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On Canada Day, four Canadian men broke the world record for the beer mile relay, which involves relay-running a mile while chugging beers.

The four Vancouver men each chugged a beer before running a 400-metre (quarter-mile) sprint. Running back-to-back, they were able to complete a full mile — and chug four beers — in the span of just four minutes three seconds.

According to Canadian Running magazine, the time bests a previous record of 4:06, which was also set by Canadians at the 2016 Beer Mile World Classic in London, England.

The new record was set on the track for Vancouver’s Point Grey Secondary School. Notably, race officials were wearing faded neon tracksuits dating from the 1994 Commonwealth Games, which was held just across the Strait of Georgia in Victoria.

While it may seem like a frivolous excuse to get drunk, the various disciplines of “beer miling” have attracted some serious competitors in recent years.

The much more challenging beer-related feat, for instance, is the solo beer mile, in which a single runner must complete four laps of a quarter mile track while chugging a beer before each lap.

The clock is running while the competitor drinks, meaning that their time is also dependent on how quickly they can chug. (On the recent record-breaking Vancouver run, relay-runners’ beer-drinking times ranged from 4.8 seconds to 11.3 seconds.)