Devoted cycling fans of all ages came out to watch the USA Pro Challenge’s first men’s stage around Steamboat Springs. The circuit race provided an opportunity to see riders twice.
Those at the finish line witnessed Taylor Phinney’s (BMC Racing Team) first victory after a 15 month post-accident recovery period.
Gallery
- Enterprising BMC fans
- Cowbell practice
- Dolls like bike racing too
- Bad foot? No problem.
- Phinney / Shelden fan
- So where are they?
Get your Aussie on! Check out my piece for SBS Cycling Central on Drapac Professional Cycling’s Lachlan Norris and his partner in summer training, GS-Ciao’s Chris Winn.
Norris’s winning program boosts prospects in Colorado http://t.co/VilJkaXxmY #sbscycling pic.twitter.com/cFh8i3LZ68
— CyclingCentral (@CyclingCentral) August 17, 2015
- Steamboat Springs backdrop
- Lachlan Norris
- Drapac presented

Joe Dombrowski wins on Snowbird at 2015 Tour of Utah stage 6 in a “comeback” year after iliac surgery (photo: Tour Tracker / Tour of Utah)
Congratulations to Virginia’s Joe Dombrowski (Cannondale-Garmin) on his win at Snowbird today in the Larry H. Miller Tour of Utah.
It brings back memories of his 2012 climb up to the same finish line alongside then teammate Ian Boswell (Team Sky).
This year Dombrowski ascended with the help of Cannondale-Garmin teammate Ben King.
“Ben buried himself for a kilometer or two,” said Dombrowksi. “He rode a really hard tempo. When I looked back, no one was left except Franck Schleck and Mike Woods. When Ben swung off, I put in another dig. Frank followed at first, but eventually everyone was gone.”
Everyone. Winning solo, Dombrowski also took the race lead with a margin of 50 seconds going into tomorrow’s final stage.
Thank you @Ride_Argyle and especially fellow Virginian @BenKing89 for nailing it at the bottom for me today! Stoked on this jersey and win!
— Joe Dombrowski (@JoeDombro) August 8, 2015
“This win means a lot to me,” said Dombrowski. “I had a lot of success really early in my cycling career. I started late, and I was really good straightaway. I struggled when I moved up to the WorldTour, and I didn’t really know what was wrong for about a year. Around this time last year, we had finally sorted things out. I had the operation on my iliac artery last August.
“This year, it was like starting from zero, almost like being a neo-pro again,” Dombrowski said. “I’ve had to take my time to build-up and hopefully deliver the results I feel like I’m capable of achieving.
“This is the best thing I’ve done yet in this comeback year, if you will. I’m really happy about it.”
Read Cannondale-Garmin’s full stage report on the team’s website.

Inaugural Tour of Utah Women’s Edition podium (l-r) Mandy Heintz 2nd, Coryn Rivera 1st, Meredith Miller 3rd
The preliminary roster for the Tour of Utah Women’s Edition includes the returning 2014 winner, 22-year-old American Coryn Rivera of UnitedHealthcare Pro Cycling team. Rivera has 68 national titles so far in her career covering three disciplines (road, track, cyclocross). She is currently ranked fifth in the individual standing of the USA Cycling National Criterium Calendar (NCC).
Last year’s second and third place finishers, Mandy Heintz (Fearless Femme p/b Haute Wheels Racing) and Meredith Miller (Pepper Palace Pro Cycling presented by The Happy Tooth) are also expected to compete.
The 2015 Tour of Utah Women’s Edition: Criterium Classic is an omnium-style competition that will take place over two days – Aug. 3 in Logan and Aug. 4 in Ogden. It is sanctioned by USA Cycling as part of the NCC.
All of the women’s professional teams currently ranked in the Top 11 of the NCC are confirmed to race in the 17-team field. In addition, the Top 10 riders on the NCC individual rankings will compete.
Rivera will be joined by NCC points leader Erica Allar, racing for LA Sweat; Samantha Schneider of ISCorp presented by Smart Choice MRI (second overall); Tina Pic of Pepper Palace Pro Cycling presented by The Happy Tooth (third); Skylar Schneider of ISCorp presented by Smart Choice MRI (fourth); and Kendall Ryan of Team TIBCO-SVB (sixth), who will wear the stars-and-stripes jersey as the U.S. national criterium champion.
Sprint specialist Allar has won the individual NCC title for four consecutive seasons. This year she has 11 podium finishes, including a third place at one stage of the Amgen Tour of California Women’s Edition and the Omnium title at the 2015 Saint Francis Tulsa Tough. Pic, a Bountiful, Utah resident, is a six-time U.S. national criterium champion and four-time NRC champion.
The ISCorp, a Domestic Elite team from Wisconsin, leads the NCC team standings by 472 points over UnitedHealthcare Pro Cycling. This top team is led by the Schneider sisters. Twenty-four-year-old Samantha holds 11 U.S. national titles (U23 & Junior) and has two NCC event wins this year (Saint Francis Tulsa Tough and Chevron Manhattan Beach Grand Prix). Skyler, 17, won the 2014 USA Cycling Junior Criterium national championships and has three podium finishes this season.

(l-r) Coryn Rivera and Lauren De Crescenzo finish 2nd and 3rd in women’s p-1-2 at the Morgul-Bismark Road Race, day 3 of the Superior Morgul Classic in Colorado
Two Utah-based teams will fight for top honors as well.
DNA Cycling p/b K4 brings a roster including Lauren De Crescenzo and Breanne Nalder. Nalder won the most aggressive rider prize in 2014. De Crescenzo recently returned from racing in Europe.
Canyon Bicycles-Shimano fields a team led by Mindy McCutcheon, the current Utah state time trial champion.
![Coryn Rivera wins the inaugural Tour of Utah Women's Edition. "[Winning] is special because we’re here for the first women’s edition race."](https://provelopassion.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/coryn-rivera-wins.jpg?w=497&h=331)
Coryn Rivera wins the inaugural Tour of Utah Women’s Edition. “[Winning] is special because we’re here for the first women’s edition race.”
Team Presentation
For the first time, all the men’s teams will be joined by the women’s teams at a special event for cycling fans on Saturday, Aug. 1. The Team Presentation, hosted at the Logan Golf and Country Club, will take place at 7 p.m. The event provides free general admission seating for all spectators, and cameras are welcome.
The Larry H. Miller Tour of Utah continues to be free to all spectators, making professional cycling one of the most unique professional sports in the world today. Read details about the Larry H. Miller Tour of Utah by visiting www.tourofutah.com, as well as social channels Facebook (tourofutah), Twitter (@tourofutah #TOU15, #TOUWE15), Instagram (thetourofutah) and YouTube (Tour of Utah).
About the Larry H. Miller Tour of Utah
The Larry H. Miller Tour of Utah, referred to as “America’s Toughest Stage RaceTM,” is a week-long, professional stage race for the best men’s cycling teams in the world. The 2015 event, Aug. 3-9, has been elevated to a 2.HC-rated UCI stage race, making it one of the premier events in North America. For women’s professional and elite teams, a two-day Tour of Utah Women’s Edition: Criterium Classic, Aug. 3-4, is sanctioned by USA Cycling on the National Criterium Calendar.
Host venues for 2015 are Logan, Tremonton, Ogden, Antelope Island State Park, Bountiful, Soldier Hollow/Heber Valley, Salt Lake City, Snowbird Ski and Summer Resort, and Park City. In 2014, the Tour of Utah expanded to seven days of racing and community festivals. The 2015 Tour of Utah covers 712 miles of racing and 51,442 feet of climbing. A total of 16 men’s professional teams will compete, bringing more than 120 athletes from 20 countries. American Tom Danielson of Team Garmin-Sharp claimed the overall men’s title for the Tour of Utah for a second year in a row. The inaugural Tour of Utah Women’s Edition was won by American Coryn Rivera of UnitedHealthcare. For more information visit www.tourofutah.com.

Kirsten Williams leads a silent lap at the 7-Eleven Olympic Training Center Velodrome in honor of her father, Vic Willaims
Track cyclists pose in a balance dance over their bikes – until the official drops the flag to start a race. Harnessing all of their bodily strength, they power through the initial pedal revolutions slowly, as if they’re churning through a trough of caramel.
Sweat rises almost immediately, especially at an outdoor track like the 7-Eleven Olympic Training Center Velodrome in Colorado Springs on a sunny summer day.
Naturally those salty drops evaporate after splashing onto the track surface. But imagine they seep into crevices in the concrete and leave behind slivers of souls, making athletes like Vic Williams forever part of that oval facing the sky.
In mid-June last year Williams left much more behind there; he lost his life in an accident on the bike. A new multi-day track event named after Williams took place at that velodrome two weeks ago.
At least two other memorial races occur on the Front Range in Colorado: the Bob Cook Memorial Mt. Evans Hill Climb and Fred Prindle Memorial City Park Criterium. They’ve become fixtures in the cycling community; the first has run for 50 years and the second for 44.
There’s every chance the Vic Williams Memorial Grand Prix will carry on for many years as well.
Memorial events endure because they remember special people. We remember those athletes for their physical presence, athletic qualities, and demeanor as competitors, friends, and family members. We remember them too for the places of respect they held and contributions they made to the cycling communities that surrounded them.
Like all bike races, the new one named after Williams happened because many people came together to pull it off. Races wouldn’t exist without promoters and course volunteers and riders. Coaches, training companions, and family help racers prepare to compete. Then there’s the spectators, people that look after facilities like the 7-Eleven velodrome, sponsors, and benefactors who lend equipment like barriers and the ubiquitous orange cones.
Williams promoted races. He ran teams. He was a leader, a member of the board of directors for the Bicycle Racing Association of Colorado and the Colorado Velodrome Association. He coached juniors. With his wife he raised a young woman and track star for today and the future, his daughter Kirsten.
Eighteen year-old Kirsten returned to the velodrome within days of her father’s passing. Then only two weeks later she made the journey to California and won two U.S. junior national track championships.
A friend was spot on when he wrote about Williams’ appetite for learning and how he passed that trait onto his daughter. Bruce Hecht wrote this about Kirsten while remembering her dad: “As she has moved to the top of her cycling she is just like her father, always knowing she has one mouth and two ears for a reason. She will absorb anything of value, and quickly push out what she knows is wrong.”

Kirsten Williams takes off for the individual pursuit bronze medal round at the Vic Williams Memorial Grand Prix
At the Colorado Springs race in memory of her father, Kirsten validated Hecht’s observation. She raced the individual women’s pursuit and qualified for the bronze medal final. In that round she clocked consistent laps which ultimately shaved two seconds off her time because she had banked strength for the last laps. She was trying something new, she said. Previously she’d zoom off too hard in the opening laps.
As a junior cyclist Kirsten supplied her talent and positive spirit to the track community, her TWENTY16 Junior Development Team, and the local Colorado racing scene. She supported and encouraged other young riders.
Kirsten’s courage and persistence in coping with deep adversity has become a model in the cycling community she and her father shared and beyond. Now a member of the elite ranks, in August she expects to contest the individual and team pursuit at the U.S. elite national track championships.
On day two of the Vic Williams Memorial Grand Prix, shadows lengthened over the edge of the velodrome railing as the second session of racing paused for a lap of silence in honor of Williams. Kirsten led 50-plus riders around the oval, her head held high. Her mother played a role too; she draped medals over the top three riders in the completed events.
It must have required all of their strength to manage the painful reminder of a missing devoted father and husband.
The next day, Kirsten said, she and her mom were okay. “It actually was really good and helpful I think,” Kirsten said, “to feel the love and support of everyone still remembering him.”
Gallery
- Cat and mouse, Germany vs Spain
- Women’s keirin finals round
- Cat and mouse, Germany vs Holland
- Eric Engler cools down
- Tela Crane at full speed
- Women’s individual pursuit podium
- Men’s sprint
- Jennifer Tetrick pursuit start
- John Cline’s send-off
updated with full report, June 28, 2015
Canadians Catharine Pendrel (Luna Pro Team) and Raphael Gagne (Rocky Mountain Bicycles) both won the final US Cup event in the 2015 USA Cycling Pro XCT mountain bike calendar as well as the overall series titles in Colorado Springs on Saturday. Off the front from the gun in their respective fields, they stayed away for 90 minutes under a brilliant sun at an altitude of approximately 1,800 metres.
In the women’s race Pendrel led with teammate Katerina Nash who finished second. Erin Huck (Scott – 3Rox) took third.
“It was pretty much perfect for me out there today,” Pendrel said after the race, “because Katerina and myself got away early and so I knew I’d be with my teammate and no matter who came out on top it was going to be a good day for the team in terms of the overall and the individual day.”
Series leader Gagne raced in a group of three with Russell Finsterwald (SRAM) and American champion Todd Wells (Specialized). Geoff Kabush (Scott – 3Rox) snuck up on them at the finish after chasing the entire race and finished fourth behind Wells. Local racer Finsterwald placed second.
After winning the first race in the series at Bonelli Park, the Colorado win presented a neat wrap-up for Gagne’s US Cup efforts.
“This year I got my first US Cup win at the beginning of the season and here it’s a [UCI] HC race so it’s even bigger,” Gagne said. “So I am very happy with this.” The series title, he said, was another first for him.
As for whether 2015 marks the initial occasion of a Canadian sweep of the American series, Pendrel thought not. During the early days of the National Off-Road Bicycle Association (NORBA), which launched in 1983, Canadians were “pretty dominant on the men’s and the women’s sides,” she said. Pendrel won the Pro XCT overall in 2009.
Women’s race
Current world champion Prendrel and Nash built a lead of nearly 20 seconds after the completing the opening partial lap. Chloe Woodruff (Stan’s NoTubes) and Luna’s Georgia Gould each chased singly, followed by a group including Kate Courtney (Specialized), Huck, Larissa Conners (Ridebiker Alliance), and Rose Grant (Stan’s NoTubes). The remainder of the field consisted of lone riders and occasional groups. Soon the early chasers solidified into the group of Huck, Conners, and Woodruff.
As Nash and Pendrel stretched out their lead lap after lap, a fight for position and UCI HC points developed between the chasers and the two women who stalked them, Gould and Grant. Small gaps opened between Huck, Woodruff, and Conners, which appeared to be driven by Huck’s pace. Gould steadily worked her way forward as Conners lost some ground.
With about one lap to go Pendrel attacked and out-distanced Nash, winning over her teammate by 13 seconds.
Pendrel said the slick, gravely soil conditions played a role in selecting the winner. “We were pretty evenly matched and it just came down to who stayed upright pretty much on that last lap.”
Huck clinched third with a fist pump 30 seconds after Nash. The remainder of the top ten came in one by one. Woodruff placed fourth and Gould held off Conners for fifth.
Two factors played into Pendrel’s satisfaction with her results in Colorado Springs.
“It was definitely a slow burning start to the season and coming into here where it’s at altitude, it’s a little bit different for me. And so I’m really happy with how good I felt today because I just came off of a big training block too,” the world champion said.
“It also gives me confidence going into next weekend in Switzerland which is at the same elevation because my plan was to start hard today and just push my body and see what I could handle at altitude. And I’m happy with what I got.” The Swiss event is part of the World Cup calendar.
Men’s race
Wells left no doubt about his desire to repeat last year’s victory at the same venue. He attacked partway through the first lap, taking a handful of rivals with him.
Eventually the Wells group thinned to three with series leader Gagne and Finsterwald. Fernando Riveros (Raleigh Clement) flatted and lost contact with the leaders whom he continued to pursue despite another flat and a dropped chain. That left Kabush and his teammate Derek Zandstra with the Sho-Air/Cannondale riders, Stephen Ettinger and Keegan Swenson, in a four-man chase group.
“I know the two guys I was racing with are guys that live at altitude, which was definitely a factor for me,” Gagne later said. “So I felt like I had to go kind of steady and play it smart and that’s why I stayed in the group the whole race.”
The leaders built a gap of at least 45 seconds mid-way through the contest. From there the gap began to drop. With about half a lap remaining the leaders’ advantage had tumbled to just five seconds. The chasers, which now excluded Swenson, could glimpse the threesome. Kabush made a last push and caught the leaders before the finish line.
Gagne said he felt strong in the last lap and that helped him to best Finsterwald in the finale. Wells nipped Kabush at the line, getting third. Zandstra placed fifth.
The first time series winner will remain in the U.S. for altitude training. He’ll prepare for his next race, the Pan American Games in Toronto, Canada on July 9.
For full results visit the Sho-Air Cycling Group website.
Gallery
- Russell Finsterwald
- Georgia Gould
- Erin Huck near top of climb
- Andrey Fonseca of Costa Rica
- Geoff Kabush, hunter
- Zandstra leads the chase
- Larissa Conners
- Caroline Mani
- Fernando Riveros descends on a flat tire
- Chloe Woodruff tries to pass Erin Huck near the top of the long climb
- Todd Wells takes charge
- Catharine Pendrel takes the win
- Men’s race podium bubbly
- Grant Ellwood
- Peace-out hand-off
- Mitch Hoke, a happy dude
- Brady Kappius
- Garrett Gerchar
- Maghalie Rochette
- Evelyn Dong placed 11th
- Shayna Powless
- Megan Carrington
- Raphael Gagne cools off
- Kate Courtney finished 8th
Paul Morris proved that something that ended totally wrong can go totally right the next time.
One year ago he turned his life on end and moved to Colorado. Very soon after arriving he started the Fred Prindle Memorial City Park Criterium. On the last turn of the sixty minute race he crashed, hard. He walked away from the park toting a broken bike.
Last Saturday he returned to the scene of destruction with one thought: I really want to win.
He tried to break away but the pack defeated his attempts. Then in the final laps around the two mile circuit he watched several riders go, past green green lawns, fountains spilling water, and spiky trees overtaken by hooting Cormorant fledglings.
Morris dug in and joined what became the winning break. Rubber-side down out of the final turn, he out-sprinted the others and took the win.
So the next time something ends in bitter disappointment and the temptation to stew in regret or avoid the situation begins to settle in your heart, remember Paul Morris’ victory at the City Park criterium.
The Rocky Mountain Road Club (RMRC) stages the Fred Prindle Memorial City Park Criterium. RMRC athletes currently compete as the Thump Cycling p/b Turin squad. According to a Thump Cycling representative, the RMRC, which has existed for forty-plus years, named the race after team member Fred Prindle who died on a training ride while attending college in California.
Gallery
- Fearsome foursome
- Annie Toth and a Stages rider
- Who’s knocking on the door?
- Cormorant corner
- Gage Hecht bridges to the late winning P12 break
- Jenna MacPherson wins women’s 3 race
- Kale bouquet
- Eric Brunner on the front
- Men’s 3 podium, Robert Wright wins
- Men’s 3 lakeside
- Men’s P12 podium, Paul Morris wins
- Yep
- Podium jumping
- Robert Wright, men’s 3 victor
- Saturday in the park
- No stop, go
- Women’s 3 pack
- Breaking the speed limit
- Women’s P12 field near the Esplanade

Four U23 athletes race for the COGA Elite Cycling Team. Three mentors assist and race with them. (photo by Tim Lucking)
Four young men sat attentively around a dining room table in suburban Denver on a sunny March day perfect for riding their bikes. They ignored their smart phones for over an hour.
They are Ian McPherson, Maxx Chance, Liam Dunn, and Taylor Schmidt, members of a new elite under-23 cycling team. They were learning details about the nature of the organization sponsoring them, COGA (Colorado Oil and Gas Association). Also present were team mentors Taylor Jung, Jason Short, and Anuthee Korder. Jung manages and directs the squad.
Some might not align an outdoor, community-based activity like cycling with this industry. That’s exactly why COGA is championing the young sportsmen. The association hopes the team can spread a message regarding its members’ goodwill contributions in the state.
Jung points out that not many people know, for example, that the industry supplied relief for Colorado communities affected by the September, 2013 flood disaster. According to data supplied by COGA, donations totaled $2.1 million.
In mid-July over two thousand cyclists will have a chance to see the message in action at the Courage Classic. The team has invited COGA energy company employees and their friends to pedal over mountain passes with its riders to reach a $100,000 fundraising goal for the benefit of Children’s Hospital Colorado.
“There are a lot cyclists in the energy industry, which shouldn’t really be surprising since people who live in Colorado tend to love outdoor activity, regardless of what industry they work for,” notes Jung.
Another objective for the organization is to increase understanding about the oil and gas business. On that sunny March day James Cole, an energy subject matter expert with Colorado Legislative Services, supplied industry context and answered questions. Christina Delpone, a COGA employee, passed around information in paper and thumb drive form.
They talked about how most of the parts on their bikes can be traced back to the oil and gas industry, as well as the fabrics stitched into cycling kits.
Jung first contacted the organization through Delpone. “When Taylor first met with COGA he came prepared with a COGA specific proposal that aligned with our organizational mission and values,” she says.
“Also, Taylor has proven a commitment and genuine passion for what he does with the team and we could see that since day one.”
About 50,000 people in Colorado work in the industry, according to a fact sheet on COGA’s website. The organization’s representatives indicate the state ranks sixth nationwide for natural gas production and ninth for crude oil production. Significant growth over several years has brought more attention to the industry’s activities and raised concerns among some residents of mineral-rich communities.
At the meeting the riders and mentors speculated about the response to their title sponsor. Would people welcome a new cycling benefactor? Or would those critical about the industry give them an earful?
Whichever it would be, the four U23 riders seemed confident about handling either situation.
From the team and sponsor’s perspective, ideally when people see these young men wearing the COGA logo while training or racing their bikes they will connect the industry with a sport that is a part of a healthy lifestyle for many Coloradans – or at a minimum become curious about the flame insignia.
Jung says he’s not received any negative reactions thus far.
“I have had some very positive feedback from people in the [bike] racing community. They seem to like the idea of money from outside the cycling world coming into our sport,” Jung says. “Even people who I am guessing tend toward the liberal side of the issue have approached me with ‘So oil and gas…tell me about that,’ which opens a conversation.”
Investing in young adults
By choosing U23 riders for its first cycling sponsorship venture COGA supports a cohort of ambitious bike racers who, Jung says, needs assistance to make a successful leap from junior competition to the serious senior ranks and also lacks the attention and resources focused on other adults or juniors.
“When you’re eighteen you’re not likely to be ready to move to a pro level, no matter how good you are from a racing stand point or how strong you are as a rider,” comments Jung. “There is a maturity that builds over time and so a need for a step in between a junior program and a professional level.”
Jung devotes himself to their cause. He launched his first development outfit in 2012 under the name pedal p/b Cannondale. Pedal, a bike shop in Littleton, also backs the current elite team. Jung owns the COGA Elite Cycling Team through his management organization, Rocky Mountain Velo.
The four U23 riders frequently race in the same field as mentors Jung, Short, and Korder. In their early thirties, the mentors can call on fresh memories regarding the chase for glory and struggles faced by their young charges.
Together with this guidance the riders benefit from logistics planning, transportation, housing when traveling, fully built Cannondale CAAD10 bikes outfitted with Shimano Ultegra components, and performance coaching if a rider hasn’t yet secured it. Additional equipment sponsors on board are Cannondale for helmets and gloves, Pactimo for performance-grade kits, Fizik saddles, and Continental tires.
This season riders expect to compete in a set of major events they likely couldn’t enter on their own; that could be due to cost or coordination for travel and items like mechanical assistance during events. Racing fees are covered for events that include the Joe Martin Stage Race in Arkansas, the eleven-day Wisconsin Tour of America’s Dairyland in June, and Oregon’s Cascade Cycling Classic in July.
“On a small scale I want the team to operate as much like a professional team as possible,” says Jung. “We allow them to focus on the racing instead of housing, transport, food, etc.”
Collegiate cycling offers a development opportunity for the U23 group and all four of riders compete as members of collegiate squads at Fort Lewis College, the School of Mines, or the University of Colorado. However, the collegiate road racing season is short and concludes in May when local and national competition is just heating up.
From the racing perspective the team has already enjoyed success with three wins. That means podium and finish line photos featuring the COGA insignia in communities across the Front Range and beyond.
Even when they aren’t winning, the riders have proved able ambassadors for their title sponsor. Last weekend after the three-day Superior Morgul road race ended, Jung walked along the finish line, meeting people, handing out business-sized cards titled “Frack Facts,” and talking about the oil and gas industry’s support for cycling.
- COGA Elite Team with Jim Cole
- COGA Pactimo jersey
- U23 riders Liam Dunn, Maxx Chance, and Ian McPherson, with manager Taylor Jung (l-r) and U23 rider Taylor Schmidt (foreground)
Anyone interested in joining the team at the Courage Classic can contact Taylor Jung for more information.
Abby Mickey (UnitedHealthcare Pro Cycling Team) and Michael Burleigh (GS CIAO) won from the pro-1-2 fields after breaking away late at Colorado’s Morgul-Bismark road race. The Morgul-Bismark took place on day three of the Superior Morgul event which opened with a time trial last Friday.
They each savored victories that transpired on the course where their competitive cycling days began.
Mickey crossed the line with an extensive post-up sequence. It began with arms raised in a victory salute. Then she smoothed out and pointed to the “UHC” logo on her blue and white jersey. Finally, she extended her arms wide looking for all the world like she was embracing the entire scene: finish line truss, official’s trailer, and the spectators watching from behind orange fencing and up on the adjoining hill.
“It’s not a huge race, but it is one of the first races I ever did on the road,” Mickey said. “I love this course.
“And to take the win with such a big gap and by myself, it was really fun. And even better to go one-two [with teammate Coryn Rivera].” Mickey’s advantage measured three minutes.
During her first Morgul-Bismark outing she had competed as a Cat 4 rider. Now she’s twenty-four and in her second professional racing year.

Michael Burleigh moments before winning the 2015 Morgul-Bismark road race. GS CIAO’s next race is Winston-Salem Cycling Classic.
Burleigh began his celebration with a peaceful expression near the crest of the final steep climb dubbed “The Wall;” the rise concludes the 13 mile loop the men circled six times. Then he punched one fist skyward over the line. He chose the hand on the same side as his heavily bandaged right leg which had been injured in a crash the day before.
“I love this course,” Burleigh said. “This is the first road race I ever did, as a Cat 5, and I was hooked. So this is incredible to win in the p-1-2’s here. It’s certainly the best result of my cycling career.”
Burleigh is thirty-two and started racing about four years ago. GS CIAO is one of the top amateur men’s cycling teams in America.
With under two laps remaining Burleigh stepped up the pace to put pressure on the other teams in defense of teammate Josh Yeaton’s placement in the omnium competition. He soon realized he’d outdistanced the reduced peloton.
“I didn’t really imagine I would be able to hold that to the line,” he said. When his lead steadied at a minute and a half he changed his outlook.
“I started to let myself believe I might hold that and I did. It was quite a great redemption after yesterday, hitting the deck so hard and taking myself out of the GC and causing so many of my teammates to have to drop back to get me.”
The satisfaction these two athletes experienced stemmed from a significant span of progression, from newbie to queen and king of “The Wall,” a storied hill made famous by the Coors Classic.
Of course progression takes more shapes than winning, and sometimes it shows in those you’ve influenced. Jennifer Sharp (Stages Cycling) coaches with retired pro racer Alison Powers at Alp Cycles Coaching. Mickey is one of their clients and Sharp motor-paces her. While cooling down after the race coach Sharp was ecstatic about the UnitedHealthcare rider’s victory.
Sharp also enjoyed her own effort while racing in the pro-1-2 field. Despite the fact that the hilly Morgul-Bismark course isn’t her favorite playground, midway through the race she decided to try to leave a cautious pack.
“Then I had this gap and was like, ‘OK, they’re not worried about me. I’m just going to go.’ So I went.”
Mickey bridged up to her and flew away on a hill. Sharp powered on and with one lap to go she still held a gap to the pack. But she’d run out of water and ended up in nineteenth place.
“That’s all right,” Sharp said. “This is definitely not my cup of tea, but to have that kind of redemption on a day when you don’t think you have it, it’s success.”
For full results from Superior Morgul visit the Without Limits Productions website.
Gallery (more to come)
- Power zones on a 14 year old’s bike
- GS CIAO swept the men’s pro-1-2 podium, Chris Winn 3rd and Josh Yeaton 2nd
- (l-r) Coryn Rivera and Lauren De Crescenzo finish 2nd and 3rd in women’s p-1-2
- Men’s Cat 3 Superior Morgul omnium: Kenny Boots 3rd, David Leonard 1st, Evan Clouse 2nd
- Men’s Cat 3 field led mostly by juniors with one lap to go
- Women’s pro-1-2 podium, Lauren De Crescenzo 3rd and Coryn Rivera 2nd
- Men’s Cat 3 field near the turn onto Highway 93
- Huddling for warmth while waiting for the podium call
- Abby Mickey and Jennifer Sharp rip past a rider from another category
- Krughoff, Primal rider, Drew Christopher, and Taylor Shelden in p-1-2 race
- Yeaton and Winn carry off podium sweep for GS CIAO
- Michael Burleigh resists a handup
- Liam Dunn refuels
- Abby Mickey cruising with one to go
- Chasing Abby Mickey and Jen Sharp
- MM 40+ 1-2-3 Sunday at the office
- KP Legan finishes top ten
- Cari Higgins’ happy dance with Sarah Fader
- Dig the new Boulder Jr Cycling kits
































































































