Last month, Jim Cummins, the co-founder of the ,聽announced that , a national chain of workout facilities, had agreed to purchase his event. The announcement caps the race鈥檚 stratospheric rise聽from a grassroots ride with 34 participants and a few pizzas afterwards in 2006 to the country鈥檚 premier gravel race with 2,750 cyclists and a three-day expo in 2018.
The acquisition of the DK200 adds to Life Time鈥檚 growing portfolio of endurance races, including Colorado鈥檚 聽and the 聽in northern Wisconsin. It also marks a trend of large corporate sponsors snapping up small races and events. Most notably, , a Chinese conglomerate, purchased the 聽(WTC), owner of the Ironman Trademark, for $650 million in 2015. Since then, Dalian has added both the 聽and the to its portfolio.
These sorts of acquisitions might be good for business, but it鈥檚 easy to wonder how they will affect the quality and experience of the races that are absorbed. 鈥淚 think there鈥檚 a lot of conversation about how big corporate owners might homogenize events,鈥 says Mike McCormack, founder of the , which Dalian courted for purchase this year. 鈥淵ou can make a case that these sorts of deals can improve an event. You can also make a case that they do not.鈥
For his part, after careful reflection and lots of input from the city of Breckenridge, much of it negative, McCormack decided to pass on WTC鈥檚 purchase offer. 鈥淲e felt like we measured the soul of our event differently than they would have,鈥 he says.聽WTC鈥檚 intent to grow the event from its current roster of 600 riders to 1,500 after four years was one of the biggest reasons McCormack declined, as he worried about the impact on聽the trails and the town. 鈥淭hey wanted to make it really big,鈥 he explains. 鈥淏ut bigger isn鈥檛 better. Better is better.鈥
Eric Mamula, mayor of Breckenridge, says it was a difficult choice, but that he feels McCormack made the right decision. 鈥淚t would have been great for business, but the truth is we鈥檙e already busier than we have ever been,鈥 says Mamula. 鈥淲e鈥檙e a little town, and there鈥檚 already event fatigue here. There鈥檚 always something going on. So I think people just worried about the Breck Epic getting bigger and bringing in more people. I think people didn鈥檛 want it to turn into a Leadville.鈥
Mamula is referring to the Leadville Race Series, which started as a 100-mile running race in 1984 with 45 participants and a 100-mile mountain-bike event in 1994 with 157 riders. Since Life Time purchased the event in 2010, participation has聽swelled (713 runners and 1,850 cyclists in 2018). Demand is so high that athletes pay a lottery fee just for the chance to race, and the franchise has turned into a series of races, events, and training camps that span the calendar and the country. A 2013 study estimated that the race series brings some into the town each year, but many people the growth and overcrowding. 鈥淟eadville certainly suffered for it,鈥 says Tom Purvis, a longtime resident of nearby Salida, Colorado, who raced the聽Leadville聽Trail 100 MTB in its early days but now steers clear. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just the crowds either. The race has become greedy. It鈥檚 definitely all about the profit motive now.鈥 Entry fees are a whopping $450 for the 2019 mountain-bike race.
As the race has grown over the years, Cummins says that he and his partner, Lelan Dains, have felt a growing sense of obligation to the swelling number of riders, as well as to the community of Emporia, Kansas, which has seen a boom because of the event.
Purvis is part of a group of friends, based at Salida鈥檚 , who鈥檝e been running a grassroots mountain-bike race called the VaporTrail125 since 2005. The Vapor is the antithesis of the Leadville Trail 100 MTB: low-key, in part because permitting limits entries to 100 people, and far less appealing to a broad base because it transpires overnight on extremely technical trails, mostly at 11,000 feet and up. Finish times are roughly double Leadville鈥檚, and the attrition rate is usually well over 50 percent. 鈥淲e were never going to be a race that could attract an owner like Leadville did. And we never wanted to be,鈥 Purvis says. This year, because of a rockslide that closed the course and then a lack of manpower to reconnoiter a new route, the Vapor took a year off鈥攁nd it鈥檚 unclear whether the event will return. 鈥淵ou get the crowds and the costs with a sponsor like Life Time,鈥 Purvis reflects, 鈥渂ut you also get resources to keep things running.鈥
In the case of the Dirty Kanza, Cummins is adamant that the acquisition is all upside. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just going to allow us to be better at what we do,鈥 he says. 鈥淥ur goals with this race have always been twofold: to provide a life-enriching experience for our participants, and to build community. We felt that Life Time鈥檚 dedication to both of those things was as strong as ours.鈥 Cummins says that the race-day experience will remain much the same for participants聽and that there are no plans to increase the number of racers despite what has happened at Leadville. He points to a bigger expo, more camps and events, and better infrastructure as places where riders may see improvements.
According to Mark Stevenson, a.k.a. , who rode in the premier DK200 and several subsequent editions and was on hand in 2018, some of those changes are already happening. 鈥淭he finishing chute got a lot longer this year, which made it smoother, safer,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hat meant another whole block of barriers, which might not seem like much, but that鈥檚 a huge outlay.鈥
Stevenson knows a thing or two about managing an endurance event. In 2005 he founded a 300-plus-mile self-supported gravel race called the , which he has directed for the last 14 years. Not unlike the VaporTrail125, Stevenson鈥檚 event attained cult status for its difficulty and purity of experience, with only 19 of 95 starters actually making it to the finish this year. He says he was originally dismayed at the growth and changes he鈥檚 seen at the Dirty Kanza over the years, but then he realized it was just the natural course of events. 鈥淚t鈥檚 easy to sit here and lament the changes, but you can never re-create the experience from those early years. So you have to step back and realize it鈥檚 just going to become something else,鈥 he says. He says races can stay small, but it takes real work and attention to make that happen. The good news, according to Stevenson, is there will always be smaller, less-produced events for those who don鈥檛 want the hoopla of something like the Dirty Kanza or Leadville鈥攖hough he pulled the plug on Trans Iowa this year. 鈥淏eing an event coordinator isn鈥檛 a forever job,鈥 he says, explaining that running an event like this on your own takes its toll over time.
That was a big part of Jim Cummins鈥檚 consideration in selling the Dirty Kanza to Life Time. As the race has grown over the years, Cummins says that he and his partner, Lelan Dains, have felt a growing sense of obligation to the swelling number of riders, as well as to the community of Emporia, Kansas, which has seen a boom because of the event. 鈥淚 just turned 60, and one of these years, Jim Cummins is going to decide that he wants to just go out and ride his bike. And when that day comes, how selfish of me would it be to just turn off the lights and lock the doors behind me?鈥 he says. 鈥淭his partnership with Life Time ensures that 30 years from now, there鈥檚 still going to be a Dirty Kanza.鈥
McCormack, the 聽founder, says that鈥檚 a good thing. 鈥淗ave you looked around lately? It鈥檚 still so punk rock!鈥 he says. 鈥淎s soon as one thing gets homogenized, another thing rises up to fill its place. Independent bike racing has been kicking ass for 20 years, and it鈥檚 going to keep kicking ass for 100 more.鈥