CNN  — 

At the 1928 Winter Olympic Games in St. Moritz, Switzerland, demonstration sports – not part of the official program – were included for the first time. With demonstration events ceasing to exist after 1992, in this mini-series, CNN Sport explores some of these ‘lost sports’ of the Winter Games.

For most, a dog is a man’s best friend.

But for select few, they’re also integral to a competitive sport – welcome to the world of sled dog racing.

Debuting as a demonstration sport at the 1932 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, 90 years later, the sport is still alive and barking as dogs pull their harnessed drivers, or mushers, around courses across the globe.

Most popular in the Arctic regions of North America and Europe, any mention of sledding and the breeds of dogs involved – huskies, malamutes and similar Nordic breeds – always come with the association of snow.

Yet Matt Hodgson, Great Britain’s first world champion in purebred sled dog racing, is living proof that a relative lack of snow is no barrier to success when passion is involved.

The Deadly Sins

Based in the occasionally cold but rarely arctic southeast of England, Hodgson has developed his childhood fascination with dogs of the far north into Infury Dogs – a five-time medal winning sled dog team.

Hodgson cites Jack London’s 1903 novel The Call of the Wild as one of his earliest influences, an interest that quickly turned to love with the arrival of his first dog, Ranger – an Alaskan Malamute puppy – in 2005.

These days Hodgson runs with his pack of six “Deadly Sins” – all dogs taking their name from one of the seven biblical vices.

It is an etymology that seems extremely harsh given their impeccable training and talent, not to mention their cuteness – compounded by the arrival of two adorable Greenland Dog pups, Nimis (gluttony) and Pride, in February last year.

Infury's litter of Greenland dogs, born February 2021.

Yet there is a method to the madness, Hodgson explains. Having intended to call his first sled dog – assumed to be female – Envy, Hodgson was forced to rethink when his Canadian Eskimo Dog was born male.

Invidia, the Latin origin of ‘envy,’ was the replacement name of choice and subsequently set a trend, though Hodgson assures that “they’re my ‘deadly sins,’ rather than being deadly sins.”

Distracting deer

No rest for the wicked then, as training begins from puppyhood.

“First of all, they’re my pets, so they’ve got to be good dogs all round,” Hodgson tells CNN Sport, with all dogs attending puppy classes to nurture good behavior and sociability, laying the groundwork for sledding further down the line.

Training is gradually built up over a two-year period – after half a year, pups are allowed to run loose alongside the adults before being “hooked up” towards the ends of runs a few months later to get a feel for the harness.

Invidia, a Canadian Eskimo dog, relaxes in the snow.

A gradual build up is crucial and each dog varies, Hodgson says, but within a year dogs can begin club level competition. Between 15 and 18 months, the international level beckons.

Members of the public trekking through the forests of East Sussex at unsociable hours may be lucky enough to catch the Infury Dogs racing past on one of these sessions, with Hodgson having a permit to run on Forestry England land at certain times – typically at less busy periods – in order to fulfil his impressive five to six days of training per week.

You may hear shouts of “Haw!” and “Gee!” as the dogs turn left and right, as Hodgson, with no reins or any physical connection to the pack, must rely on verbal commands alone, taught through constant reinforcement.

If you’re very lucky, you may even catch Hodgson “wrapped around a tree” when the dogs catch sight of a streaking rabbit or deer.

“Most of the time, they listen,” Hodgson laughs. “That’s all part of the fact that you’re running with animals rather than a machine.”

Hodgson and team race through the New Forest in southern England.

Gold medal retrievers

In competition, though, the Infury Dogs are very much machines.

Hodgson – who tends to compete in “short” races of up to eight kilometers (almost five miles), depending on terrain – has amassed five medals for Great Britain since his first international outing in 2015.

His crowning moment came in 2019 when Infury’s relatively inexperienced team soared to victory at the UK’s maiden World Championships – becoming Team GB’s first ever world champion in purebred sled dog racing.

Hodgson celebrates winning gold on snow at Zuberec, Slovakia in 2020.

Yet for Hodgson, self-proclaimed “consistently last” for his early international outings, winning has never been the absolute priority.

Though disrupted by the pandemic – with a December trip to Belgium canceled following the Covid surge of the Omicron variant – the sport has taken Hodgson and his dogs around the world.

Travel restrictions willing, Sweden calls for the World Championships in March, with the tantalizing prospect of competing at the Östersund Ski Stadium in Östersund.

“I love the dogs and the dogs take so much pleasure from it – if they didn’t enjoy it, they wouldn’t run and it wouldn’t be a lot of fun,” Hodgson said.

“I like the camaraderie, I like the social elements, and I love sharing my love of dogs with people who also have a love of dogs, so it’s a coming together of different people. It’s nice to do well, but that’s not the main thing.”

Lux and Ava pull Hodgson at Zuberec.

An Olympic return?

Now, 10 years shy of the 100th anniversary of sled dog racing at the Winter Olympics as a demonstration sport, talk continues to swirl of the sport one day making a return to the Games.

Hodgson says the International Federation of Sled Dog Sports (IFSS) has been petitioning the International Olympic Committee (IOC), but he holds his own reservations on the suitability of the sport for Olympic status – fearing a “can of worms” opened up by logistics, finances and the very nature of the sport.

“Trying to take tons of dogs and travel from North America or somewhere around the world, it’s so expensive and there’s no money in it,” Hodgson said.

“There’s so many distances, so many categories – which do you select? Is it going to be teams of huskies or teams of greyhound crosses? What distances are they going to run? Does it reflect the sport?”

“Then there’s the issue of, ‘Is the Olympics about human sport? Is this actually human athletics?’” Hodgson adds, referencing the long-running “furor” around equestrian sports at the Games.

Yet theoretically given the chance to compete in “his version” of the sport, Hodgson would “absolutely love” to represent GB at a Games.

Until then, it’s racing through forests – and the occasional tree – in East Sussex for Hodgson and his “Deadly Sins.”