Ironman Wisconsin: The Finances Save Email Print

A | A | A

UPDATED Thursday, September 4, 2008 --- 7:30pm

Statement from WSDC:

September 4, 2008 (Madison, WI) – North America Sports (NA Sports), the license holder and event organizer of the Ford Ironman Wisconsin would like to confirm their commitment to Madison event. NA Sports has enjoyed a great relationship with our partners in the community since the inaugural event in 2002.

The current agreement with the community runs until 2011, the date being predicated on the expiration date of NA Sports license agreement with the World Triathlon Corporation (WTC), owner of all Ironman licenses. It in no way reflects any intent to move the event after this date and is in keeping with the process we follow in all our race communities.

The partnerships between the Wisconsin Sports Development Corporation (WSDC), the Greater Madison Convention and Visitors Bureau, The City of Madison as well as Dane County and the surrounding communities have been positive and we continue to work together to improve the event each year. Our volunteer army, 3500 strong, has been a true supporter of the event, “The continued success of the event is directly tied to the great community support. Without the volunteer base in each Ironman community, no event of this nature could ever take place," said North America Sports CEO Graham Fraser. "An event like Ironman helps to bring the community together to support it and in addition provides a great economic benefit for the area."

WSDC would like to apologize if there was any confusion regarding a story that aired Wednesday, September 3 about the possibility the Ford Ironman Wisconsin Triathlon could exit Madison after 2011. WSDC intended to praise the great support from local businesses such as Alliant Energy and Rayovac for their assistance in helping bring the event to Madison. They have been great partners for many years and we need more supporters similar to them.

Ford Ironman’s economic impact to the community benefits many local businesses and we are now looking to reach out and share in retaining the success we’ve had for so many years. There is no reason not to continue the contract for another five years after 2011 and a multitude of reasons to extend it. Event organizers and supporters at all levels are happy to be in Madison and look forward to the years to come. We do hope to grow the number of local supporters so that everyone can benefit and be part of the “ironman experience”.

For more information please log onto www.ironmanwisconsin

_______________________________________________

Posted Wednesday, September 3, 2008 --- 3:30pm

Ironman Wisconsin could be looking for a new home if it doesn't find more sponsorships and donations because many sponsors have pulled out of the event leaving local organizers with a projected loss.

Ron Vincent is the CEO of Wisconsin Sports Development Corporation and says, "It would be a big loss. Plus, there's only 7 of these in North America and Madison has one and it's something they hang their hat on."

The Ironman Wisconsin attracts nearly 2500 athletes from around the world who do more than just swim, bike and run a combined 140.6 miles through Madison, Verona and Cross Plains. Vincent says, "They've trained for this event a whole year, so they bring up their whole family, they're here to be a part of this experience, the Ironman experience and they're not here to scrimp. They're here, they're staying in the downtown hotels, paying the big bucks, eating out, they're shopping, they're doing the whole Ironman experience."

The economic impact in Dane County is estimated between $2- $2.5 million. But, WSDC has to come up with the host fee of $100,000 to bring the event to town. A cost that's normally offset by sponsorship and donations. Vincent says, "Sponsorship is waning a little bit and now it's to a point where again it's hurting us, that we need to raise the local sponsorship awareness that this is a great event for Madison and if it's going to stay here, the city and the business leaders have to kick in and help out."

Especially after losing big name sponsors like Alliant Energy and Rayovac and the free services of an ambulance company due to the slower economy. Vincent says, "We are probably looking about a $15,000 to $20,000 loss for us. and again, us being a non profit, it's hard for us to make it up, you know we can't just go out and sell one more widget."

The WSDC is talking with Mayor Dave and other organizations about helping offset some of the costs in order to keep the event in the Capital City.

More Stories
Crime Tracker 15: Madison Area Crime Stoppers

CrimeTracker 15: Madison Area Crime Stoppers

Unsung Hero: Local Police Chief Serves Country and Community

Chippewa Falls Student Arrested for Nude Photos

The Spotlight on the Capitol Holiday Tree

Black Friday: Store Hours

Taste of Wisconsin on Thanksgiving Tables

Thanksgiving Gift of Life

Post Your Comments
First Name:
Location:
Enter Comments: characters left
Email (optional):
Email will not be displayed on site. For station contact purpose only.
Read Comments
Comments are posted from viewers like you and do not always reflect the views of this station.
Posted by: Rich Location: Rockford IL on Oct 3, 2008 at 06:55 PM
Wow! You guys are clueless! I drive up to Verona and spend $ all year round to train on the bike route, and eat at the mom&pop places in Madison. You don't only prosper from this event one day of the year! I'm not alone in spending a lot of extra time in Madison that I wouldn't spend otherwise if it weren't for Ironman. Talk about short sighted whiners!

Posted by: styxrox on Sep 7, 2008 at 05:49 PM
It would be no loss if Ironman left...it is nothing but a pain in the rear for the people that live here and the outlying areas don;t see any significant revenue from it. Everyone stays in Madison at the chains and the small businesses who have their streets blocked off might get $2 from a banana and bottle of water sold, but their regular customers can not get in. If there are businesses with money to spend on supporting things lets not throw money at athletes, let's spend money on causes like the Cancer Society, Red Cross, the food pantry, homeless shelters etc where it will do some good.

Posted by: Anonymous on Sep 5, 2008 at 02:14 PM
Only a whiner would compare this to a disease. Whine, whine, whine.

Posted by: James Location: Madison on Sep 5, 2008 at 02:14 PM
Bill, of course Ironman will make money every year. They, like all of these major sporting events (the espn games that were here, and pga for example) require the financial risk to be put on the local organizing groups. 5 million plus merchandise and whatever other deals they have with the photographers and other vendors, yet you have to pay them to get them to come here and come up with all of the volunteers. No thanks.

Posted by: anonymous Location: ? on Sep 4, 2008 at 05:59 PM
anon 9/4 11:- AM: sooooo, what? you have to be an athlete to complain about the ironman being in town? that kind of logic is seriously flawed dude! that is like saying you can't complain about rape until you've been raped, complain about drunk drivers paralyzing someone until your in a chair dead from the neck down, complain about colon cancer until half your bowels have been removed, complain about second hand smoke damages until you have chemotherapy and radiation treatments for lung disease! dude, you're freakin' whacked!! with logic like your's...

Posted by: Bill Location: Verona on Sep 4, 2008 at 01:24 PM
Where does the two thousand dollar or so per athlete entry fee go? 2500 athletes x $2000 is $5 million dollars. Seems like there is plenty of room for a profit on this deal.

Posted by: Anonymous on Sep 4, 2008 at 11:42 AM
Terry YOU ARE A WHINER!!! Bet you don't do any exercise yourself!!!

Posted by: Mickey on Sep 4, 2008 at 11:15 AM
Yeah Terry, it's hard to have one day a year taken up with hootin' and hollerin'. I don't know how you stand it.

Posted by: Anonymous on Sep 4, 2008 at 10:08 AM
Whine, whine, whine. Feel better?

Posted by: Tony Location: Madison on Sep 4, 2008 at 10:05 AM
These types of events bring in a few dollars to small local businesses, but the majority of the profits are for chain-owned hotels and mega-stores ... probably owned by multi-national corporations, with the profits going overseas. The local employees don't profit from them, they just work harder for a few days. A lot of inconvenience for a large segment of the local population, with little local benefit. Do you think the multi-national chain hotels will be sponsors?

Posted by: Anonymous on Sep 4, 2008 at 06:53 AM
same here. wont miss it at all. and mayor dave wont do anything like usual.

Posted by: Alice Location: Madison on Sep 4, 2008 at 12:23 AM
Amen Terry! considering all the extra police, all the extra trash created by these inconsiderate jerks, and everything else, hell, we get more city revenue just from a badger game in town, and we already have plenty of those! besides, it is just a game! Oh, and if the business community is worried about profits "lost" because this event leaves, fine, pony up some ad money, and raise your rates when the stupid games come to town! bunch of b.s.

Posted by: Jim Location: Madison on Sep 3, 2008 at 09:11 PM
Maybe the sponsors that didn't come back didn't see a return on their investment. The financial benefit to the county of these type of events always seems to be inflated. I'm sure some businesses benefit from it but it also inconveniences many others with all of the road closures.

Posted by: Anonymous on Sep 3, 2008 at 07:41 PM
Terry, don't be a downer! Its once a year. Try to enjoy and celebrate it!

Posted by: Terry Location: Madison on Sep 3, 2008 at 06:53 PM
I personally wouldn't shed a tear to see this event leave. It blocks off key downtown streets and the spectators that hoot and holler all day long outside of peoples homes can just go away permanently

Posted by: zeffan Location: Western Dane Cty on Sep 3, 2008 at 04:07 PM
Madison gets the positive economic impact and the surrounding communities get traffic headaches and a negative economic impact. Madison has never hesitated to throw away millions on Monona Terrace, Overture Center, and the leftie social program of the day, so I don't believe they'll think too long before they pony up the money to keep this pain in the rear event screwing up our roads for years to come. If Ironman decides to leave, good riddance to them!

What did they say?
Did you miss what our guests had to say today on the Morning Show? Or maybe you heard part of it and couldn't quite get that address, location, recipe or the latest consumer warning. If you're asking 'What Did They Say?,' just click on the flash video player above to see and hear what you missed!