all photos by Coach Chad
Durango DEVO Next in Nathrop
The local squad plays next this weekend in Nathrop, Colorado at the somethingth annual Chalk Creek Stampede. It is the second stop in the MSC Series and the third team race this season for the student athletes. 35+ racers and family will camp out at the local campground, with cross country racing on saturday and slalom and short track on sunday. A serious “DEVO Shwag Fest” will take place friday night at team dinner, random cycling artifacts from test pilot Matt Phillips of Bicycling Magazine, and other local cyclers. Bread also chipped in for pasta bread and pre race cookies. City Market also lent a hand with the beeef, thanks to Devin for the fuel.
Tad's First German World Cup
DEVO alumni Tad Elliott just completed his most massive World Cup to date in finishing 138th of 180 in Offenburg, Germany for round 2 of the World Cup XC series. Here are the results and story.
Q: Did you know anybody around you at the start line? What was that like?
A: I did know one person, I was near Barry Wicks. He was easy to spot since he was about a foot taller than anyone else around us. I also met Kris Sneedon on the start line and we started right next to each other. It was nice to see some friendly faces amidst a sea of Euros with their game faces on.
Q: How did the first 5 minutes of the race go for you? Describe the feeling of being in that massive pack of hammers on the start.
A: The start really is crazy. The first five minutes for me were tough. I managed to stay upright which was goal number one. The feeling of being in massive pack of hammers was GRIPPED. There is a lot of dust you can’t see that well and you are trying to pass guys. It was intense, but now I know to stay relaxed and go with the flow.
Q: How did you finish?
A: I finished well started to move up the last couple of laps and came in 138th. I was more pumped that I did not crash or flat or walk any decents.
Q: Was there anything techy on the course that messed with you?
A: Yes. There is this 90 degree left turn off a log drop into super steep roots and ruts and then another flat 90 degree loose gravel turn to a rock drop off with hay bails on both sides for protection. The first day a girl crashed crazy hard infront of me and I could not get that image out of me head. On race day there were probably 1000 spectators there with huge speakers blasting music and a guy was anouncing over the loud speaker who you were and what country you were from before you dropped in. There was a little NASCAR vibe with people wanting to see some CARNAGE.
Q: Who is your favorite German World Cuper? Besides Sontagg.
A: Sabine Spitz she won gold at the Olympics last year. Getting to see her race and hearing the cheers of the crowd when she would came by was pretty cool. The loudest I have ever heard fans at a bike race.
Jr DEVO Rocks
Yep, it true, Jr DEVO rocks pretty hard. The season is in the half way week right now and skills are improving every ride. If you see em’ out on the track, say “what up.”
Alien Run Results and Photos
Women Overall; 1. Tina Dominic, 2. Kaila Hart, 3. Kricket Lewis, 4. Annie Cheeney, 5. Mary Monroe
Men Overall; 1. Ben Sonntag, 2. Travis Brown, 3. Cale Redpath, 4. Joey Thompson, 5. Chad Wells
Jr Expert Girls; 1. Kaila Hart, 2. Lilly Oswald
Jr Expert Boys; 1. Elliott Saslow, 2. Kyle Horn
Jr Sport Boys; 1. Chris Blevins, 2. Stephan Davoust, 3. Devin Feilen, 4. Riley Wanzak, 5. River Weiss
Jr Sport Girls; 1. Hannah Madden, 2. Joan Walker, 3. Kaylee Blevins
Jr Beginner Girls; 1. Whitney Wanstrath, 2. Hannah Peterson, 3. Emily Schaldach
Jr Beginner Boys; tied for 3rd. Will Berger, Shane Ellis, and Keenan Desplanques
Coaches; Annie Cheeney 2nd Expert Women, Kricket Lewis 1st Singlespeed Women, Chad Cheeney 7th Expert men
Moms and Friends; Julie Feilen 1st sport veteran women, Dana Desplanques 3rd, Robin Guillaume 2nd Singlespeed Men, and Bob Davoust sport veteran men.
Fruita Fhotos
All Pics by Jeanne Pastore, Gino and Alicia’s mom.
Durango DEVO in Fruita
The U-14 and 19 Durango DEVO mountain bike teams are in Fruita this weekend, participating in their first team race of the season. The Rabbit Valley Rally is the first stop on the Mountain States Cup Series, which takes place at 7 different venues around Colorado and New Mexico. The athletes will compete in the individual Time Trial on saturday and the Cross Country on Sunday.
Elke Brutsaert Interview
Local retired DH superstar Elke Brutsaert has been working with the local college cycling team as well as the DEVO program ever since she gave up the traveling lifestyle as “team Mom” for the Giant World Cup mtb team. Durango is stoked to have her here for more months out of the year. Here is what she has to say about sweet stuff.
Q: What was your first, best bike ride memory?
A: When I was ages 3-5yrs, my family lived in Socorro NM. There is not much I remember of these early days, being such a wee one and all. I do have a vague memory of riding bikes with my brothers in the arroyo across the road from our house. I do also recall the day we moved to Maine, when we found a black widow spider in the bottom of a trash can that was to get packed in the U-Haul. SUPER scary day…first I had ever heard of a spider that could kill you, never mind the “rattler’s” all over the arroyo!
Q: Who did you look up to in the cycling world when you began your career in
the DH mtb world?
A: Susan Demoate (sp?) And why? She was a great Icon of the sport!! True professional, very friendly and genuinely excited for me…. a new racer on the DH circuit, ready to dominate. She also later became a gracious Olympic medal winner in Athens, Georgia. I also have great respect for Sara Ballentine and Cindy Devine….they were the founding mtb diva’s of equal prize money. Unprecedented in many other sports.
Q: What was your favorite bike you ever rode when you raced professionally?
A: I was chosen by Mert Lawill to pilot the first Schwinn/Yeti/Lawill prototype at a world cup in Big Bear, CA. Monkey, our trusted Mechanic and great friend, stayed up all night with Mert, working out the kinks of the new rear linkage system. Grinding parts, reworking bushings, putting on stickers and dialing in the shox’s to make it all run smoothly for my morning race run. I took one practice run and roosted the field to win my second World cup DH on a bike I had spent only 5 minutes on that morning in practice. Regina Stiefel, the German WC overall leader was shocked, as she was expected to handily win on this fitness course. From that day, forward the Lawill rear linkage had a lasting name in the industry and I am honored to have been a part of that process which eventually produced the legendary Schwinn Straight 8 DH bike. Also, it was entirely fun to feel like I had “one up” on my competitors. The bike was a mental edge…it had one more inch of travel (4 inches of rear plushness) that worked really, really well…even in pedaling. All my rivals knew I had this new prototype and would ride it in the race the next day. Just the thought alone made them shudder with bike envy, hopelessly distracted by my sweet machine of domination.
Q: You were a massage artist for the Giant World Cup team the past few
years, what do you do now and how did it come to be?
A: Yes, I was Soigneur for the Giant race bandits for several years…spoiling them rotten with my honed sports massage skills, home cooked meals and constant caretaking shenanigans. Now that I have given up this fun and thankless job, which involved way to much air travel….. I am currently in school at FLC working towards my Exercise Science degree. I also teach part time at the Rocky Mountain Institute of Healing Arts and have a private massage practice. I have also recently started personal training at 24 hr Fitness Solutions. This is a new aspect to my “skill set”, which has been long in coming, as I have dabbled in the fitness & wellness field for many years and have a great wealth of knowledge in coaching, training and corrective exercise training specific to postural problems as well as Elite level performance. I am excited to branch out, as I constantly reinvent myself.
Q: What is the most important thing young cyclist must learn in their
development as well rounded cyclists?
A: The aspect of REST, is one of the most poorly understood and under-utilized aspects of training. In a sea of variables where you try to gain any margin of improvement, the most beneficial can sometimes simply be rest. Learning when and how to rest is an art form and comes with maturity and experience. Even some athletes, who are advised by the best coaches in the country, just do not listen and over train. There is nothing worse than to see a talented young athlete dig themselves into a hopeless hole of fatigue, because they did not value rest as much as the training aspect.
Q: Have you witnessed any foreign junior programs in your world travels, and
do you have any top secret info?
A: Yes, the Brits. are dialed…as was obvious in China when they dominated 60% of all cycling disciplines. The BCF is a very organized, government funded organization, which also has private donors who love to win medals…especially in Track events. Most foreign federations are government funded, thus they usually have more youth based development programs. In the US, since everything is privatized, our federation is ill in comparison without the Gov. funding. Not all bad though….I think that the young D’go Devo athletes are on the right track and are lucky to have a private Devo program, where there is more say on a local level as far as what the program will offer. With federations, there are always plenty of hoops to jump through and generally, in my opinion, way too much structure. So, no need to look for any top secrete info in the foreign lands of Kurdistan and the likes, as you have all the right stuff here in your own back yard. The program here in Durango has just the right mix. Imposing too much structure without emphasis on fun, at a young age in athletics, seems a recipe for burnout. It takes many years to develop a cycling career, where if the early years are pushed too hard, some kids may never evolve into what their parents pushed them to be in the first place. Most elite level athletes from my era of racing, never raced as kids or teenagers, we all came into the sport through other sports in our 20’s. So what is the rush??? Kids should be kids and allowed to enjoy the freedom of youth and thrill of sport simply because they love it. So I commend you DEVO…for being the Beez-knees!!! I wish I was a kid in your program…or no, maybe I wish I was Peanut, my dog…he has the life!!!
Q: If you had two hours and were felling super snappy, what mtb ride would
you do from town?
A: I’d rip the Rim, being sure not to roost any joggers off the edge…..then rally up into the gulch via guigline(sp?) and up Telegraph, down Crites and carbon Junction to the River trail to BMX. Hit the track for a few laps, may plunge in the animas if it is hot and then up the nature trail to my car on campus. Maybe sess. the pump track too.
Road Race This Weekend
Yep. This saturday and sunday, Fort Lewis College Cycling will be hosting a time trial, criterium and road race here in Durango. Attached is the race flyer with all the specifics. There are open USA Cycling licensed races for all three events. There are however no junior categories. With the purchase of a one day license for 10 bones, juniors can race in the mens 4/5 group or the open women. Sundays road race is a circuit on campus that includes a decent down goeglin and up the 8th ave front hill. Tough and sweet. 09-flc-squawker-road-flyer
Top Secret Training Camp Photos
Top Secret Training Camp was so rad. Durango DEVO would like to thank all the people who made this sweet thang possible. First off, Russ Zimmermann of Durango Cyclery took care off all the camp supplies, food, tent, stuff, and even the used groovers! Ulgh. With his trusty sidekick, Bill Pile, those two took care of every meal for 45 coached and campers. Dang! We’d also like to thank the coaches for volunteering their preseason time into fostering the bondage between the athletes. Kricket Lewis, Evan Elliott, Jon Bailey, Scott Shishim, Annie Cheeney, Chad Cheeney, Jess Reed, Daniel Walker and Sarah Tescher were all there shredding with the kids. We aslo had a crew of superstar friends who came out to lend a hand. Lisa Lieb, Greg Herbold, Bicycle Bob Gregorio, Jonathan Reed and Glen Shoemaker made the time to share the love. HB blew minds with his super high-teck rc truck! We’d also like to thank Trails 2000 for the tool usage, Dave Hagen at FLC Cycling for the tent and race course setup stuff, Devin at City Market for the sweet discount, the Burnett family for use of their groovers, Ted’s Party Rental and Bill joiner for the use of his van. Booya that was fun.
Ride Like a Kid is Tonight
The spring Durango DEVO fundraiser, Ride Like a Kid is tonight at the Community Concert Hall of Fort Lewis College. Doors open at 530 and the show goes until 730. Tour de France announcer and former team 7-11 domestic Bob Roll will be the host and guests include, Ned Overend, Greg Herbold, Ruthie Matthes, Tad Elliott, Darian Harvey, Jimmy Deaton, Chris Wherry, Mike Engleman, Jimmy Kight, Cindy Whitehead and Elke Brutsaert. It will be a sweet event to benefit the kids. All proceeds go to 2009 DEVO rider scholarships. See you there.
Silent Auction Items Arriving Every so Once and a While
The Ride Like a Kid DEVO fundraiser has had a few silent auction items arrive. The auction will take place on March 3rd in the room outside the Community Concert Hall at FLC. Here is a sneak peak at a few of the items.
Shonny V Likes Coffee
Durango DEVO role model, Shonny VanLandingham is rumored to be on an island, living off coffee and a daily dose of athletic activity. Hawaii to be exact. She has been nursing coffee trees on her property for three years now. Her is what she said, “We bought this property w/ 200 coffee trees 3 yrs ago and have been bringing the trees back to healthy production while developing our coffee brand. We’ve launched our 100% Kona coffee business, Wahine Farms. Wahine means ‘female’ in Hawaiian. Our first roast is called Kona Kruiser Dark Roast (had to relate it to bikes). It’s a superbly balanced and smooth flavor.”
“The coffee bean harvest is over so we have an abundance of green bean that we roast to order so that it’s fresh upon arrival. We start most days, packing and shipping orders which is great. We will most likely run out of bean this year, a good problem to have.”
Check out their site: wahinefarms.com
Animas Orthopedic/ Durango DEVO Short Track Series
Durango DEVO’s popular summer short track series is in search of a title sponsor for the 2009 season. The 10 race series takes place every wednesday night at 6pm from June through August. The venue changes throughout the series and new ideas are always appreciated. Short Track racing is a mountain bike race around a 2-6 minute dirt track circuit. It is a timed event with competitors racing from 15-30 minutes total depending on skill level. This style of racing was introduced in the early 2000’s to draw spectators back to the big race venues, and it has become a popular spectating event since. The DEVO series was a great cycling addition to the community last season as it saw the junior racers get the opportunity to have fun training next to their older cycling professionals and peers. Please contact chad@durangodevo.com if you would like to be a part of this sweet cycling action.
2008 Golden Grip Winners
2008 Women’s Team & Taylor Borucki
- The women’s team was on the top spot all season with Alicia Rose winning all the races she entered but one and Kaila, Joan and Hannah taking the top three spots overall in the MSCup series. With Coach Kricket at the helm, this team exemplified what it means to have fun and be fast. Their off the bike hang outs and their attention to detail during practice made for an excellent model of what it means to be a team.
- Taylor Borucki accomplished his goal of making the US Worlds team for downhill this past season, but it was his attitude during his recovery from a badly timed broken ankle that has earned him this award. Taylor kept a positive attitude in spite of missing his chance at racing in Italy in early June. His teammates were lucky to witness his recovery as he kept active throughout, within his sport and his team.
- 2007 awards