Ok, the following is a little more than I expected to write.
If you can make it through, please take a minute and leave a comment.
I read today that the Hardrock 100 is phasing Leadville out
of its lineup of qualifying races. Beginning in 2015, Leadville Trail 100
finishers will no longer be “qualified” to run Hardrock. What I find interesting
is the reason behind this decision. Here is the text taken directly from the
Hardrock website:
A note about the 2013
Leadville 100: The Leadville 100 includes many of the features that
are important for a HR qualifier: high altitude, long climbs, potential for
mountain weather, and more. However, the 2013 Leadville 100 ignored other
traits of importance to the HR: environmental responsibility, support of the
hosting community, and having a positive impact on the health of our sport.
I think the Hard Rock organizers are overreaching here. And,
yes, I’m fully aware that this isn’t the popular position to take. Bashing
Leadville has become a sport within our sport. I get that. I also get why. The
Leadville trail 100, despite being one of the oldest 100 milers in the country,
has become the equivalent of an outcast kid in a class of buttoned up Ivy Leaguers.
Its bulging size (943 starters in 2013), its NYSE listed corporate owner, its
lack of a trail-service requirement, its olly olly oxen free philosophy of no
qualifying race required because, after all, everyone is qualified to run 100
miles, all these quirks, big or small, make Leadville something of a outcast
among its peers.
I understand that there were some serious missteps by the
race organizers at the 2013 Leadville 100. Most of these were the direct result
of too many runners combined with too many crew members and inadequate logistics. What ensued were traffic jams at Winfield, Twin Lakes
and other aid stations, a shortage of supplies for runners, trash on trail,
confused aid station volunteers, etc., etc. It probably doesn’t help that Life
Fitness, the NYSE owner of the race, is not, heaven forbid, a non-profit
organization and does have to justify its existence with profits to its shareholders.
That said, all of what went wrong in this years Leadville
100 can be fixed if Life Fitness listens to the feedback that is flowing like
the Mississippi their way. But are they listening? I have not talked to the
corporate brass at Life Fitness but I would love the opportunity to do so. If
given the chance I wouldn’t hesitate to inform them that they need to pay
attention to these details or the past 30 years of good will that this event
has engendered with the Leadville community and the ultra-running sport at
large is in jeopardy.
Which brings me back to the Hardrock organizers’ decision to
throw their cross state brethren to the wind by “phasing” Leadville off their
qualifier list. This, as I said, is overreaching. Why? Because it sets a bad
precedent. It would be kind of like the Boston Marathon saying to the NYC
marathon (or any marathon for that matter) that its runners can’t qualify for Boston
because the race is too big, too corporate, too harmful to the environment, too
crowded, etc. It is not a perfect analogy but the concept is relevant. If NY is
singled out, should London, or Berlin or LA also be excluded? Along these
lines, if Leadville is singled out, shouldn’t UTMB as well? That race (2,300
entrants) dwarfs Leadville, Western States, AC and Hardrock combined. Can you
imagine the impact on the environment from that event?
The problem is illuminated by asking one question. Where
does one draw the line? What does it mean to be environmentally responsible? Is
smaller better? How small is small? And where does one find a clear definition
of a “positive impact on the health of our sport?” The more I think about this
last one the more baffled I become. One thing I’ve learned about running 100s
is that crossing the finish line is the single most gratifying part of our
sport. How does one apply this gratification to a definition of a “positive
impact on the health of our sport?”
The thing that gets me is that there seems to be a little
bit of elitism seeping through the veins of this whole subject. Who among us runners can say what another
runner should want or value? When I showed up to Leadville this year I too was
aghast at the number of runners on certain sections, the amount of cars on the streets, the
disorientation of certain volunteers. I was also extremely impressed by the
volunteers that I personally interacted with. Never had I been so well taken
care of at a 100 mile race. I’ve also never experienced such a positive vibe
from other runners on the trail (I'm not sure reducing the number of runners is the best solution). To me the Leadville 100 was the best
experience I’ve had in the six 100 mile races I’ve completed. Was it perfect?
Of course not. But I didn’t sign up for this sport to experience perfection.
When I was a little boy, I used to get embarrassed when my
mom did something that was different. Like when she drove her yellow Volkswagon
Thing down the sidewalk on her 40th birthday. Or when she would talk
to total strangers like they’d been her best friend since grade school. And,
when the principle at my high school told me not to take my hat off at
graduation, it was my mom who asked me why on earth I would hide my new haircut
– a mohawk – on such an important day.
My mom taught me a thing or two about conformity. The first
was that conformity leads to intolerance. And intolerance leads to a lot of
what is wrong with our society. It is important to keep an open mind about
people and things. Leadville is not Hard Rock. Nor should it be. It’s bigger.
It’s corporate owned. Any adult can enter it, regardless of experience.
My hope would be that the
Hard Rock race organizers reverse their decision to phase out Leadville as a
qualifier, and give the Leadville race organizers a chance to right their ship.
Sure, they messed up this year. But give them a break. After all, Leadville has
been part of the ultra family for 30 years.