The Denver Post

Hardrock 100 canceled over health concerns

- By Daniel Petty

The Hardrock 100 ultrarun in mid-july has been canceled for a second straight year, becoming the latest endurance sporting event in Colorado to be scrapped over health concerns from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The race’s board of directors announced the decision publicly on Saturday. It’s the fourth time the run has been canceled since it debuted in 1992.

“We considered the health and safety of our runners and community our litmus,” run director Dale Garland said in an interview with the Denver Post. “The tipping point was the uncertaint­y with what we’re dealing with. We feel like we’re a pretty good organizati­on, and we do a good job of managing what we can control. But we can’t control everything.”

The iconic 100.5-mile loop course takes about 140 runners through the San Juan Mountains in southweste­rn Colorado, hitting the towns of Silverton, Ouray, Telluride and Lake City. A mixture of elite and amateur runners — and their support crews — descend on Silverton from the United States and all over the world for the start.

The decision comes after the Lake County Commission­ers voted May 12 to ban gatherings of more than 250 people through September, forcing the cancelatio­n of the Leadville race series, including the Leadville 100 ultrarun, which usually draws more than 700 runners and their crews in late August.

To put on the event, Hardrock’s organizers work with 13 different federal, state and local jurisdicti­ons, each of which currently have varying levels of restrictio­ns. Garland said the organizing committee considered alternativ­es, including a staggered starts, limited or no outside support crews at aid stations, and canceling the in-person pre-race briefing and post-run awards ceremony.

“We what-if’ed this thing to death,” Garland said. The event could have obtained the permits and insurance, but participan­t safety and concern that an event might lead to an outbreak that could overwhelm the area’s small, rural health care system was too concerning.

Organizers last year were forced to cancel the run because high amounts of late-season snow and avalanche debris left many roads and passes along the course inaccessib­le, even through the late summer. The event was also canceled in 1995 because of snow conditions and in 2002 because of a nearby wildfire. Runners who had gained entry for 2019’s race were deferred to an entry this year, and plans for how to honor this year’s entrants were still being considered, Garland said.

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