Teton Village trail runner wins bronze at world championship in Spain

Gibson also finished 13th in Sunday's 14k Mountain Classic.
Runner Anna Gibson celebrates after taking third in the Uphill race at the World Mountain and Trail Running Championships in Spain. (Gracie Hinz / Instagram)
Runner Anna Gibson celebrates after taking third in the Uphill race at the World Mountain and Trail Running Championships in Spain. (Gracie Hinz / Instagram)

Twenty-six-year-old Teton Village runner Anna Gibson made a splash at her first-ever World Mountain and Trail Running Championship in Spain.

She represented Team USA in two of the event’s five races and started strong with a bronze medal in the Uphill 6k on Thursday, coming out on the podium in a pack of more than a hundred women. The race winds through a pine forest and up the summit of Larraca Mountain, covering more than 3,000 feet of elevation gain over just four miles.

Gibson crossed the finish line in 46 minutes and seven seconds, coming up just eight seconds behind Finish runner Susanna Saapunki. Nina Engelhard of Germany took gold with a time of 45 minutes and 33 seconds.

A woman with a running vest and racing outfit smiles as she hikes uphill.

Runner Jane Maus during the 45k Short Trail race at the World Mountain and Trail Running Championships in Spain. (Gracie Hinz / Instagram)

“THIRD IN THE WORLD 🤯,” Gibson wrote on her Instagram page after the race. “Still at a loss for words. It turns out that showing up every day and running for the love of it is enough.”

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Rémi Bonnet of Switzerland took the top spot in the men’s heat of the race, followed by Kenyan runners Richard Omaya Atuya and Patrick Kipngeno. Utah-based athlete Christian Allen took fourth.

Gibson later finished 13th in Sunday’s 14k Mountain Classic.

Boulder-based climber Jane Maus took seventh in Friday’s 45k Short Trail race, which climbs nearly 12,000 feet over a little more than 27 miles. She finished in about 5 hours and 48 minutes, and previously set the Fastest Known Time on the Grand Teton earlier this summer.

Over 1,700 athletes from nearly 80 countries will race throughout the weekend.

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About Hannah Habermann | Wyoming Public Media

Hannah Habermann is the rural and tribal reporter for Wyoming Public Radio. She has a degree in Environmental Studies and Non-Fiction Writing from Middlebury College and was the co-creator of the podcast Yonder Lies: Unpacking the Myths of Jackson Hole. Hannah's work has been featured on NPR, Marketplace and National Native News, and she has years of experience leading backpacking and climbing courses throughout the West. Originally from Billings, Montana, Hannah is passionate about the transformative power of storytelling. In her free time, she loves spending time in the mountains, reading, petting other people's dogs and playing music with friends.

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