The Elite/Pro wave started off promptly at 9 a.m. with athletes running through the farm and out to the fields along the 6.5 mile course, which was about a half a mile shorter than last year’s course. Open waves were released every 20 minutes after the Elites took off. The course was extremely flat with only about a hundred feet of elevation change which was perfect for the locals who are used to the flat terrain. Athletes were led through a few of the more mediocre obstacles to begin with, including an easy barbed wire crawl, the freezing Shriveled Richard, and new for 2016, Squeeze Play. Runners must crawl under a series of 55 gallon barrels set up in a row. From there Savage stepped up their game obstacle-wise in the form of Lumberjack Lane where athletes carried a log to the inverted walls and on to a crowd favorite, Wheel World, where one must traverse a series of turning wheels across an open pit of water. After that test of grip strength, Savage ran athletes up the slip wall and again tested grip strength with Kiss My Walls. This is Savage’s wall traverse and is the hardest among other races, due to the small rock climbing holds and the fact that the top of the wall sticks out farther than the bottom making you fight even harder!
Now approaching the middle of the course, Savage continued to test mental grit with a high dive off of Davey Jones Locker into the water below, up and over Barn Doors, and across On the Fence. On the Fence was new to 2016. Fencing was placed over a water pit once again testing an athlete’s grip. The Big Cheese was next up, also new to 2016. A large, rounded, wooden wall with triangle cut outs for hand holds tested your climbing ability along with the great 9 foot wall. The claustrophobic Teeter Tuber was our next obstacle and this one is a killer for a big man. Not very much room to shimmy through this tube. From there it was on to my personal favorite set of monkey bars in OCR the Sawtooth. Climbing up 20 feet over the water pit and back down really tested that grip once again. The Big Ass Cargo Net and Colossus led us back to the festival area, where the new Savage Platinum Rig was waiting to see if an athlete had any grip strength left, and an area where many an Elite runner lost his/her band. Last up and making its debut in Chicago was the Tree Hugger. This new obstacle was a series of metal poles and tree posts sticking straight up and in a line where athletes had to traverse across three metal and three wooden posts without touching the ground. Personally, I thought it was a smash hit.
Overall, my opinion of the Chicago Savage was that they have really stepped up the difficulty of their obstacles and cut down the running some. While Savage is not yet up to the level of BattleFrog, I feel they have Spartan in their sights. The festival area was about what you would expect with merchandise, food, and drinks available for purchase along with a $5.00 bag check and hose off/changing area. Parking was close by and only $10.00 for general parking, $20.00 for VIP parking right up front. One concern my wife had was that the medic tent was quite a ways off from the festival area. They were super friendly and well supplied, but it was quite a hike to get there. The kid’s race was a tad weak with few obstacles and mostly running, but it did include a bubble machine that all the kids enjoyed. The 2016 Chicago Savage lived up to my expectations and then some. Savage is certainly one of the must do race series for all.
Scott Brackemyer
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