If you have not signed the online petition to build a Velodrome here in the SB area get with it and click here http://www.petitiononline.com/mod_perl/signed.cgi?CCVM1
As of today there are 1227 signatures and we’ve pledged over $40,000 towards this goal,
we need $400,000, we’re more than 10% there!

 
By Fred Dreier
VeloNews associate editor
This report filed April 29, 2007

A patient Geoff Kabush used his experience to win the Santa Ynez Valley Classic, the second round of the 2007 National Mountain Bike Series. The Canadian, suffering from admittedly bad legs, spent the day riding in the draft of Jeremy Horgan-Kobelski (Subaru-Gary Fisher) and Barry Wicks (Kona), before out sprinting the two Americans for the win.

Kabush takes his pull.... when it counts.
 
 
"I took one pull today and it was in the last 50 meters of the race," Kabush conceded after the win. "Something wasn't right with me from the get go, and I just tried to hang on today as long as I could. Luckily I just let Wicks and JHK chase each other all day."  

Visibly dejected at the finish line, Wicks and Horgan-Kobelski slumped over their bikes shaking their heads. Both realized they had blown a chance to topple Kabush - two times the series champ and the winner of the opening NMBS round in Fountain Hills, Arizona - who was visibly having a sub-par day.

"I'm kicking myself, I should have used my brain more," said Wicks, the 2006 Santa Ynez Classic cross-country champion. "I was feeling really good but I never attacked on the course, I always just dialed up the pace and tried to drop people. I wasn't worried about Geoff at all and he saved it ‘till the very end."

It became evident halfway through the first of two 13.1-mile laps that the day's winner would come from the lead group of four, which contained Wicks, Horgan-Kobelski, Kabush and Max Plaxton (Rocky Mountain-Haywood). But with Horgan-Kobelski pushing the pace on the climbs and Wicks dialing it up on the flat sections, Kabush and Plaxton enjoyed a free ride.

The men completed two laps around the 13.1-mile course, which contained a handful of steep, lung-busting climbs and two speedy, winding descents, but no technical riding. A steady wind blowing from the west kept riders in groups, and helped quell attacks.

Horgan-Kobelski, looking for his first top cross-country victory of 2007, looked hell-bent on breaking away and put in numerous digs on his Gary Fisher 29er. His final break came inside the final kilometer, which succeeded in dropping Plaxton.

But Kabush slammed the door shut just before the finish, letting the American lead into the final left hand turn. Horgan-Kobelski tried in vain to sprint, but Kabush kept his bike in a big gear and easily brought home the win.

"It felt good to finally ride at the front of one of these things, but I thought Geoff was really hurting," Horgan-Kobelski said. "Nine out of 10 times that we go to the line together in a sprint, I'm going to lose."

Kabush's Maxxis teammate Mattieu Toulouse grabbed the final spot on the podium, finishing a minute up on Kris Sneddon (Kona), Andy Schultz (Bear Naked-Cannondale) and Ryan Trebon (Kona).

Gould heads up a Luna sweep
Crossing the line just after Trebon was women's winner, Georgia Gould of the Luna women's mountain-bike team. Gould and the rest of the women's field completed one full and one shortened laps around the course, bringing them to the finish line with the back half of the pro men's field.

SWEEEEP! Luna does it again
 
 
Gould dialed up the pace on the opening lap, and held a two-minute advantage on teammate Shonny Vanlandingham at the summit of the first climb. Gould never looked back, powering to the win by nearly four minutes.  

Indeed, despite enjoying a lead that bumped past five minutes at times, Gould said she never let up.

"You're supposed to go hard the whole time - this is a mountain-bike race," she said. "It's not like I'm a road racer."

Vanlandingham held on to second, while Luna's Katerina Nash rebounded from an early crash that sent her into 30th position to ride into third place by the race's midpoint. Nash's effort gave Luna a 1-2-3 sweep for both the short track and cross-country races.

The victories have Kabush and Gould two for two at 2007 National Mountain Bike Series cross-country races. The series continues May 5-6 in Fontana, California. That venue will host the entire NMBS events schedule: cross-country, short track, Super D, downhill and mountain cross.

2007 Santa Ynez Classic NMBS
Cross country
Men
1. Geoff Kabush (Can), Maxxis
2. Jeremy Horgan-Kobelski, Subaru-Gary Fisher
3. Barry Wicks, Kona
4. Max Plaxton (Can), Rocky Mountain-Haywood
5. Mattieu Toulouse (Can), Maxxis

Women
1. Georgia Gould, Luna
2. Shonny Vanlandingham, Luna
3. Katerina Nash (Cz), Luna
4. Heather Irmiger, Subaru-Gary Fisher
5. Willow Koerber, Subaru-Gary Fisher

 
By Fred Dreier
VeloNews associate editor
This report filed April 28, 2007

At just 22, Canadian cross-country rider Max Plaxton (Rocky Mountain-Haywood) already owns palmarès worthy of envy. He is twice the Pan-American U-23 champion (2006 and ‘07) and owns a bronze medal from the 2006 world championships U-23 cross-country race.

Now, with countrymen Geoff Kabush and Seamus McGrath entering their 30s, Plaxton is undeniably the future of Canadian cross-country racing.

 
 
"Young Max," as his peers call him, took another step toward the big time by winning his first NMBBS race - Saturday's short-track cross-country at the National Mountain Bike Series's Santa Ynez Valley Classic.  

"Well it feels great," Plaxton said. "The last few years I've won some Canada Cups and this is a lot bigger than that."

Plaxton proved his strong fitness at shorter efforts with podium finishes in the short track and time trial at the April 18-22 Sea Otter Classic in Monterey, California.

Still, most eyes were on Plaxton's countrymen Geoff Kabush (Maxxis) at the Santa Ynez Classic. With 14-career short-track victories, including one at the 2007 NMBS opener in Fountain, Hills, Arizona, the sideburned Kabush is the discipline's winningest racer.

Looking to topple Kabush was the Kona duo of Barry Wicks and Ryan Trebon and the Subaru-Gary Fisher squad of Jeremy Horgan-Kobelski and Sam Schultz.

Team tactics and gusting winds turned the race into a chess match after a large group of nine asserted itself at the front. Present in the group were Kabush, Plaxton, Wicks and Trebon, Horgan-Kobelski and Schultz, as well as Alan Obye (Jamis), Ross Schnell (Trek-Volkswagen) and Brent Miller (Kenda/X-Fusion).

With the teammate-less riders sitting on, national short-track champ Wicks played the first card midway through the 20-minute race, and attacked through the mile-long course's start-finish area. The effort dropped Obye, Miller and Schnell, but as the group came together with three laps remaining, Plaxton took a solo flyer.

Hesitation within the group made Plaxton's move a winning one. Trebon turned on the afterburners and slowly reeled the Canadian in, towing Horgan-Kobelski along. But the lanky cyclo-cross national champion ran out of real estate and finished second. Horgan-Kobelski, Wicks and Schultz rounded out the podium.

"I just waited too long," Trebon admitted.

 
 
Afterward, sixth-place finisher Kabush praised his countryman.  

"It's too cool to see Max fired up and winning," he said. "We need more Canadian guys doing well at the races."

Plaxton's victory came after the Luna mountain-bike team lit up the women's short-track race, with Katerina Nash, Georgia Gould and Shonny Vanlandingham finishing 1-2-3.

With reigning national short-track champ Susan Haywood (Trek-Volkswagen) in Maryland to race the UCI C-2 Greenbrier Challenge on April 30, the Luna squad faced off against Willow Koerber and Heather Irmiger of Subaru-Gary Fisher. Koerber grabbed the hole shot off the line, and with her teammate on her wheel led around the first lap.

But Irmiger went down on the lap's only descent - the crash separated the Luna three and Koerber from the chase group. Koerber marked attacks for half of the race, but when she too slid out in a corner, taking down Gould, Nash assumed a sizable advantage.

Gould, hot off an impressive eight-place finish at the World Cup opener in Houffalize, Beligium, wasn't ready to let her teammate go so easily. The Luna rider flexed her legs with three laps remaining, powering away from Koerber, speeding past Vanlandingham and grabbing Nash's wheel - all in less than half a lap.

"I really wasn't surprised to see Georgia, she's been so strong this year," Nash admitted.

The two rode comfortably at the front of the women's field, and looked primed for a Luna vs. Luna sprint finish. But Gould lost control in the final turn, and Nash soloed in for an easy win.

"It's good for me - I'm not such a good sprinter this year and I think Georgia would have beaten me," Nash said.

Vanlandingham and Koerber secured the third and fourth spot finishes, and Kiwi Jennifer Smith (Trek-Volkswagen) out-kicked Zephanie Blasi (Kenda/X-Fusion) for the final spot on the podium.

The 2007 Santa Ynez Classic NMBS concludes Sunday with the men's and women's cross-country.

2007 Santa Ynez Classic NMBS
Short Track
Men
1. Max Plaxton (Can), Rocky Mountain-Haywood
2. Ryan Trebon, Kona
3. Jeremy Horgan-Kobelski, Subaru-Gary Fisher
4. Barry Wicks, Kona
5. Sam Schultz, Subaru-Gary Fisher

Women
1. Katerina Nash (Cz), Luna
2. Georgia Gould, Luna
3. Shonny Vanlandingham, Luna
4. Willow Koerber, Subaru-Gary Fisher
5. Jennifer Smith (NZ), Trek-Volkswagen

 
By Fred Dreier
VeloNews associate editor
This report filed April 28, 2007

Southern California's picturesque Santa Ynez Valley is internationally renowned for its miles of grapevines and upscale wineries. But this weekend it's the area's singletrack earning the attention, as the National Mountain-Bike Series rumbles into town for the April 28-29 Firestone Santa Ynez Classic mountain-bike festival.

The Santa Ynez Classic is drawing more attention this year
 
 
In its eighth year, the Santa Ynez Classic has become the largest off-road festival in Southern California. The weekend features cross-country, short-track, downhill and Super D competition. New for 2007, all the events are part of USA Cycling's National Mountain-Bike Calendars. The downhill also boasts points for the American Mountain Bike Challenge (AMBC). The festival's cross-country and short-track races are also part of the 2007 NMBS schedule.  

"I'm definitely excited to be part of the NMBS, this is huge for us," said Mike Hecker, the event's founder and chief organizer. "Getting this race on the national calendar is something I've been trying to do since day one."

Outsourcing the NMBS
The festival's partnership with the NMBS marks a turning point for the series: It's the first time the NMBS, in its latest edition, has outsourced race organization. Formerly called the NORBA National Series and the National Championship Series (NCS), North America's premier off-road series has operated under Jeff Frost of Blue Wolf Events and Tom Spiegel of Team Big Bear since 2003. Each summer Frost and Spiegel load up a semi trailer and roll from venue to venue, organizing each event themselves.

At the Santa Ynez Classic, Hecker and his team are the chief organizers.

Barry Wicks
 
 
"It's going to be an interesting step for us," Frost said. "In a lot of ways this is more ideal, and something we'd like to do more of in the future. We can spend more time entertaining potential sponsors, not running around putting up fencing. "  

The Santa Ynez Classic also gives the NMBS another foothold in the lucrative Southern California market. The series lost its marquee So Cal event in 2004 when the Snow Summit ski area outlawed downhill racing. The NMBS returned to Southern California in 2006 with a round in San Bernadino's suburb of Fontana. For 2007 the Fontana NMBS falls the weekend after the Santa Ynez Classic - the scheduling should boost participation numbers for both events.

The Santa Ynez Classic has already seen a jump in numbers. Pre-registration for 2007 is double that of 2006, when 900 racers showed up.

 

JHK astride his 29-er
 
 
"I printed out 1200 race numbers. I hope that's enough," Hecker said.  

Hecker, a former semi-pro cross-country racer who currently runs a tree-care company, began the Santa Ynez Classic in 2000 as a way to stay involved SoCal's community of off-road racing. Then called the Firestone Winery XC festival, his race attracted 189 racers in its first year.

The race owes its namesake to the Firestone Ranch and Winery, which has hosted the festival on its grounds since day one. The event was labeled the Firestone Walker in after the winery's brewery in 2003. Hecker added a short-track event that year, followed by downhill in 2004 and a marathon cross-country in 2005.

 

Gould has had an amazing early season
 
 
This year the festival's expo and staging area heads to the nearby Ted Chamberlain Ranch, although the cross-country loop still crisscrosses the Firestone winery.  

Pared Down XC field
The NMBS sought out the Santa Ynez Festival after Infineon Raceway in Sonoma, California, dropped its affiliation with the series for its July 6-8 Cougar Mountain Classic. The raceway's late-season decision opened a hole in the NMBS schedule, and Frost and Spiegel hurriedly roped in the Santa Ynez Classic.

The late entry into the NMBS calendar meant that, while the Santa Ynez Classic will award prizes, it will not carry UCI points for the cross-country race. UCI points are currently a hot commodity for cross-country racers hoping to make the U.S team for the 2008 Olympics in Beijing. Opting to chase after points, Americans Olympic hopefuls Todd Wells (GT), Jeremiah Bishop and Susan Haywood (Trek-Volkswagen) will forego the Santa Ynez Classic for Maryland's April 29 Greenbrier Challenge a Category 2-rated UCI race. Americans Adam Craig and Kelli Emmett (both Giant) have opted for a rest week after the April 22 World Cup opener in Houffalize, Belgium.

Present at the Santa Ynez festival will be 2006 cross-country champion Barry Wicks and second-place finisher Ryan Trebon (both Kona). Wicks, who beat his teammate at the line, said the cross-country course holds a few surprises.

"Last year we came around a corner and there was this huge bull just standing in the trail," he said. "We stopped and looked at him and he looked back at us. His hoofs were putting four-inch deep tracks in the hardpack."

Barring any encounters with livestock, the rider able to maintain the most speed on the ultra-fast, non-technical course will win the 2007 Santa Ynez Classic cross-country race. The course bisects the Firestone vineyard before sending riders on six steep ascents. Following each climb are off-camber singletrack descents that test a rider's high-speed skill and courage.

Bike selection could help determine victory in the men's cross-country. Wicks and Trebon will ride their Kona hardtails, while current NMBS leader Geoff Kabush will race on his full-suspension Litespeed Sewanee. Looking to score his first major cross-country victory on a bike with 29-inch wheels, 2006 NMBS cross-country champion Jeremy Horgan-Kobelski (Subaru-Gary Fisher) will ride his Gary Fisher 29er hardtail.

In the women's race, the pro field will try and hold the wheel of Luna's Georgia Gould. Gould, winner of the 2007 Pan American Championships and the NMBS opener in Fountain Hills, AZ. Gould won the April 15 Sea Otter Classic cross-country race by nearly five minutes.

The pro men will tackle three laps around the 13.1-mile loop while the women will complete two. Stay tuned to www.velonews.com for news and updates from the 2007 Santa Ynez Classic NMBS race.

2007 Santa Ynez Classic

Saturday, April 28
7:45 am: open women STXC
8:30 am: expert men STXC
9:15 am: junior expert men STXC
10:00 am: semi-pro men STXC
10:45 am: pro women STXC
11:30 am: pro men STXC
1:00 pm: Downhill (all categories)
5:30 pm: Super D (all categories)

Sunday, April 29
8:00 am: sport XC
8:30 am: beginner XC
11:00 am: expert XC
11:00 am: semi-pro XC
2:00 pm: pro men XC
2:10 pm: pro women XC

TEAM PLATINUM PERFORMANCE'S TAKE
By Todd Booth
Story in www.mbaction.com

 

 Todd Booth

 Two jobs: Platinum Team Captain Todd Booth was the fourth fastest 35-39 XC Expert. He also runs the most successful amateur team in SoCal.

Check out the names who swept the cross-country. The Firestone Walker Classic was loaded this year. Look at 4th place semipro finisher John Kirkcaldie. How strong is that? Expect the current Oceania 4-Cross Champ to be in peak condition for the National at Southridge. Also check out cyclocross legend Larry Hibbard's 2nd fastest non-pro time. That was done on a rigid KHS (that's rigid fork) with a 44-tooth single chain ring.

The Chamberlin Cattle Ranch in San Ynez was the host of the Firestone Walker Mountain Bike Classic. This was the third stop on the California State Series. On Saturday, the AMBC sanctioned R Country Market Chamberlin Ranch Downhill races took place. The downhill attracted some of the top pros in and out of the country, such as John Kirkcaldie from New Zealand, who won the pro division.

The Cross Country race was held on Sunday with overcast skies turning to warm and sunny by midday. The venue was held on the Firestone's property with the beautiful winery fields as the backdrop. The beginners raced 12.5 miles, the sport riders rode a 23 mile course, and the expert/pros took on 31 miles. There was also a marathon race which consisted of 75 miles. Race organizer Mike Hecker, a former Cal State XC Champ himself, designed the course for everyone. There were steep climbs, long rolling singletrack, and endless flat fire roads with tough head winds to deal with.

The Platinum Performance Mountain Bike Team was out in force with 36 riders competing in the DH, XC and the Marathon races. Top performances this week came from Jonathan Luckett (Beg 40-44), Stacy Roberts (Sport Wm 19-29), Mike Roberts (Beg 50-54), Nick Davis (Sport 45-49), Melanie Davis (Beg Women 14 under), Peter Park (Marathon 40-49), and Dave Phreaner (Expert DH), who all took home first place finishes. Runner-ups included Luke Werkhoven (Sport Clydesdale), John Martin (Expert 40-44), Shawna Martin (Beg Women 14 under), Sondra Williamson (Expert Women DH), Ian Mcfarlane (Sport 15 under), and Caroline Deloreto (Beg Women 19-29). Third place finishes went to Mark Luke (Sport 45-49), and Terry Dalh (Expert 60-64).

Equal Trail Access for All
Multi-use Trails Coalition 3/7/06 - get  version here

MISSION
The Multiuse Trails Coalition is dedicated to maintaining equal and safe front country trail access
for all trail users while promoting outreach and education efforts, and providing an independent
voice for responsible mountain cycling and other trail use in the Santa Barbara community.

• Multiuse Trails Coalition (MTC) supports all the Front Country Trails Working Group (FCTWG recommendations except limiting mountain cycling on front country trails.

• MTC opposes the odd/even component of the FCTWG proposal because:
     – It is an inappropriate first action: limiting a user group should be the last resort, considered only after
        a community educational outreach program (information, additional signage, user survey) has been
        implemented and the results measured
     – Agencies and the trails community need to first try implementing other management options:
     – Designate slow speed areas
     – Designate multi-user zones
     – Create and maintain new trails where feasible and appropriate
     – If trail use is limited, sacrifices should be made by all trail user groups, not just mountain cyclists
     – Eliminates access to specified front country trails for half the year
     – Trail safety can be achieved through education without limiting access. Safety concerns will continue to
        exist on the days all users are on the trails

• Ensure the FCTWG proposal is thoroughly vetted through a full public process. The public was not invited to participate, and the members of participating groups were not fully informed during the FCTWG process. The public deserves the opportunity to fully weigh in on the FCTWG proposal.

Tunnel/Jesusita, Cold Springs and other front country trails may be closed to cyclists for half the year.

Public meetings will soon be held where officials will discuss recommendations restricting access to local trails for mountain bikers.

Please join us in maintaining full public access for all user groups on the front country trails.

Don’t unfairly restrict the public’s trail use!
Get involved to make a difference!

Contact MTC for upcoming public meetings and info: multiusetc@gmail.com or (805)637-7350

MTC Board of Directors
Dave Everett
Flemming Bertelsen
Dorothy Littlejohn
Michael Allison

No stroll through the park
Riders deal with mud, rocks, hills, concrete barriers, other obstacles in Cyclocross
By Mike Takeuchi 12/5/03

Bicycle racers descended upon Goleta at the Southern California and Nevada State Cyclocross Championships last Sunday. Held at the Campus Pointe Industrial Park, nearly 100 riders participated in different divisions throughout the day. The event was contested for the first time in the local area and is a part of a series that concludes on Jan. 4. Cyclocross is a sport that combines aspects of road and mountain bike racing on a lapped course of less than two miles. The competition often has riders pedaling on a hilly, muddy course while negotiating planned (barriers) and unplanned (crashes) dismounts. Each race usually lasts one hour or less. The top winners at the championships were elite riders Brent Prenzlow of Carlsbad and Dorothy Wong of Altadena. Locals Bret Suding (Espoir Under 23 Class) and Austin Doner (17-18 year olds) won their respective divisions. Also placing in their age groups were Santa Maria's Brian Starr (second in the 45+) and Santa Barbara's Todd Booth (third in the 30+). According to race director Mike Hecker, Booth's feat was impressive because he raced on his dual suspension mountain bike.

"The beauty of cyclocross is that beginners are welcome because all you need is a mountain bike," Hecker said. "For this event, everyone loved the course and the organization. We know that the momentum is building and that we will get even more races at the last race of the Santa Barbara Cyclocross Series at the same place here in January."
FRANK BOTT / NEWS-PRESS PHOTOS

Charles Morris, above, and Dan Nelson pedal hard to get through the muddy portion of the cyclocross course in Goleta.

Chris Gally carries his bike over a barrier. Gally finished second in the 40-plus division behind Emilio Cervantes. Morris placed third in the division and Nelson took eighth in the 35-plus group.

Jim Vance of Bike 101 powers up one of several hills on the course. Vance competed in the elite men's division.

A New Cycle Bret Suding Cyclocross Story

 
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