Extreme Nation Finally Arrives

In the beginning of 2013, Hobie Call famously left Spartan Race and began work on a new race called Extreme Nation which was to launch in Michigan. Hobie promised an obstacle heavy, “short course” as opposed to the longer “running heavy” courses we are used to. Shortly thereafter there was a public crash with management publicly fighting, and family tragedy. A few months later, the brand was reborn, a new date and a venue in Zephyrhills, Florida was announced for February 2014. Yesterday, that event happened.

What Extreme Nation Got Right

Pre Race Instructions Before The Race.

There was an 8am mandatory meeting for all teams where the rules were gone over. Spartan and Superhero typically do this at the actual start line of the elite waves. Not all the participants can hear or are even paying attention because they are too focused on the race at that point. Doing it an hour in advance is a much better way to do this. It gave everyone time to get their questions answered prior to the start line.

Rules

An Almost Completely Viewable Course

The course itself was about 1.5 miles. Once the race started, spectators could use “lanes” to follow the racers. If you wanted to get a closer look at a particular obstacle, you could walk down and get near that obstacle without interfering. The setup made it so that spectators could watch several obstacles at at once up close. Then, move only a few feet over, and see several more obstacles. Extreme Nation absolutely delivered on “Spectator Friendly”

Multipleobstacles

An invitation to ask for time corrections.

Once the official times were in from the timing table, the race organizers posted the times. Then the race organizers gave all athletes a 5 minute window to approach with any time questions. Giving anyone a chance to say “Hey, my time was off”. We have never seen this and believe it to be very generous. After 5 minutes, race organizers declared the times official and all placements final.

New take on old obstacles

The monkey bar/rope/monkey bars was an awesome twist on the standard monkey bars. Also, the sandbag carry was turned into a new challenge by not allowing males to carry the sandbags on their shoulders. You must “carry” using hands only.

Sand Bags

Hobie Being Hobie

Hobie Call was there and as always, talked to everyone who approached him, answered questions, and took pictures. Our first superstar helped put OCR on the map and everyone still loves him. In ORM’s opinion, there will truly never be another Hobie Call.

Being Open to Suggestion

It didn’t take long for participants to see that the monkey bar incline/swinging rope/monkey bar decline was very difficult for most of the women. From a physical standpoint, most women could just not do it as the bars were too far apart. Rather than declaring “we aren’t wrong”, which is the attitude that sometimes comes with such criticism, EN immediately instituted a change. Women would have to attempt the “regular way”. Then, if they failed, they would then attempt from the middle rope. If they failed again, there would be a 20 burpee penalty.

Paying down to 6 places

It’s no fun showing up when you already know who the winners will be. Paying a field that deep, gives hope where there was not previously. Standing on the start line, and looking over at teams led by a Hunter McIntyre or a Karlee Whipple can be intimidating. However, knowing that any given team could take some of the other places, makes the race much more exciting for the racers and the spectators.

Great Staff/Volunteers

Most in the OCR community know that this can be make or break for any event. From parking, to registration, to on course, all staff and volunteers were awesome. They gave everyone a “What can we do to make your day better” kind of attitude.

Same Day Pay Outs

Extreme Nation promised $40,000 in payouts and came through on that. All money winners, left with a check that day.

1stwomen

What Needs To Be Improved

Where are the pictures?

There were few if any official race photographers. As of this writing, there is no link to pictures or a promise to post any. Even the EN Facebook page only has a few photos up from yesterday. Elite obstacle racers and the everyday mud runner both love to see photos after the race.

Where is the food?

The only “food” on site was a stand, not unlike at a high school football game, with less selection. Choices were candy, chips, soda, or a hot dog that had been sitting in a crockpot all morning.

Where is the mud?

A staple of any outdoor obstacle course is mud. There was no time on this course that shoes got wet or muddy. Some races have what we call “mud for mud’s sake” with some ridiculous mud crawl at the end. That’s not needed either, but this course had zero water or mud on the course

Where are the officials?

This is a big one. There were really only two obstacles that needed to be heavily officiated. One of them was the monkey bars. For the women’s prelims and finals, many women were doing burpee penalties. We saw one official, standing on the opposite side of the obstacle, talking to spectators, while women did burpees on the other side of the obstacle. We asked if he was watching/counting, he said “yes”.

We didn’t think this was acceptable. There needed to be multiple people at this obstacle counting out loud, making sure chest hit the ground, etc. Other obstacles that required one volunteer had several volunteers so the bodies were there. The focus and training of this position needs to be top priority if Extreme Nation wants to be taken seriously.

An additional question would be “Would the average mud runner, enjoy this course?” ORM found the distance a bit short. The course was between 1.4 and 1.8 miles long and had between 18 and 20 obstacles. If it took an “average” person 30-40 minutes to complete, would they feel they got their money’s worth? Possibly? A way to correct that would be to allow for multiple laps or perhaps an extension of the course that would be optional for the non-elite waves.

Overall, every one we talked to loved the course, loved the format, and had a great time. We guessed there were approximately 200 people at this event. It made for a great time since everyone knew each other or had to chance to meet new people. This also made for great camaraderie as we witnessed an overall cheering for all participants, not just one particular person or team.

That small of a crowd is not going to make a race any money though. Extreme Nation was true to their word and provided a great , spectator friendly event with top payouts on the same day. They won’t stay in business though if they can’t find a way to market the race better and get a larger attendance,

A podcast will be up in a few days with additional interviews from participants and the race directors. In the meantime, Arnel Banawa, created an awesome video. You can see many of the obstacles, and hear what people thought. Check it out here.

Some additional photos can be found on our Facebook Page, using this link.

 

Matt B. Davis

is the host of the Obstacle Racing Media Podcast and the author of "Down and Dirty-The Essential Training Guide for Obstacle Races and Mud Runs". He is also the only (known) #wafflehouseelite obstacle racer.

Latest posts by Matt B. Davis (see all)

Total
0
Shares
9 comments
  1. Only 200 participants? A $40,000 payout? Those numbers don’t add up. I can’t imagine they had a big name sponser to pay that prize money.

  2. Hi Matt, Thanks for the quick review it dose help. As the race director for this Extreme Nation Event WHERE IS THE FOOD. I did plan on telling everyone what happened to the food vender at the 8am meeting but I got side tracked. I decided to go with only one food venter because of the size of the crowd we knew we had coming(smoothie king). At 8pm on friday I got an e-mail that they had been in an accident on the way to the event and had rolled the truck 3 times. His brother even sent us pics from the accident. I work on a new vender until 11:30 that night (no Luck) plan C is what you seen, there was no plan B. LOL. Welcome to my world. OFFICIALS. We did place 2 officials at every obstacle, and during the women’s event I even asked Hobie to make sure he stayed there to over see the penalties. So we though we had it covered and I think we did. No protest by any runners. MUD we could have put mud on the course very easily but we wanted to try it without mud.(Something Different) and thats what this event was, something different. Im sure at the next Extreme Nation event you will see something different. Always trying to make it better. I would like to thank all the athletes that participated, your sportsmanship and professionalism did not go unnoticed. You made my job very easy.

  3. Now they announced going to a standard 5k with 10000$ in purse…going more in a Spartan format but that just another race..will die soon!!

    And by the way spartan Canada have obstacle called the rig, monkey bar, rope, ring, chains that you have to go through!

  4. I was surprised to hear only there were only 200 people. I would have though after the team events it would have been open to individuals wanting to run the course.The monkey bars looked awesome and I guess not being in a pit of water would make them very dangerous to the average joe who just likes to get out and run OCR’s.How did you make any money with a $40,000 payout? The course looked awesome.There is nothing wrong with making the elites run as a team. Just need to open it to the individuals who just want to run the course.This is from an old guy who wished he could have run the course.

  5. The format sounds amazing. As someone mentioned above, “the rig” on the Canadian Spartan courses. I really wish the U.S. Spartan directors would look into it, as it is very spectator friendly, and an absolute blast.

Comments are closed.

Previous Article

Episode 78 - West Coast Trip

Next Article

All In - An Update on Superhero Scramble

Related Posts