The Crossroads of Two Brands At the 1983 New York Marathon, New Zealand’s Rod Dixon staged an epic comeback in the final 10 kilometers, overtaking his long-leading rival to win by a mere 9 seconds. On his feet were a pair of Saucony running shoes—a brand that had already spent nearly a century perfecting footwear.
Meanwhile, on Canada’s West Coast, Vancouver was quiet. Arc'teryx didn’t exist yet; its predecessor, Rock Solid, hadn’t even been founded. The brand that would redefine outdoor gear was still six years away from birth.
While Saucony became synonymous with champions, speed, and victory—earning its reputation as a "super running shoe"—Arc'teryx was in its underground incubation phase. Today, under Anta’s ownership, Arc'teryx has transcended its niche as professional outdoor gear to become a cultural symbol for the middle class. Acquired by XTEP, Saucony has attracted serious runners with its performance, achieving steady growth but failing to break into mainstream consciousness.
One is famed for top-tier outdoor equipment; the other is hailed as the "Rolls-Royce of running shoes." Despite similar beginnings, their paths diverged. Now, as their destinies unfold in China, the question arises: Which route leads to the future of outdoor brands?
**Parallel Histories: What Arc'teryx Has, Saucony Has Too** In 2025, Saucony dominated wear rates among international brands at China’s top three marathons. It excelled in technology and speed but remained confined to the running community.
Could Saucony break out? Its heritage, performance, and niche status mirror Arc'teryx’s—only Saucony’s history stretches 91 years further back. Founded in 1898 along Pennsylvania’s Saucony River, the brand took its name and logo (three stones shaped by the river’s flow) from its birthplace.
Over 127 years, Saucony has innovated relentlessly: the 7446 track spike (1958), the iconic Jazz shoe (1981), the GRID cushioning system (1991), and victories like Grey Welch’s 1994 Ironman triumph. Today, it ranks among the "Big Four" running brands (alongside New Balance, ASICS, and Brooks), revered as "first-class for runners."
Like Arc'teryx in outdoor gear, Saucony is the gold standard in its field. Both share deep histories, elite status, and rocky entries into China. Arc'teryx, after changing hands twice (Adidas, then Amer Sports), found clarity under Anta. Saucony’s early China attempts (2004, 2015) faltered until XTEP’s 2019 partnership unlocked growth, hitting ¥1 billion in revenue by 2024.
Yet their stories split at "breaking out."
**Diverging Paths: Saucony’s Narrative Struggle** Arc'teryx’s rise hinged on storytelling. Anta positioned it as "outdoor luxury," borrowing from Hermès’ playbook: exclusivity, scarcity, and elite experiences. It shuttered low-performing stores, launched flagship boutiques, and cultivated a lifestyle brand via social media and high-end events. By 2022, revenue soared to $952 million.
XTEP seems to follow Anta’s blueprint. Saucony’s 2025 campaign tapped actor Eddie Peng, peppering ads with terms like "elite living" and "urban style." Collaborations with M Stand coffee, TEDx, and niko and… aimed at lifestyle appeal. But results lag: searches for "middle-class running shoes" still favor Salomon or HOKA.
Price points further blur Saucony’s identity. Shoes range from ¥300–¥1,000+, with top sellers under ¥500—accessible to runners but awkward for aspirational branding. Unlike Arc'teryx’s "luxury outdoors" or Salomon’s "mountain chic," Saucony lacks a defining narrative beyond performance.
**The Endgame: Must Every Brand Be Arc'teryx?** Arc'teryx’s breakout brought clout and margins, but costs followed. Outdoor purists decry its fashion shift and inflated prices, questioning whether marketing-driven hype can endure amid cheaper alternatives.
Saucony’s challenge isn’t becoming another Arc'teryx—it’s finding a story that bridges performance and broader appeal without diluting its core. Coffee tie-ins and trend collabs risk muddying its identity: Is it a runner’s staple or a lifestyle accessory?
**The Peril of Forgetting Roots** XTEP’s H1 2025 report shows Saucony’s professional segment grew 32.5% to ¥785 million, proving that technical prowess remains its strongest moat. Yet growth demands reaching beyond runners—without losing them.
Professionalism and style aren’t mutually exclusive, but hierarchy matters. Collaborations should amplify Saucony’s expertise, not chase trends. For niche brands going mainstream, one rule stands: never forget your roots.