This question arises when I am reading Dugger and Isaksen's "Hypercovers in topology". According to Definition 4.1 in that paper, A hypercover of a space $X$ is an augmented simplicial space $U_*\to X$ such that the maps $U_n\to M^X_nU$ are open covering maps for all $n \geq 0$. Here $ M^X_nU$ denotes the nth matching object of $U_*$ computed in the category $s(\mathcal{Top}\downarrow X)$.
On the other hand by Definition A.4 in the same paper, a simplicial space $X_*$ is said to be split, or to have free degeneracies, if there exist subspaces $N_k\hookrightarrow X_k$ such that the canonical map $$ \coprod_{\sigma}N_{\sigma}\to X_k $$ is an isomorphism. Here the variable σ ranges over all surjective maps in $\bf{\Delta}$ of the form $ [k]\to [n]$, $N_{\sigma}$ denotes a copy of $N_n$, and the map $N_{\sigma}\to X_k$ is the one induced by $\sigma^*: X_n\to X_k$. The idea is that the spaces $N_k$ represent the ‘non-degenerate’ part of $X_k$, sitting inside of $X_k$ as a direct summand.
Now Theorem 4.3 of the paper claims that if $U_*\to X$ is a a hypercover then the maps $\text{hocolim}U_*\to |U_*|\to X$ are all weak equivalences. In the proof it says that "the simplicial object $U_*$ is Reedy cofibrant since it has free degeneracies,"
It is clear that the Cech nerve of an open cover has free degeneracies. My question is: is it also true for any hypercover in the topological setting?