusaz 26.7 km (16.6 mi), France[60]
  • 1st, The North Face Endurance Challenge 50 mi (80 km), San Francisco, USA[61]
  • 1st, Sylvesterloppet, 10 km (6.2 mi), Sweden (new course record)[62][63]

2017

  • 1st, Ultimate Tsaigu Trail 50 km (31 mi), China[64]
  • 1st, Yading VK, China[65]
  • 1st, Yading Kora Ultra 46 km (29 mi), China[66]
  • 1st, Transvulcania 73 km (45 mi), Spain (2nd straight victory, new course record)[67]
  • 1st, Åndalsnesløpet 5 km (3.1 mi), Norway[68]
  • 3rd, Sthlm 10 10 km (6.2 mi), Sweden (also Swedish championship in road running, won the masters athletics class for women 35 years for a 2nd straight victory)[23]
  • 1st, Öland Ultra 51 km (32 mi), Sweden (2nd straight victory, course record)[69]
  • 2nd Marathon du Mont Blanc 42 km (26 mi), Italy[70]
  • 1st, Böda Beach run 10 km (6.2 mi), Sweden (3rd straight victory)[71]
  • 3rd, Malkars halvmara 21 km (13 mi), Sweden[72]
  • 2nd, Mefjellet Opp, Vertical km, Norway[73]
  • 1st, Swiss Alpine Marathon 78 km (48 mi), Switzerland[74]
  • 1st, Fjällmaraton 44 km (27 mi), Sweden (3rd straight victory)[75]
  • 1st, Ultravasan 90 km (56 mi), Sweden (new course record)[76]
  • 3rd, Lidingöloppet 30 km (19 mi), Sweden[77]
  • 2nd, Grand Trail des Templiers 76 km (47 mi), France[78]
  • 1st, North Face Endurance Challenge 50 mi (80 km), California, USA (2nd straight victory)[79]

2018

2019

  • 1st The Coastal Challenge 236 km (147 mi), 6 stages, Costa Rica (new course record; 2nd overall)[96]
  • 1st Monument Valley Half Marathon 21 km (13 mi), USA[97]
  • 1st Crown King Scramble 50 km (31 mi), USA (new course record)[98][99]
  • 1st Skälbyloppet 8 km (5.0 mi), Sweden[100]

2021

  • 1st Victorialoppet 9 km (5.6 mi), Sweden (second victory)[101]
  • 1st Böda Sandsloppet 6.5 km (4.0 mi), Sweden[102]
  • 1st Salomon 27K 27 km (17 mi), Sweden (second victory)[103]
  • 1st Fjällmaraton 45 km (28 mi), Sweden (fourth victory)[104]
  • 2nd Idre Fjällmaraton 45 km (28 mi), Sweden[105]
  • 3rd, Romsdalseggenløpet 8.6 km (5.3 mi), Norway[106]
  • 1st, Marató Pirineu 42 km (26 mi), Spain[107]

2022

2023

  • 5th, Black Canyon 100 mi (160 km), USA[110]

World Cup wins

#SeasonDateRaceDiscipline
120167 MayTransvulcania UltramarathonSky Ultra
24 SeptemberThe Rut 50KSky Ultra
4201713 MayTransvulcania UltramarathonSky Ultra
4201812 MayTransvulcania UltramarathonSky Ultra
527 MayMaratòn Alpina Zegama-AizkorriSky Classic

Ski mountaineering

YearEventRace result
IndividualVerticalSprintTeamTeam mates
2015Kittelfjäll, Sweden1[111][b]
2015Keb Classic, Sweden2[112]3[112]Lovisa Norén
2015Narvik Rando, Norway2[113]
2016Relais des Chamois, France1[114]Emelie Forsberg
2016Font Blanca, Andorra13[115]14[116]
2016Valtellina Orobie, Italy16[117]21[118]
2016Transcavallo, Italy9[119]20[120]
2016Altitoy-Ternua, France5[121]Malene Haukøy
2016Pierra Menta, France5[121]Marta Riba
2016Mondolé Ski Alp, Italy9[122]9[123]
2016Narvik Rando, Norway2[124]
2016Keb Classic, Sweden1[125]1[20][b]Jenny Råghall
2016Norgescup Björli, Norway3[126]
2017Font Blanca, Andorra20[127]11[128]
2017Cambre d'Aze, France17[129]
2017Norgescup Todalen, Norway2[130]2[131]
2017ISMF World Championship, Tambre/Piancavallo, Italy14[132]11[133]6[134] / 7[135][c]Fanny Borgström / Emelie Forsberg, Fanny Borgström
2017Stryn Rando 3000, Norway1[136]
2017Romsdal Rando, Norway1[137][138]
2017Narvik Rando, Norway2[139]
2017Keb Classic, Sweden1[140][b]1[141][b]Jenny Råghall
2018Font Blanca, Andorra10[142]
2018Pierra Menta, France4[143]Fanny Borgström
2019Font Blanca, Andorra13[144]9[145]
2020Funäs Rando Race, Sweden1[146]
2020Comapedrosa, Andorra22[147]22[148]
2022Keb Classic, Sweden1[149][b]Jenny Råghall

Fastest Known Time (FKT)

She has held the fastest known time on the following routes:

Grand Canyon viewed from South Rim, FKT 2018
  • Grand Canyon, Arizona, USA, Women's FKT Rim-to Rim-to Rim (R2R2R), 7h29m16s, 16 November 2018.[150] Taylor Newlin bettered Nilsson's time just a few days later.[151]

References

Notes

External links

Ida Nilsson

Skyrunning

Ski mountaineering