


While attending school, he’d stopped working out, gained 20 pounds and ran the slowest time on his fitness test by a minute-and-a-half. Imhoff’s decision to start running came in 2016 during his time at the University of California, Davis. That strong finish boosted my confidence and I just became hooked on the sport.” I am a competitive person and during my first half marathon I felt strong near the end of the race and ended up passing a bunch of people. “At the time I was running just to stay fit, so I just decided to try it. “I was deployed with a person who was really into running marathons,” said Klein. Klein, who has run eight ultramarathons, nine marathons and more than 20 shorter races, completed his first marathon in 2011. Jeff Klein, deputy director for AFCEC’s Operations Directorate, consider ultramarathoning – running races greater than 26.2 and up to 100 miles – a hobby and have no plans to stop.

Kyle Imhoff, Air Force Civil Engineer Center Detachment 1 executive officer for the commander, and Lt. What do you do when running a 26.2-mile marathon just isn’t enough? Two members of the Air Force Installation and Mission Support Center team at Tyndall Air Force Base, Florida, tack on about another 75 miles!Ĭapt.
