McConneloug and Powers Take Victories in Northampton

McConneloug and Powers Take Victories in Northampton

 

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

October 10, 2009

CONTACT:

Jeff Bramhall

Media Coordinator, Verge New England Championship Cyclo-Cross Series

(617) 669-5056

jeffrey.bramhall@gmail.com

 

 

The 19th annual Cycle-Smart International started off with a bang

today. Under clear blue skies, The Verge NECCS sprung back into action

for its 9th round. The elite fields were won by two local favorites in

decisive fashion. Mary McConneloug (Kenda/Seven/NoTubes) and Jeremy

Powers (Cannondale/cyclocrossworld.com) both continued their stellar

seasons in Northampton, today.

 

The Elite women split up quickly from the gun with Mary McConneloug

and Natasha Elliott (Garneau/Club Chassure/Ogilvy) breaking away from

the field on the first lap. A chase group formed behind them with

series leader Maureen Bruno-Roy (MM Racing), Laura Van Gilder

(C3/Athletes Serving Athletes), Minuteman Road Club racers Andrea

Smith and Anna Barensfeld as well as Sara Bresnick-Zocchi

(pedalpowercoaching.com/Landry’s Bicycles). McConneloug and Elliott

were able to stretch their advantage on the chase group and were

matching each other move for move until Elliott bobbled in the sand.

McConneloug, hearing of Elliott’s bobble over the loudspeaker, threw

down a huge attack and held Elliott at an arm’s length for the rest of

the race, eventually finishing with a twenty second advantage. Behind

them, Van Gilder proved to be too strong for the chase group and

soloed in for third place ahead of Bruno-Roy. Barensfeld outsprinted

Smith for fourth.

 

With a field over fifty strong, the Elite men was chaos at the start.

A broken chain caused a massive pile-up only 100 meters from the start

which took down several riders, leaving many riders to walk their

bikes off the course, asses damage and prepare for Sunday. Ahead of

the chaos though, were Jeremy Powers and Jamey Driscoll of the

dominant Cannondale/cyclocrossworld.com team. With them were series

leader Dan Timmerman (Richard Sachs/RGM/Radix) and Nicholas Weighall

(California Giant Berry Farms/Specialized). Not far behind them were

Jerome Townsend (bikereg.com/Joe’s Garage/IF) and Adam Craig (Giant

MTB Team). Powers and Driscoll controlled the front of the race the

same way they’ve been controlling races all season. Their pressure

proved to be too much for Weighall as he fell off the hard pace,

eventually holding on for fourth. Like Weighall, Timmerman was unable

to match the pace, but rode valiantly to keep the leaders within a few

seconds until the last two laps. Timmerman was able to hold on to

third, thirty seconds back, and retain his series leader’s jersey.

Adam Craig looked like he was going to be able to bring himself to the

leaders but with two to go, he dropped his chain and lost several

spots but fought back for 5th place in his return to racing in New

England.

The U-23 race came down to a two-up sprint between Jerome Townsend and

series leader Luke Keough (Team Champion System) with Townsend taking

victory.

 

The Masters 35+ race was a three-way battle again, but this time

Johnny Bold and Kevin Hines (Corner Cycle) were joined by Matt Kraus

(Richard Sachs/RGM/Radix) instead of series leader and national champ

Roger Aspholm (Westwood Velo) who was plagued by a poor first lap and

found himself fighting back. Keen tacticians, Bold and Hines took

advantage of Aspholm’s absence and, with Kraus’s help, opened an

insurmountable lead. The three at the front remained intact as a group

and hit the finishing straight together, Bold crossing the line first

with Hines behind him and the Sachs rider pulling in third. Aspholm

was the next in, his fourth place finish not enough to keep him in the

series jersey.

 

The U-19 juniors had a bit of a shake up with the return of Evan

McNeely and Karl Hoppner, both Canadian racers for the EMD/Specialized

squad. McNeely soloed to his fourth series victory this season with

Hoppner behind. Third place went to the consistent Curtis White (Clif

Bar Development Cyclocross Team) for his second podium of the Verge

NECCS season.

 

The U-15 juniors had Austin Vincent (CL Noonan/KAM/Coast to Coast)

alone off the front, in his favorite position. Behind him was Peter

Goguen from Minuteman Road Club in second and Cooper Willsey (White’s

Bikes/GMBC/Catamount) in third.

 

Of note, in a bizarre accident at the end of the Masters race, UCI

Official Harry Lam was seriously injured. While details are not

readily available, he was admitted to a regional hospital. A

collection will be opened to help his family during his recovery.

Details on his condition and the collection will be forthcoming.

 

The Verge New England Championship Cyclo-Cross Series will be

contested over 7 weekends in 2009, starting with the New England

Cross-toberfest of Cycling:  3 straights weekends of UCI calendar

racing to be held in Williston VT, Gloucester MA, and Providence RI.

After a weekend of much needed rest, the series will continue with

stops in New Gloucester ME on Oct 24, Northampton MA on Nov 7,

Sterling MA on Nov 28, and the series finale in Warwick RI on Dec 5.

This year series is generously supported by Verge Sport, makers of

fine cycling clothing and products since 1993; by Cycle-Smart,

purveyors of personalized cycling coaching and solutions for riders

across the country; by BikeReg.com, the official online registration

service of the NECCS; by Paul Weiss Photo/Video, the official

photographer of the NECCS, by October Handmade Bicycles, and by Ryders

Eyewear.  You can visit these sponsors and get more information on the

series by going to the web at http://www.cycle-smart.com/neccs.