All Lewis Kent ever really wanted was some free gear. In early 2015, Kent was the proud owner of a few sub-five-minute beer miles鈥攖imes that put him among the best in the world. He reached out to shoe companies to see if someone would throw him some free kicks. No one called back and by聽August 2015, he鈥檇 given up.聽
And then, the following month, a mutual friend suggested he reach out to Kris Mychasiw, a Montreal-based agent who mostly works with track athletes, like steeplechase Olympian Genevieve Lalond and 1500-meter Olympian Charles Philibert-Thiboutot.聽Within a few weeks, Kent was meeting with Brooks Canada and signing on the dotted line. Not long after that he got a spot on the Ellen DeGeneres Show. Today, he鈥檚 a , with the shoe deal and a contract with a hydration company to prove it. Brooks even designed him a custom , complete with a maple leaf design and skid resistance for beer-soaked tracks.
Mychasiw may just be sports marketing鈥檚 cleverest agent. He鈥檚 managed to make two athletes pro鈥攊n an event聽that doesn't even have an official governing body. This weekend, the two athletes he represents, Lewis Kent and Corey Bellemore, will face off at the FloTrack Beer Mile World Championships in Austin, Texas. They've both held the world record for the beer mile (Corey currently holds the record) and they are the sport's only sponsored athletes.聽On the line will be cash and a sizeable amount of media attention, almost all of which Mychasiw is responsible for generating.
If you鈥檇 told us a decade ago that runners would be making a living off chugging four beers and running four laps around a track, we鈥檇 have laughed at you, then tried to figure out how to get in on the scam. The idea seemed聽as preposterous as a gymnast getting a contract after sticking the landing on a kegstand. But it wasn't preposterous to Mychasiw. Right before Kent and Mychasiw connected, Mychasiw had gotten a pint glass in the mail. It was a promo item from聽shoe company Brooks. The combo聽made him pause. When so much of shoe marketing is about being lighter, swifter, and better, this beer glass was zagging聽into new, chiller territory.聽鈥淲hen a friend said, 鈥楬ey, you have to talk to this beer-mile kid,鈥 I was like, huh, I might know the right company for this,鈥 he says.

Mychasiw wasn鈥檛 sure how much he could do for Kent, but the more he thought about the idea of a professional beer miler, the more he saw its promise. The聽future of track and field is bleak, he says. 鈥淭he viewers are getting older, and with more and more doping scandals, more and more people may start to pull out. So what鈥檚 after track?鈥
Probably not beer miles. But Mychasiw聽does think that track fans need a fun distraction. 鈥淎nd the mass media just loves it.鈥 (Guilty as charged.) He sees beer miles as breathing some life and fun back into track. 鈥淎nd yeah, you may not be the best on the track, but this is something anyone can do,鈥 he says.聽
He thinks companies will see marketing potential with that young, new scene. At first, Kent struggled to believe all the things Mychasiw promised鈥攁 major shoe company deal聽or coverage聽on mainstream sites like and . 鈥淟et's just say that now when Kris tells me something is happening, I never doubt it is going to get done,鈥 Kent聽says. The sponsorship deals legitimized Kent and elevated the beer mile from its origins as the track nerd鈥檚 vomitous fun run. The media attention helped, too. Getting Kent booked on Ellen was mind-bending for many in the industry. “The only track athlete that I recall being on that show was Usain Bolt,” says Mychasiw.
The majority of Mychasiw鈥檚 income still comes from representing regular track and field athletes and Kent runs a window-washing business on the side. Pro drinking and running pays but not much鈥攜et. Mychasiw and Corey Bellemore just , in which the company agreed to outfit him for 2017 (Adidas noted聽that it's not an official partnership or endorsement deal, and Mychasiw can't share all the details of the deal, but says that it's fair to qualify Bellemore as a pro based on the terms).聽
While it鈥檚 cool to finally get free shoes, what Kent likes best about working with Mychasiw isn鈥檛 the money or the swag. It鈥檚 the legitimacy that Mychasiw has lent to the sport. 鈥淲hat I like to say is the beer mile had a little spark and Kris poured gasoline on the fire. Without him, I don't think the sport would be where it is today.鈥澛