Mud Run, OCR, Obstacle Course Race & Ninja Warrior Guide

The Future of OCR: Rise of the KidFests?

Disclosure: MRG's Kristen Stewart owns & operates ADV.FIT Kids! and this is a follow-up to a 7 Weeks to Fitness article written by Brett Stewart

Less Sufferfest, More Kidfest

I finally got around to watching Rise of the Sufferfests while on vacation this summer, and while my scenes made the cutting room floor, at least I still have all the cholla scars on my calf to remember that shoot in the desert. As entertaining as the movie was, I walked away thinking about the present and the future of the sport of OCR; 8 years from the real “start” in the USA and 5 years after the explosion of new races, is the sport continuing to grow in 2017? What about three or five years from now?

As far as growth in 2017, the numbers look just fine. Participation in events is steady for the third year in a row without any major peaks or valleys. While participation numbers and event growth is nowhere near what it was in '14 – '15, there are some really bright spots, such as Rugged Maniac and Savage Race incremental growth, Terrain Racing exploding from 8 to 30 events (and an announcement soon for an estimated 60 locations in 2018), Warrior Dash with a rebound from a slightly “off” 2016, Tough Mudder creating about 30 different race formats (even this cheat sheet couldn't keep up!), and Spartan Race digging deeper into their Endurance branding, expanding their national and global championship events.

Some naysayers make it a yearly tradition to post “the sky is falling” articles about OCR this time of year, as negative stories are their cheap & easy way to get headlines. Actually, OCR is as healthy as it has ever been, and Phase III of the sport is starting to make strides…

Some good examples of kid's events as an add-on to the main adult event: 

The biggest thing that's missing right now is kids-only races – but how do we get the demand and funding to make it possible?

Photo: ADV.FIT Kids!

OCR: The Next Generation

Innovation in obstacles has been one of the hallmarks of the development of OCR from '12 – today; we've grown from rickety monkey bars and plywood walls to immense (and structurally sound) Kong at TM or Savage Race's huge investment in trussing to make Sawtooth 2.0 (or 3.0?) and complete one of the most impressive OCR kits in our sport. Race formats have surely morphed as well from the “standard” 5k distance which is locked in for WD & RM to pretty much fit all shapes & sizes: 1 mile TMX, TM's 12(ish), Spartan's Sprint, Super, Beast, UB, Savage's 5 mile, OCRWC's 3k & 15k, etc.

Event R&D budgets have smartly been allocated to grow and retain OCR's main demographic; guys and gals 25-45, but with the demise of female-only races (Diva Dash, Mudderella, Lozilu, Kiss Me Dirty, etc.) and Dirty Girl Mud Run only featuring (2) 2017 locations, and the extremely limited investment in kids-only mud runs such as PursuEVENTS and most of the big events adding a kid's course as an afterthought, the long-term future of OCR seems to be taking a backseat to present profits. Yes, the market for a kids-only race hasn't shown to be profitable (yet), but aren't there new ways to reach kids now and start developing the next generation of OCR fanatics?

Obstacool and ADV.FIT Kids! are two of the companies working hard to fill that gap by providing OCR to schools as an option for fundraising, sports programs, field days, and even after school programs to build fitness, confidence, and strength.

In 2016 Obstacool went to primary schools all over New South Wales from Banora Point to Albury North where teachers have told us that it was the “best thing ever brought to the school” and the kids have asked us “can you come to every rewards day?”

Photo: Obstacool

ADV.FIT Kids! was born back in 2015 out of frustration that such a huge portion of their kid's school fundraiser money was being spent to the production company putting on events at their daughter's school instead of where it was intended – on the kids. With a decade of event production under their belts, Kristen and Brett Stewart began developing a program to get the kids motivated, have fun, and get introduced to the sport of OCR in a safe environment, right at their school.

Most fundraisers take a huge portion of your PTO’s hard-earned fundraising amounts to put on a boring run-in-a-circle “fun run” – ADV.FIT Kids! delivers an impressive turn-key event featuring obstacles that you’d see at a Warrior Dash-type event: crawling tubes, monkey bars, cargo nets, balance beams, and even a warped wall like the kids see on American Ninja Warrior! We offer a complete experience with soundsystem, music, water stations, course, a professional fitness author to motivate the kids, and more!

Photo: ADV.FIT Kids!

From 7 Weeks to Fitness: When I wrote Ultimate Obstacle Race Training back in 2012, I sincerely had no idea what I was getting myself and my whole family into! Launching Mud Run Guide, creating OCR Warrior, and helping to develop the OCR World Championships has been a fanatical and fantastic blur over the last 5 years. (OMG it's been half a decade already!?) The very first race I helped to set up way back in late 2011 was a women's-only event called Lozilu Mud Run, and I was shocked how well an event could do that only catered to less than half (at that point) of the mud run market, and wondered aloud “why isn't there a kid's only event?”

A Real OCR Experience – Just Smaller!

Goliathon does a great job for kids 10 & up of providing a real OCR experience side-by-side with adults via their tiered “choose your own difficulty” obstacles, while all other kid's courses are their own loop away from all those pesky adults. Are younger kids missing out by not seeing their parents or even older kids tackling each challenge? What about giving kids multiple attempts at harder obstacles like monkey bars or a warped wall? ADV.FIT Kids! attempts to solve both of those issues by offering multiple laps through their kid's obstacle course while offering parents, teachers, aides, and mentors a loop around to provide encouragement, assistance, and even show some technique to help them master the more challenging obstacles. During their fall '17 event, teachers joined the principal and office staff to “show off” in front of the kids and provide a little humor along with a big dose of can-do attitude for students.

The Next Step?

Spinning up a new event is an extremely daunting task, especially with the knowledge of how many races have failed over the past few years. So, how do we get obstacle course racing ingrained with kids to participate in future kids-only events or become an OCR athlete when they get to the required age for most big events? Time, patience, and location.

Adding a kid's event onto an existing OCR is a great start, but you're only reaching those kids whose parents are already into the sport and who chose to bring them along. Reaching kids in schools, camps, or sports programs helps to bypass the bottleneck of parents that are disinterested and give the kids an exciting, health, and fun option!

PursuEVENTs at F.I.T. Challenge video:

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