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MTB index page for all MTB content MTB News & racing round-up for October 7, 2005Edited by Steve Medcroft Welcome to our regular round-up of what's happening in the dirt. Feel free
to send feedback, news and gossip to mtb@cyclingnews.com Chris Sheppard: "I cheated"Canadian mountain biker Chris Sheppard recently tested positive for recombinant erythropoietin (rEPO) after an out-of-competition test at his home in Kamloops, Canada, and was subsequently suspended by Canadian Cycling and fired from Team Haro. He was liked in the mountain-bike community but is now a pariah. Sheppard used to send a personal email to his sponsors and friends on a regular basis; a diary of sorts. The email was called the 'Shep Report'. What follows is what the outcast rider calls 'the final Shep Report.' In it, Shep, as he is known to friends, explains what led to his decision to take EPO and the consequences.
Interbike: A retailer's eyeBy Steve Medcroft Although it is a fascinating spectacle for anyone who is in love with cycling, Interbike is primarily a business trade show for the cycling industry. Manufacturers, dealers and vendors put out their wares in an attempt to impress retailers and other buyers. During (and in the past week since), Cyclingnews has attempted to bring you inside Interbike and show you what the industry has in store for you in the coming year. Since this is really a show for the retailer though, we thought we'd corner one and get his thoughts on what Interbike had to offer. The retailer we caught was Erik Angermeier, owner of Slippery Pig Bikes in Phoenix, Arizona. As well as attending the show as a retailer, Angermeier has an unusual two-niner bike design featuring dual drivetrains (called the Slippery Pig One-2) on display at the show. Cyclingnews: What did you want to accomplish by going to Interbike this year? Erik Angermeier: Variety is one of the reasons I go. We had an early-season intro to Trek and Kona at their facilities so I was going to Interbike to see the second and third-tier bike companies, see what they had to offer in comparison to the larger companies. I want to can see everything that's going to be out there in one place and do the comparisons. You get to see who has the best road, mountain or commuter bike, the best $400 bike, $500 bike and $1000 bike. CN: Did you find what you were looking for? EA: I found that I was paying attention to the companies that had a stronger complete line; who paid attention to the commuter as much as the $5000 road bike, to kids bikes as much as women-specific bikes. Jamis impressed me; they had a complete line from low end to high end and are actively trying to become a first-tier bike company. We saw what they had to offer and this morning I did a 50-bike order with Jamis because of what I saw in the trade show. CN: Anything else stand out in particular? EA: The twenty-niner marketplace is increasing. When you see companies like DT create a wheelset and every major tire manufacturer offer the larger tires, you know a trend is taking hold. We're still not seeing the Specialized and Cannondale's jumping on board, though. Track bikes are poplar right now, too. It seemed like every major bike company had a singlespeed fixed gear track bike on display. Companies like Breezer had a good presence at the trade show as well; and their European-style commuter bikes sell well for us. A lot of companies are paying attention to the commuter now. Trek has the Navigator series. Lightweight road wheels in a mountain bike position with a lightweight aluminum frame; everybody's doing it. CN: What about the traditional mountain bike? EA: We went to Specialized, Santa Cruz and Cannonade and all of them had a six-inch travel mountain bike. And it seems like the standard cross-country suspension for a bike is now four inches. It used to be that five inch was the all-mountain bike - the Santa Cruz Heckler, the Gary Fisher Cake, Kona Dawg, Specialized Enduro. Then Fox came out with that 36 fork. It weights 5.1 pounds at 6 inches of travel and if you install it any five to six inch travel frame, the bike becomes so aggressive that you can ride it like a freeride bike. People are putting lightweight tires and cross country parts on these bikes and ending up with 30-pound bikes you ride either down a ski slope or take on an all-day trail ride. CN: You're seeing a lot of demand for this all-mountain format? EA: A lot of demand. The Santa Cruz Nomad is a hugely popular bike for us. And it's not because we (the retailers) drove the format. Consumer demand is changing. The information that's available on the web gets to the consumer before we ever get organized enough as a business group to showcase it. People knew about things that were at Interbike before I went to the show. For example, someone came in on Wednesday and said: "yeah, I saw the Niner (29-inch singlespeed boutique bike) online already." CN: What has happened to the traditional mountain bike? EA: Everything has moved up a class. The three-inch travel race bike almost doesn't exist any more; the race bike is now a four-inch travel bike. Specialized took the Epic from three to four inches. Kona on their race bike went from three to four. So now the four-inch bike, which kind of used to be the all mountain category, is considered cross country. CN: You had a bike design of your own at the show (The Slippery Pig One-2, a two-niner with dual drivetrains)? EA: It was popular. Because of the uniqueness of the drivetrain - whether they figured it was functional or not - everyone seemed at least curious about it. CN: Why two drivetrains? EA: The double chain is like a four wheel drive on a truck. It slightly engages forward progress a little more positively. It's a little stiffer. There's the mechanical advantage that if you broke a chain, you'd still be pedaling with the other side. You reduce frame flex because the frame is boxed out by the two chains, crankset and rear hub. The bike is symmetrical so it balances equally on both sides; when you let go of the handelbars, you don't have to countersteer to compensate for the weight of the drivetrain. The novelty of it is what catches people's eye though. CN: Are you offering it to the mass market? EA: Through the shop, I want to offer the drivetrain setup; the hub, two chains and the tandem cranks. A buyer will be able to choose the gear ratio they want and install it on any bicycle that has horizontal dropouts or an eccentric bottom bracket. Cyclingnews' coverage of Interbike:
6 Haro mountain bikes stolen at InterbikeWhen Haro's employees returned to the Sands Convention Center on Saturday morning to start packing up their Interbike trade show booth, they discovered their locked cables had been cut and 6 mountain bikes had been stolen at some point during the night. "These bikes have a lot of non rideable parts on them and some frames are not heat treated. They are photo samples only and are not safe to be ridden. In fact, they could be downright dangerous," said Wayne Doran, Haro's Quality Control Specialist. "Bike shops should keep an eye out for anyone who brings them in for service or warranty, and consumers should be wary of private individuals trying to sell them a 2006 Haro mountain bike."
These bikes should be easy to identify since these particular models are not available in shops and will not be available for purchase for several months. Anyone with any information about these missing bikes is encouraged to contact Haro Bikes immediately at 800-289-4276 or e-mail Jill Hamilton, Haro Marketing Manager at jillh@harobikes.com. MONT 24hr this weekendThe MONT 24hr Australian Mountain Bike Championships, kicks off at 12 noon this Saturday, October 8. 2,450 riders will be competing over the tight singletrack course in the Australian Capital Territory including 176 solo riders (a number equal to the complete field of the 1999 original race). With two return tickets to the World Solo champs on offer, more riders have been challenged to go the solo option. The field is wide open with many of the top Solo riders recently returned from their efforts at the Adrenaline World Champs in Canada. Solo Males contenders include Saul Britton, trying to come back after a major back injury, Graeme Allbon, 17th at the World Solos, adventure racer Matt DeBelin and first time 24hr rider Johnny Waddell. One of the favorites is young rider, James Williamson. The female Solo category is a close field of some of the most extreme endurance sportswomen in Australia. The field includes Freya Scollay, 4th in the World Solos, Olympian Carla Zijlstra-Evans, Adventure Racer and MONT Solo winner Rosi King, and our own Katrina Roper. The over 40s field is equally strong with Neil Dall fresh from his Canadian experience. Single Speeders are also well represented. With over $70,000 in prizes, air fares and prize money the race offers opportunities for all riders to take home some Schwag More information: www.corc.asn.au. The Gunn-Rita Dahle diaryExciting days in ChinaOur week in China has been action-packed, extremely enjoyable, and very educational. We got to experience the enthusiasm of Chinese cyclists through the Great Wall Bicycle Festival, arranged by Nordic Ways; we got to know our Merida family in China; we got a taste of cultural history dating back to the old kingdom of the Chinese Czar; and we got to taste the utterly fantastic Asian cuisine. Wednesday, September 21 After a substantial plane trip from Stavanger to Beijing, we arrived in the metropolis of Beijing in the afternoon, local time. We were met by representatives from the Norwegian-Swedish organisation Nordic Ways, and were driven to our hotel. Nordic Ways has its offices in the centre of Beijing, where three Norwegian and 17 Chinese employees work full-time, organising and arranging huge sports venues within the country - e.g - cycling, orienteering and cross country skiing. We were invited to China by Nordic Ways to take part in the Great Wall Bicycle Festival, which was in its second year. The whole event takes two days, and on Saturday there's road racing, while mountain biking takes place on the second day. A good 1300 locals took part, three times as many as last year. This year Merida China was the main sponsor for the day of mountain biking, and this gave us a great opportunity to meet our Merida friends in the country. Merida will be putting a lot of focus on cycling in large areas of Asia in the years leading up to the Olympics in Beijing. In other words, we will probably be travelling to this part of the world again in the years to come. We checked into a nice hotel about 5-6 kilometres from the centre of Beijing, and had a short hour of exercise to get our circulation going again. In the evening we went for a walk in the surrounding area and then enjoyed a quick supper. We're feeling somewhat comatose after a long day of travelling and entering a new timezone. Our first impressions are of a place with a lot of dust in the air, many cyclists and pedestrians everywhere, and lots of noise. We're really looking forward to tomorrow. Read the rest of Gunn-Rita's latest entry here. Sam Hill resigns with Iron HorseIron Horse Bicycles resigned Australian downhiller Sam Hill this week. Hill is fresh off another successful World Cup race season (two UCI World Cup wins, 2nd overall UCI World Cup Series, UCI World Championship Silver Medalist, and U.S. Open Champion) and will continue with the U.S. bike maker through the 2008 race season. Said Hill: "I'm really excited to be riding Iron Horse Bikes, happy to continue working with people who care about me, my future, and about the products they make. It's going to be awesome to help develop bikes that give cyclists the confidence to ride any terrain they choose." Hill's focus will be on the U.S. Open, UCI World Cup Series, UCI World Championships, and select North American and Australian National events. Garmin Ltd. acquires MotionBased TechnologiesGarmin Ltd. (Nasdaq: GRMN), announced this week that it has acquired MotionBased Technologies, LLC; a privately-held developer of Web based applications for GPS devices that operates www.motionbased.com. MotionBased Technologies will continue operations as a division of Garmin International, Inc., a subsidiary of Garmin Ltd. "We are very pleased with this acquisition because it complements our strategy to penetrate the fitness market," said Dr. Min Kao, Garmin's chairman and CEO. "The MotionBased web application is popular with Garmin customers. Since MotionBased.com was launched in 2004, over 11,000 GPS users have registered for access, and they have logged approximately 140,000 individual outdoor activities to the site." MotionBased Technologies, headquartered in Sausalito, California, is recognized for processing GPS and other data (e.g., heart rate) for performance analysis and online mapping for athletes and outdoor enthusiasts. This web-based subscription service complements Garmin's fitness and outdoor devices, such as the Forerunner 201 and 301, Edge 205 and 305, Foretrex, and eTrex. Following an outdoor activity using a Garmin GPS unit, customers connect their device to a computer and upload the data to MotionBased where they personalize and categorize each activity. The MotionBased service is used by customers to analyze the data to calculate time, distance, speed, elevation, and heart rate. MotionBased displays this information through charts, illustrations, reports, and a variety of map representations including street, photo, topographic, and elevation maps as well as the popular Google Earth service to visualize their activity. Users can replay their workout using media controls as they watch themselves move along the mapped route coupled with an elevation profile. Each activity stored in a personal online digest is also added to the TrailNetwork - a growing database of routes created by the MotionBased community. Members use the TrailNetwork to seek out new activities in their region, to find popular routes while traveling, or to engage in "virtual races" with other MotionBased users. "We are elated to join forces with Garmin and integrate the MotionBased web application into Garmin's core fitness and outdoor product lines," said Aaron Roller, MotionBased's co-founder and CTO. "By working together as a team and sharing technologies, MotionBased and Garmin will further expand the way athletes prepare, participate, analyze and share their outdoor activities using GPS and the Internet." $30,000 on offer at Wigwam/Ultimax Mountain Bike ChallengeThe 2005 version of the Wigwam/Ultimax Mountain Bike Challenge, hosted by the Sheboygan FAT KATS (www.fatkats.org) will be held on October 9th (XC) in Sheboygan, Wis. For 2005, sponsors have delivered a total cash and merchandise purse greater than $30,000! The Pro purse will be no less than $5,000 in cash with Men receiving $1,700 for first place, $900 for second, $500 for third, $300 for fourth, and $150 for fifth place overall. Regular payouts for the remaining top 20 are based off of WORS standard payout schedules. The Women's Pro division will be receiving $500 for first place, $250 for second, $125 for third, $100 for fourth and $75 for fifth. Again, regular payouts for the remaining top 10 will be based off of WORS standard payout schedules. Also worth mentioning are some intriguing sections on the racecourse that offer additional cash rewards for riders, such as: 1) Bicycle Works Hole Shot Prime - Top three overall from the start will receive cash at the end of a 500 yard sprint (all classes); 2) Equalizer Hill Climb Prime by Wigwam - Each time you climb this 50-yard headwall without dabbing, you are handed $5 at the top; 3) All overall winners will receive custom awards courtesy of Industrial Graphics; and 4) All registered racers will receive a pair of Ultimax Cycling Socks. The amount of the racer raffle prize list has also increased. This year there will be a chance to win the use of a Hyundai automobile from Van Horn Hyundai, TREK bikes, Oakley glasses and clothing, Chippewa Falls Water, Wigwam Socks, PCW Cycling gear, Saris Racks from Bike 'n' Ski, Crank Brothers pedals, Bontrager Equipment, and many more items. Fun stuff and great times await the 900 plus riders yearly and we welcome your involvement to make this event even more memorable. A bike for a village Golden Dahle bike auction endsThe "A Bike for a Village" charity auction, in which the wining bidder took home a customer gold-colored Gunn-Rita Dahle signature Merida mountain bike, came to a close this week. Belgian Valerie Custers too possession of her bike at the Grand Prix Roel Paulissen in her home country, in turn handing over $2,550US to the "Village of of Friendship". "Riding Gunn-Rita's bike is like a dream come true," Custers raved in Genk. She called herself a huge fan of the Norwegian pro rider, whose Olympic victory inspired the building of the bike. "We are very happy about the financial support but also about the publicity brought about by the campaign. 30 years after the end of the Vietnam War it's hard to raise awareness, even though the people there are still suffering from the effects," said charity chairperson Rosi Höhn-Mizo. The money for the bike will be spent on the equipment at a wing of the clinic in the Village of Friendship in Vietnam. The plan is to buy a dental x-ray machine. "We can move a lot with 2500 dollar. Another option would be to hire a special education teacher for two years," explained Rosemarie Höhn-Mizo at the handing over of bike by Merida team manager Andi Rottler. 2005 Croc TrophyIt's back! The wild country of Far North Queensland will once again play host to the 11th Crocodile Trophy (October 18th to 30th). The 2005 Crocodile Trophy will feature teams from Italy, Belgium, The Netherlands, Spain, Germany, Austria, Denmark and Australia, along with the perennially competitive and truly international Gatorade / Coopers Dream team, which is rumored to be featuring some yet to be revealed big name riders. 2004 winner Adam Hansen, the first Australian to ever claim the coveted Croc Trophy will make the journey from his new European training base to defend the title, but faces tough opposition from international rivals including Italy's Mauro Bettin and Czech Sibl Radoslav, among many others in the seventy rider field. In contrast to last year's event which snaked its way from Darwin to Cairns across the Top End, the 2005 Crocodile Trophy will focus exclusively on the magnificent backdrop of Far North Queensland, from the rainforest to the remote outback. "There is no question, last year's Crocodile Trophy was the toughest on record, but that's not saying this year will be necessarilly any easier," Said Crocodile Trophy founder Gerhard Schoenbacher. "Our focus is always on making this the world's most difficult off-road cycle race, which is why we have included more mountainous stages, along with the iconic outback country." The 2005 Croc Trophy kicks off on October 18th with a prologue stage in Australia's Tropical Capital of Townsville, before heading bush via the spectacular mountain country of Paluma, Blencoe Falls and Ravenshoe. Then it's on into the dusty dry outback country of lower Cape York - via Chillagoe, Mount Mulligan and Laura - until the riders reach the coast at Cooktown. The penultimate stage, arguably the most iconic of the race, will take competitors through the Daintree Rainforest along the legendary CREB track. At the end of 1400 brutal kilometres 'The Croc' as it has become known, will reach its conclusion in what can only be described as a tropical paradise, the place where presidents go to play, Four Mile Beach in ritzy Port Douglas! "From the perspective of the European cyclists who come here for this event, I can assure you the Crocodile Trophy is like nothing they have ever before experienced," said race promoter Gerhard Schoenbacher. "The Danish team for example will come from 10 below zero in Copenhagen, then all of a sudden be racing in 35 to 40 degree heat, in some of the most rugged country on the planet... It is tough." The 'Pedal Tarvisiano' team from deep in Italy's mountainous north is among those returning in 2005, leaving behind the ski season to give its ace rider Paolo Salvatore Albano the support he needs for a tilt at the elusive Croc Trophy title. The iconic television images of 'The Croc' will feature in a half-hour documentary that will go to air on European television immediately following the race, while in recent years the event has attracted an audience of millions via the Internet. Naturally, Cyclingnews will join the race caravan, following the stories of heartbreak, despair, utter exhaustion and triumph which each year form the fabric of what is unquestionably one of cycling's most unique and iconic events. Sponsors: Red Bull, Cratoni Helmets, The Lakes Resort Cairns and Quicksilver Barrier Reef Cruises.
Total distance: 1,400 km IMBA picks their 2005 Epic RidesEpic rides are why we love mountain biking. They create classic memories and inspire us to save the trails. To fuel this passion, IMBA has selected five outstanding routes as 2005 IMBA Epic Rides, adding to the 32 great rides we've picked since '99. 2005 IMBA Epic selections:
The "Epic" designation is an honor given through a competitive application process. IMBA Epics are at the top of many mountain bikers' "must-ride" lists, and for that reason, IMBA provides information about the rides and local attractions on its website to facilitate off-road adventures. Nominate your trail for next year's IMBA Epic Ride designation at: www.imba.com/epics/nominate_epic.html In the past, IMBA has promoted celebratory events when designating Epics. This year, to reduce the strain on local organizers, we will not promote IMBA-sponsored events.
(All rights reserved/Copyright Knapp Communications Pty Limited 2005) |
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