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2002 |
Bike
racers blast through Sisters
After a grueling
ride up and over the McKenzie Pass in sweltering heat, racers in the Cascade
Cycling Classic found a few spectators along the streets of Sisters to cheer
them on Thursday, July 11.
The racers zipped through
town on the way to the finish line of Stage Two at the Upper Three Creek
Sno-Park.
The CCC is a premier cycling
event that attracts many of the top bicycle road racers in America, but
even the best were challenged by the furnace-like conditions for the second
day road race sponsored by Deschutes Brewery.
The men's racers passed through
town first, about 1:30 p.m. when the temperature was about 98 degrees.
Two of the favorites, defending
champion Scott Moninger and Chris Horner, were out of the lead after struggling
in the heat.
Burke Swindlehurst of the
Navigators team won the 72 mile stage in 3 hours, 13 minutes, 24 seconds.
The stage featured over 7,000 feet of climbing.
In the women's race Kimberly
Bruckner, the current United States champion road racer, took a solo break
at about the 25 mile mark and was never challenged, winning by over six
minutes in 3:48:58.
She went on to win the overall
women's title by 7:03.
Chris Wherry of Team Saturn,
won the overall men's title. Swindlehurtst wound up second, while Horner
and Moninger were seventh and ninth respectively.
Local cyclists Rich Hummel
and Greg Zadow had mixed results in the Category 3/Masters division, which
did not include the stage through Sisters.
Hummel took it easy in the
Pilot Butte Spring stage, finishing 46th out of the 127 starters.
He moved up a bit in the second
stage, a 60 mile road race which started and finished near Mt. Bachelor,
finishing 31st about 1:30 behind the leaders.
"I was right with the lead
pack with five kilometers (three miles) to go, but lost contact," said
Hummel.
In the 70 mile Tumalo Circuit
race, Hummel moved up some more to finish tenth and was looking forward
to great things in Sunday's criterium race in the Old Mill District of
Bend.
"I had a chance to win it,
but two different guys clipped pedals on turns in the last lap forcing
me to swing wide, so I finished fifth or sixth," he said. "That's the
way it goes in cycling."
Zadow had a tough weekend,
according to Hummel, struggling with the heat in the Mt. Bachelor race
and experiencing mechanical difficulties in the Tumalo Circuit Race.
He did rebound to finish just
behind Hummel in seventh or eighth place in Sunday's criterium.
The two training partners
typically finish very close to one another.
Overall results were not available
at press time, but Hummel was pleased with his performance.
"I'm not a tremendous climber,
so I feel pretty good about finishing where I did," he said. |
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