UNITED STATES BEGINS 2008 UCI MOUNTAIN BIKE WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS
UNITED STATES BEGINS 2008 UCI MOUNTAIN BIKE WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS WITH TEAM RELAY COMPETITION After its First-Ever Relay Medal in 2007, the U.S. Team Finishes Eighth in Italy
Trentino, Italy (June 17, 2008)-The United States National Team was hoping to repeat last year’s medal winning performance in the Team Relay competition on opening day of the UCI Mountain Bike World Championships, but fell short in the 2008 edition, finishing eighth.
The foursome of Georgia Gould (Fort Collins, Colo.), John Bennett (El Cerrito, Calif.), Sam Jurekovic (Jackson Hole, Wyo.) and Adam Craig (Bend, Ore.) worked as a tag team to tackle the rain soaked course in the Italian Alps.
The Team Relay, features four laps of the Cross Country circuit contested by an elite male, elite female, U23 male and junior male from each nation. The team’s bronze-medal-winning performance in 2007 was the United States’ best performance since the event was added to the World Championship program in Are, Sweden in 1999.
With teams allowed to determine the start order of its representatives, the U.S. squad once again chose to open with Gould as Slovakia was the only other nation that did not opt to start with either its elite or U23 male competitor. Fittingly, the U.S. completed the first lap in 19th-place with Gould besting the Slovakian junior and putting the U.S. squad 4:48 behind the leading French whose Jean-Christophe Peraud completed the first lap in 19:55. Gould’s lap time of 24:43 was the sixth fastest amongst the elite women.
Bennett, the U.S. squad’s junior male entry, took the handoff from Gould and moved the U.S. up two spots to 17th place at the contest’s midway point. Bennett rode a 24:33 which ranked 16th amongst all riders on the second leg of the relay.
“I got in last night and was able to pre-ride the course briefly, but with all the rain it has changed a lot, even since then,” Bennett explained. “It was oil-slick muddy, but a lot of fun. Not having the full pressure of a race on one person is really different from what I’m used to, but that really makes it a good time.”
National Development Team rider Jurekovic took over on the third lap and was able to make up a several spots, but after 75 percent of the race was over, the U.S. team still sat in 13th place.
This year, Craig, the elite male rider, was tasked with making-up double the amount of spots as he did in 2007 in order to make the medal stand. Ironically he was able to move up only five spots, passing the exact same number of riders as he did last year in Fort William, but this time it landed the U.S. in eighth place overall.
The American team completed the event with an overall time of 1:30:12, which was 5:27:52 off the pace of the gold-medal-winning French squad. Craig out sprinted Alexander Wetterhall of Sweden to the line to take eighth place for the U.S. by only hundredths of a second. The Swiss team won a the silver medal by less than a second with a last minute kick by Nino Schurter leaving the Italians a bronze medal on their home turf.
The come-from-behind strategy of the U.S. Team didn’t quite play out as it did last year, with much larger gaps opening up on the slick, rain-soaked course.
“It was a shorter, much more technical course this year and all the mud out there made it harder for anyone to gain much ground,” stated Marc Gullickson, USA Cycling’s National Mountain Bike Development Director. “The down hills were extremely muddy and technical, forcing riders to slow their descents.”
All four competitors on the U.S. squad will compete in their respective individual events later this week, Bennett in the junior men’s cross country race on Thursday, Jurekovic in U23 men’s cross country on Friday, and Gould and Craig in Sunday’s elite women’s and men’s cross country contests.
The 2008 UCI Mountain Bike World Championships continue on Wednesday with two additional medal events - the junior and U23 women’s cross country contests. Representing the United States in the junior women’s division will be Jill Behlen (Boulder, Colo.) and Diedre York (Indio, Calif.). In the U23 women’s contest, Jamie Dinkins (Powell, Tenn.) and Chloe Forsman (Boulder, Colo.) will compete for Team USA.
2008 UCI Mountain Bike World Championships
Trentino, Italy
June 17-22
Team Relay:
1. France - Jean-Christophe Peraud, Arnaud Jouffroy, Laurence LeBoucher, Alexis Vuillermoz 1:24:45
2. Switzerland - Florian Vogel, Matthias Rupp, Petra Henzi, Nino Schurter 1:27:07
3. Italy - Marco Aurelio, Gerhard Kerschbaumer, Eva Lechner, Cristian Cominelli 1:27:08
8. United States - Georgia Gould (Fort Collins, Colo.), John Bennett (El Cerrito, Calif.) Sam Jurekovic (Jackson Hole, Wyo.), Adam Craig (Bend, Ore.) 1:30:12
About USA Cycling
Recognized by the United States Olympic Committee and the Union Cycliste Internationale, USA Cycling is the official governing body for all disciplines of competitive cycling in the United States, including road, track, mountain bike, BMX and cyclo-cross. As a membership-based organization and sanctioning body, USA Cycling consists of 64,000+ members, including 57,000 competitive cyclists, 1,500 coaches, 4,000 student-athletes, 2,200 officials, 350 professional cyclists, and 200 certified mechanics. USA Cycling also sanctions 2,500 competitive and non-competitive organized cycling events throughout the United States annually, as well as 1,800 clubs and teams. Associations of USA Cycling include the United States Cycling Federation (road, track & cyclo-cross), the National Off-Road Bicycle Association (mountain bike), the BMX Association, the National Collegiate Cycling Association and the United States Professional Racing Organization. USA Cycling is also responsible for the identification, development, support and promotion of American cyclists through various athletic initiatives and programs including the USA Cycling National Development Team, the USA Cycling Women’s National Team, the USA Cycling Junior Development Team, Talent Identification and Regional Development Camps, domestic and international race calendars, direct athlete funding and support programs, and educational camps and seminars. USA Cycling also fields and supports U.S. National Teams for various international events, including the Olympic Games, World Championships, Pan American Games, Continental Championship and World Cups across all levels and disciplines of competitive cycling. USA cycling further supports grass roots and locally-based initiatives through its 32 Local Associations and comprehensive network of licensed and certified coaches and officials. Additionally, USA Cycling conducts National Championship events for amateur and professional cyclists, awarding more than 600 national titles annually to men and women in junior, U23, masters, elite, professional and paralympic categories throughout the various disciplines of competitive cycling.

Categories: Press-Releases
Tags:


























Leave a Reply