There is something in the name that tells you everything before you even lace up. The lost boys of Peter Pan never grew up, never stopped dreaming, never surrendered to the weight of adult practicality. When Jeremy and Tim co-founded Lostboys Track Club in June 2014, they borrowed that spirit deliberately. The idea was not simply to form a training group but to build a crew where ambitious running goals and genuine joy could coexist, where the grind and the fun were never mutually exclusive. That founding instinct has shaped every mile the crew has run together since.
The origin was modest and honest. A small group of friends with a shared appetite for racing started making day trips to events around the greater New York City area, chasing personal records and the particular satisfaction that only a finish line can deliver. The races gave them purpose, but it was the drives out, the post-race meals, the debriefs about what went wrong and what clicked, that revealed something harder to manufacture: real connection. Tim, who would become the crew's central visionary, recognized early that the community forming around these trips was as valuable as any time on the clock. The crew around him was not just a training squad. It was a group of people committed to each other's growth, on the track and beyond it.
A Philosophy Rooted in Shared Belief
Lostboys Track Club operates from a clear and consistent set of values. Members are dedicated to the craft of running, willing to embrace the discipline and repetition that serious training demands, and united by a belief that ambitious goals are worth chasing no matter how long the road. The crew draws an eclectic mix of male and female runners, backgrounds spanning the full breadth of what New York City contains. What holds them together is not pace or pedigree but a shared conviction that they are capable of more, and that they are better at pursuing that potential together than apart. Tim's leadership has been central to sustaining that culture. His understanding of running as a vehicle for personal transformation gave the club an orientation that goes well beyond race results. He has served as coach, mentor, and connective tissue for a community that now numbers around thirty members, tight enough that everyone knows each other's goals and setbacks by name.Training With Purpose on New York's Streets
Lostboys Track Club takes a structured approach to preparation. The crew offers training programs designed around specific distances and individual goals, from 5K speed development to full marathon builds, with coaching support woven throughout. Members receive guidance on training schedules, workout construction, and racing strategy, giving runners a framework that supports growth without removing the human element. Coaches within the club bring expertise to bear on the practical mechanics of improvement, but the culture of the crew ensures that technical progress never comes at the cost of enjoyment. The workouts are serious. The atmosphere around them is warm. That balance is not accidental. It reflects a founding philosophy that believed from the start that runners perform best when they feel genuinely supported, not just coached.Community That Extends Beyond the Track
The social fabric of Lostboys Track Club is woven tightly and deliberately. Group runs and training sessions are the foundation, but the crew regularly gathers around shared experiences that have nothing to do with pace targets. Post-run meetups at local spots, weekend adventures exploring new routes across the five boroughs, and team-building outings have created friendships that outlast any training cycle. The crew also takes its role in the broader community seriously, engaging in charitable initiatives and partnering with local organizations whose work touches health, education, and social justice. Running, for Lostboys Track Club, has always carried a responsibility that points outward. The willingness to put collective effort toward causes beyond the sport itself reflects Tim's founding conviction that what a crew does off the road matters as much as what it does on it.Workshops, Wellness, and the Whole Runner
Lostboys Track Club approaches athlete development holistically. Physical fitness is only one dimension of what the crew invests in. Mental resilience, emotional wellbeing, and the kind of self-awareness that allows a runner to train through adversity without breaking are all part of the conversation. The club has brought in guest speakers and organized workshops designed to give members tools for navigating difficulty, building a growth mindset, and understanding the connection between how they treat themselves off the track and how they perform on it. Race day is where this investment becomes visible. The crew organizes support along race routes, with members and friends gathering at designated spots to cheer loudly and provide the kind of energy that carries runners through the hardest miles. For Lostboys Track Club, showing up for each other on race day is not optional. It is part of what membership means.Annual Retreats and Unforgettable Shared Miles
Once a year, the crew pulls away from the city for events and retreats that bring the full community together in settings beyond the familiar urban grid. These gatherings often take members to locations outside New York, where new trails replace concrete paths and the pace of the weekend slows enough for genuine reflection and connection. Group runs share the schedule with workshops, team activities, and the kind of unhurried socializing that deep friendships require. The retreats have become landmarks in the club's calendar, events that members plan around and return from with renewed energy for the training ahead. They also serve a subtler purpose: they remind the crew that Lostboys Track Club exists beyond any single workout or race, that it is a living community with a shared history that continues to accumulate.Running Through the City That Never Sleeps
New York City has always been a remarkable stage for runners. Its density, its variety, and its refusal to ever fully quiet down make it a city that challenges and rewards in equal measure. Lostboys Track Club has built its identity within that landscape, drawing on the energy of the urban environment while finding the pockets of calm that make long training runs possible. Central Park's loop, roughly six miles of rolling paths through lawns and past the reservoir, remains a cornerstone of the city's running culture and a frequent backdrop for the crew's sessions. The Hudson River Greenway stretches along the western edge of Manhattan, offering unobstructed river views and enough distance to accommodate nearly any training plan. These routes are not just convenient. They are part of the texture of running in New York, and Lostboys Track Club knows them the way longtime residents know their neighborhood streets.A City Full of Crews, a Club With Its Own Character
New York's running scene is rich with communities, each carrying its own character and focus. Harlem Run has built something remarkable in upper Manhattan. BridgeRunners have made Brooklyn their home base. Iron Runners NYC chase the long distances that push endurance to its edge. The existence of so many strong crews only reinforces the health of the city's running culture, a culture that the New York City Marathon both reflects and amplifies every November. Lostboys Track Club participates in that broader ecosystem while maintaining a distinctly intimate scale. Around thirty members means everyone is known, everyone's goals are tracked, and no one slips through unnoticed. The crew's size is not a limitation. It is a choice that preserves the quality of connection that Tim and Jeremy built the whole thing around a decade ago. The lost boys never stopped dreaming. Neither has this club.Featured Crew
R
RunningCrews Editorial
RunningCrews.com



