On Saturday,听 during the fourth annual Yellow River Stone Forest Park 100K, a听race held in Gansu, China. The weather turned bad about 15 miles in and more than 6,000 feet above sea level, after the leading runners left the second checkpoint and started an exposed 3,000-foot climb. Suddenly, the route was hammered with a mess听of freezing rain and hail, and temperatures plummeted to near听freezing at higher elevations.
鈥淎t the bottom of the mountain there was already wind and rain, and the higher you climbed the bigger the rain and wind got,鈥 blogged Zhang Xiaotao, a racer who survived the storm. 鈥淗alfway up, the rain started to mix with hail and kept smashing into my face, and my eyes started getting obscured and blurry. A few places, you couldn鈥檛 make out the route clearly.鈥 Another racer he came across on the trail, he wrote, 鈥渉ad begun to shake all over his body.鈥
Runners found themselves stranded between the second and third checkpoints without warm clothes. Many tried to use space blankets (which they were required to carry),听and some were able to shelter in a cave, but dozens fell on the treacherous terrain or lost their blankets in the wind and passed out from exposure. Some survived long enough for help to arrive, but 21 did not.听, a 1,200-person search and rescue operation was launched for all听172 of the race participants, but local authorities couldn鈥檛 save everyone.听
One of the victims was Liang Jing, a top Chinese ultrarunner. I got to know him in 2018,听while reporting a story on the medical team at the 248-mile Ultra Gobi in western China, a race听that he won. He was among the toughest athletes I鈥檇 ever seen. One night, temperatures fell into the twenties, and when I woke up in my tent the next morning, my water bottle was frozen solid. As I found out听later, Liang听kept running through it all. He was too tired to pack away his yellow sleeping bag, so he wedged it through the loops of his backpack, above his waist, and for the rest of his run, the ends flopped behind him like deflated wings. A day later, we were sharing beers and talking about his adventure.听
For a runner like Liang to lose his life, conditions must have been truly horrendous. But among those familiar with the Chinese endurance-racing scene, a tragedy like this isn鈥檛 seen as especially surprising. I鈥檝e written about China for the past ten years, including听, and in the aftermath of the Gansu disaster, most of the WeChat messages I received from China expressed sadness, not shock. Over the past decade, tens of millions of people鈥攑erhaps even hundreds of millions, depending on which Chinese running expert you ask鈥攈ave taken up the sport. I鈥檝e heard estimates that as many as 3,000 long-distance races are held annually in China, ranging from shoddy events sponsored by local governments to听Ultra Trail du Mont Blanc鈥揵randed competitions.
Because there aren鈥檛 enough experienced organizers to run all these races safely, responsible preparation and oversight鈥攊ncluding contingency planning for bad weather鈥攊s absent at many events. 鈥淚 think what is happening is that there is a lot of enthusiasm for mountain sports, and now the demand is outstripping the supply of expertise,鈥 said one organizer, who asked not to be named, given the likely coming crackdown on races.
Organizers frequently told me the question was when, not if, a tragedy would happen.
One reason why races outpace resources in China is politics. Party officials, who are often called cadres in China, are promoted based on economic development in their region, and large cultural projects鈥攊ncluding recreational events鈥攅arn them bonus points from higher-ups. As a result, marathons and ultra races have become a favorite pursuit for many officials. (At the Gansu race, the mayor of the city hosting the event听shot off the starting pistol.) They bring tourism and media coverage, and cadres can highlight them on their r茅sum茅s. Politicians see other countries hosting competitions and, not to be outdone, organize their own, sometimes one-upping each other by increasing race distances and elevation gains. Every county in China now seems to host a race, and organizers from the country鈥檚 entrepreneurial class have risen quickly to chase after government and sponsor contracts.听
This has led to a dramatic range of quality at trail-running competitions. The Ultra Gobi that听I covered had regular medical checkpoints staffed by doctors, and both foreign and Chinese athletes were impressed by the race support and organization. There were still blind spots when it came to听safety, but medical help wouldn鈥檛 have been far away had someone become听hypothermic on the trail. This hasn鈥檛 been the case at other events, however. In my reporting, I鈥檝e often heard stories of participants becoming hopelessly lost at high elevations, without any volunteers, medical support, or guidance to be had. Any sudden change in weather could have spelled disaster in such听situations.
When I asked organizers about the potential for something like this to occur, they frequently told me the question was when, not if, a tragedy would happen. Getting lost isn鈥檛 uncommon in ultras around the world, nor is bad weather, and the tragedy in China听 whether ultra running has grown too extreme in general. But races in China often lack basic preparation.
Both foreign and Chinese organizers brought up these issues in the aftermath of last weekend鈥檚 race, pointing out that runners听 to carry sleeping bags and warm clothes, which听some other competitions insist on. 鈥淪ome events only focus on financial results and are unwilling to make investments in safety,鈥 said听 posted last weekend by Paopao Wang, a popular Chinese running app. 鈥淪ome companies who undertake [these races] are completely unprepared in their ability to organize high-risk sports and spend the necessary resources.鈥澨
Such inconsistency in quality and planning is typical for developing countries that are growing adventure sports to appeal to a growing middle class, but China鈥檚 progress has been especially uneven. Wei Jun, a former sports bureaucrat who now organizes private races, told me a few years ago that only about 10 percent of organizers survive the business, and听that new ones鈥攎any with no experience鈥攔eplace them immediately. 鈥淪o you have races that are run very well. Others are disastrous,鈥 he said.
On top of that, as Chinese athletes have honed their endurance, respect for unpredictable weather hasn鈥檛 always caught up, and organizers often fail to set boundaries in the mountains. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a crash course in mountain culture,鈥 said the organizer who asked not to be named.听鈥淲hat is happening is that you have this natural let鈥檚-get-it-done听attitude, but people refuse to believe that weather will change.鈥 He added that听in the 1970s, when mountain sports were growing in Korea, tragic accidents were common there, too.听
Several race organizers told me on WeChat that they hope the Gansu disaster will serve as a wake-up call. Whether the Chinese government will react thoughtfully is another question. When a civic tragedy strikes, authorities tend to respond bluntly, often by shutting down an enterprise entirely rather than reforming it. Once, when I worked at a Chinese high school, someone drowned in the campus pool, and the administration responded by banning swimming and removing the pool. In the aftermath of last weekend鈥檚 events, authorities may take a similar approach, eliminating races rather than making them safer with听investment and alpine education for organizers.
This appears to be happening already. An investigation by the Chinese Communist Party鈥檚 Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, the same body that investigates high-profile corruption cases and purges officials, is already looking into Gansu. Yesterday, in a sign that the dominoes have begun to fall, one of the largest state-run organizers, XTrail, canceled a major race at Kansas Lake in Xinjiang鈥檚 Altai Mountains, and local governments have already begun calling off marathons.
Reform is desperately needed, but a harsh crackdown would be a huge hit to the burgeoning community of endurance athletes in China. Within the country鈥檚 authoritarian system, running has blossomed into a cherished space for individualism, freedom, and risk-taking, and it鈥檚 also brought competitors together from across the world. At the Ultra Gobi, a day after the top finishers had slept off their exhaustion, I found myself chatting with Liang and Zhao Jiaju, the second-place finisher, in a hotel courtyard. Later听some of the foreign runners joined the conversation, and I helped translate. The group swapped stories from the race, laughing with their competition and sampling cheap Chinese beer. It felt like a meaningful moment鈥擟hinese athletes are often rendered faceless to their Western competitors. Endurance events in China have the potential to create countless similar moments, but not if organizers can鈥檛 be trusted to prevent reckless tragedy.