Friday, April 30, 2010

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Wente Road Race - Win



1st Shelley Evans

2nd Katharine Carroll
4th Olivia Dillon

Athen's Twilight

5th Lauren Tamayo

Inter Mountain Conference Finals Road Race - win

Men 1/2/3
1st Alisha Welsh

YES...she won the men's race

Monday, April 19, 2010

Santa Cruz Criterium - Win!



1st Olivia Dillon

4th Katharine Carroll
5th Ruth Winder (16 yrs)

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Sea Otter Circuit Race - podium



2nd katharine Carroll

5th Coryn Rivera
Olivia Dillon

Sea Otter Criterium & Road Race



Road Race

5th Olivia Dillon

16th Coryn Rivera

Sea Otter Criterium
7th Olivia Dillon
Coryn Rivera

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Hellyer Men's 1/2 points race - win!

Men 1/2 Points Race
1st Shelley Evans

Men 1/2 Scratch Race
2nd Shelley Evans

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Dana Point GP


3rd Coryn Rivera

Hippstar Menlo Criterium - Win!




1st Shelley Evans
6th Olivia Dillon

Boulder Roubaix - win!



1st Mara Abbott
Cari Higgins

COURSE DESCRIPTION
NEW 18.7 mile (30k) loop with 43% paved roads & 57% unpaved roads in North Boulder County. Make sure you secure your water bottles/cages. Neutral support based on volunteer availability and unlikely. Please bring a pump and spare tube. Also don't forget to do a "bolt check" the day before.

Cari Higgins wins Prairie Center Criterium



1st Cari Higgins

Cari's report

Apple Pie Criterium


2nd Olivia Dillon

Thursday, April 08, 2010

Drentse 8: Dwingeloo, Netherlands

16th Lauren Tamayo
18th Sinead Miller

Saturday, April 03, 2010

Please Support Mara Abbott's fundraising Efforts


According the United Nations, 5,700 people in South Africa wake up each morning to the reality that they are HIV-positive and have unreliable health care. Each morning, I wake up and ride my bicycle. Are the two connected? Intimately. Let me explain.

My beloved yoga instructor, Shannon Paige Schneider, often reminds me to bring full attention to my daily movements and interactions. In her words, "It is not that you place yourself in the world, it is that you mindfully activate that placement." The significance of my movement is not that I step my foot forward into a lunge position, but rather how I choose to execute the movement. Is it with precision? With awareness? With reverence? With grace? Or do I simply toss my foot forward into the anatomically prescribed position? Which way, Shannon inquires, do you want to live?

I now find myself thinking, "The significance is not that you win a bike race, but how." As a professional racer, my paid purpose is to cross the line first whenever possible. Nonetheless, as an athlete, not all victories are equal and sometimes it is the less prestigious ones that come to mean the most. What is it that sometimes allows winning - or even racing at all - to mean more than a bottle of podium champagne and an updated resume?

I currently have the women's record up Sunshine Canyon - a fabulous climb in the town I where grew up. The hill climb is a small local race and is by no means my most important victory on paper, but it is a result that I care about deeply because of the pride that I have in my roots.

I won a stage up the Monteserra, a famous climb in Italy, yet the best part of the experience was not simply standing on the podium, but rather when I could throw my arms in gratitude around my teammate Linda's legs. I was in awe of everything she had done during the stage, so proud to be her teammate, and too exhausted to stand up. It is possible to win the same race on the same course in successive years and yet have entirely different emotional reactions. Ultimately, the value of a race lies not just in the result achieved but also in the attention and reverence given to each moment of the experience.

Mindfulness is not only applicable to elite level stage racing, but also to the simple act of riding a bike at all. Remember: it is not that you ride a bike that is significant, but how. Are you riding for joy? Or are you watching the numbers on your computer the whole time? Are you riding with gratitude for movement and freedom, or are you riding with dissatisfaction in the performance of your legs on that particular day? Do you ride and then return invigorated to hug your family? Or do you return with anger because no one made dinner while you were gone? Do you ride because you want to, or because you have to? And to what degree do you believe these answers are under your control?

Some days will by nature be better than others - some rides an obligation, others a gift. Yet as cyclists, every day we have the power to inspire. We inspire others to ride - for health, for competition, for the environment, for delight. Our public value, whether it is on an international stage or a local bike path, lies in the emotions we evoke in others. The inspiration derived from watching a daring criterium victory may be different from the inspiration of watching 93-year-old Professor George Ball still ride his bike across campus every day at Whitman College, but the principle is the same. We are visible as we dart around on our bicycles - and our value lies in what others see.

Therefore, as cyclists our lives seem linked to the paradoxical adage, "If a tree falls in the forest and no one is there to hear it, does it make a sound?" If I win a bike race, and not one person in the world knows about it - if I keep the lessons I learned in the process and the personal development attained quietly to myself - if I refuse to integrate the experience of the victory into the person I am on a daily basis, how much does it matter? I have always worried to myself that I am unable to create anything quantifiable by bike racing. As I enter my fourth full season racing professionally, I have finally come to terms with the reality that the impact and value of my career is up to me.

I now return to my original question. I learned as an economics student about comparative advantage - that to create the most prosperous whole, we must each contribute in whichever way that we are most uniquely talented or efficient. If cycling is a career in which I enjoy a comparative advantage, how can I use racing as a way to create true social change and stand for the things I believe in? This year, one of the ways will be involvement with the organization Off the Mat, Into the World®.

Each year Off the Mat promotes an international service project known as the Global Seva Challenge. Participants commit to reaching a minimum fundraising goal of $20,000 through collaboration with local communities. In the first two years, Seva Challenge participants raised over one million dollars for NGO projects in Cambodia and Uganda. In 2010, the funds from the Seva Challenge will be used for health education and AIDS prevention in South Africa. The participants who reach the $20,000 goal by December 15, 2010, will travel to South Africa for two weeks in early 2011 to work directly with the organizations that the money supports.

This year I am dedicating my cycling season to the Global Seva Challenge. A goal of the program is for participants to share talents and strengthen communities in the process of raising revenue. I plan to collaborate with my sponsors to create support for my and the team's cycling victories. I also plan to host clinics and presentations to promote the cause.

I have the opportunity to begin teaching a "Yoga for Cyclists" class at my local studio, and I plan to take the class on the road and teach donation classes in tandem with bike races as they travel town to town! Keep your ears open for one coming near you. Additionally, if you are interested in contributing anything (even one day's coffee money!) to my efforts at the Seva Challenge, you may donate from my brand new website: http://www.marakatherine.com/

As my companions and mirrors in the sport of cycling, we are all the background and inspiration for one another's daily activities. So let's play.

~ Mara Abbott



Thursday, April 01, 2010