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Photo ©:
James Huang
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The green machine that drives the future of America's cyclo-cross
hopefuls
By James Huang
Salsa also provides its
bar and stem to the team.
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A flattened top tube
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The head tube is reinforced
at the ends
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There's no carbon in the
frame
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More SRAM stuff can be
found out back…
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Surprise, surprise
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The fi'zi:k Nisene saddle
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…and stems in an effort
to shed weight.
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The team and its equipment
travels to races
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The CLIF Bar Development
Team
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The 2007 UCI World Cyclo-cross World Championships was undeniably a
breakout year for US 'cross racing with three silver medals in key events:
Jonathan Page in the Elite Men's race, Katie Compton in the Elite Women's,
and one of the brightest up-and-coming stars of the sport in the US,
Danny Summerhill in the Juniors event.
Summerhill, now 19 years old, is spending his third year as part of
CLIF Bar Development team. The team was originally founded by current
Team Director Ben Turner as an offshoot of the TIAA-CREF road development
team but has grown to become what is arguably the premier 'cross development
team in the US.
"The team mission is to help the best Colorado junior and U23 cyclo-cross
racers gain experience at the national level against all the other top
kids in the country," stated Turner. "We want to have success at nationals,
obviously, but the ultimate goal is to really have kids get interested
and be committed enough to go to the European camp and get experience
in Europe and make the world championships team.
"[Last year] was huge," Turner continued. "We've always done a good
job of having juniors and under-23 kids who are diehard 'cross racers
and they're just dedicated to the sport and learning more. So we've
sent a lot of kids to the European camp and had quite a few World Championship
selections but actually being able to go to Worlds and have a silver
medal performance come out of our team thanks to Danny was just incredible."
In spite of the team's outstanding performances on the race course,
Turner doesn't necessarily set podium finishes as its overall goal.
The team has also established an equally high priority of making sure
its impressionable racers develop into responsible adults, and a large
part of that message is how their day-to-day actions impact their environment.
When coupled with that on-bike success, the result is a compelling package
for sponsors.
"The interest that people have in sponsoring our team is that they
feel really good about supporting up and coming cyclocross kids," said
Turner. "They feel really good about the team's commitment to operating
more sustainably in the cycling world, and also just educating the kids
in our program and helping them become really well-rounded adults and
not cranking out fast bike racers. We really do a lot to help the kids
become involved in their communities and learn about the environmental
impact of what they're doing. They make a difference; they're not just
kids out there racing bikes all the time."
CLIF Bar has supported the team since its outset but made the commitment
to become its title sponsor at the start of the '07 season.
"Team CLIF Bar has supported the cross team from the get-go. The fit
is ideal," said CLIF Bar's Dylan Seguin. "[We] absolutely love what
this program stands for - the team's out there leading by example on
so many levels. Ben has been wonderful to work with on [the sustainability]
front - he completely 'gets it' and has done a fantastic job incorporating
environmentally responsible efforts into the team plan. The Team CLIF
Bar Sustainable Sports program is focused on sustaining sports in many
ways. Quality junior development programs within sports are a sustainability
effort in their own right - then you add in all the efforts the CLIF
Bar Development Cyclocross Team is making to reduce its ecological footprint
and build awareness of the climate change issue so that others can feel
empowered to take action… the kids conduct themselves very professionally
- they're some of the best ambassadors out there for the sport of cyclo-cross.
And, to top it all off, they race real fast. It's a hard mix to beat."
Turner is obviously equally excited about the relationship from his
end: "With CLIF Bar, we've been really involved in helping get their
'Start Global Cooling' message out, and that's a campaign that's meant
to raise awareness about global warming and give people things that
they can do at home to reduce their carbon footprint, how much carbon
dioxide they emit during their daily lives: driving, and running electricity
in their house and those sorts of things. Last year we simply calculated
all of our travel miles via airplane and car for all of the kids and
all of the races and figured out our carbon footprint for that, and
then we bought wind energy credits through Native Energy, which is just
a simple offset. You pollute this much, and you purchase wind energy
credits to put that much more wind power into the grid."
Even that isn't enough for the team, though, who markedly stepped up
its sustainability efforts this year. They've partnered with Boulder,
Colorado-based Eco-Cycle to help the USGP of Cyclo-cross reduce the
environment impact of the race series and also acquired a decidedly
unconventional 'new' team vehicle.
"This year we decided to try to take it up a notch and try to reduce
our pollution and reduce our dependence on fossil fuels," said Turner.
"We got this team bus which is able to run on biodiesel or waste vegetable
oil. We still have to rely on diesel fuel once in a while when we're
around the Interstate highway systems but we're trying to do the best
we can to seek out biodiesel. We're still in the process of getting
our waste veggie oil system up and running, but we're ready to roll
with the vehicle. It's making a difference as compared to driving around
a big gas guzzling van or something."
Even the team's bike sponsor was a perfect fit with the environmentally
friendly theme. According to Jason Boucher of Salsa Cycles, "It was
a pretty simple decision to sponsor the team. Salsa Cycles' motto is
'Ride & Smile' and I think most agree that cyclo-cross is so darn fun,
both for riders and fans. More importantly, though, is the message behind
this team. This team is focused on youth and the environment, both very
important things with very powerful long lasting impacts for cycling
and the world. Additionally, Salsa Cycles and our parent company, Quality
Bicycle Products, are very focused on the environment… both the team
and Salsa's values are in alignment. It just felt right."
Big picture issues aside, the team does still want to win races,
and Salsa's Chili con Crosso is well suited to the task. The Minneapolis,
Minnesota-based company bucks the carbon trend with a full scandium-enhanced
aluminum tubeset. "The Chili Con Crosso is Salsa's all out cross racing
bike," said Boucher. "We chose scandium tubing instead of carbon for
a few reasons. We knew building our race cross bike out of carbon would
likely price the bike out of range for most cross racers and Salsa's
customers. We also thought that to build a bike both light and durable,
that we could ultimately build a lighter bike using scandium tubes.
Salsa has been building bikes out of scandium for 5 years and we've
gotten pretty darn good at manipulating the tubes to get the most out
of it."
That tubing manipulation includes flattened chain stays and seat stays
for improved rear end comfort and tracking, a shaped top tube to ease
shouldering, and a tapered seat tube that flares to 35mm at the bottom
bracket for good drivetrain response but necks down to accept a standard
27.2mm seatpost for a softer ride. Alpha Q's top-end CX20 monocoque
carbon fork holds up the front end. Finishing kit is a mix of SRAM Force
and Rival, Mavic wheelsets, Dugast or Maxxis rubber, fi'zi:k contact
points, as well as seatposts, stems, and handlebar out of Salsa's own
parts bin. All told, Summerhill's complete bike is a reasonable 8.45kg
(18.6lb) in tubular form, and the team is in the process of dropping
weight by possibly going with lighter Alpha Q components.
Summerhill put his scandium race machine to good use at the US Cyclo-cross
Nationals in Kansas City with a third place finish that has earned him
a nomination to represent the US at the UCI World Championship to be
held January 26, 2008 in Treviso, Italy. Summerhill will move up this
year from the Juniors category to the fiercely competitive U23 division.
He will undoubtedly want to improve on last year's finish with a win
and a set of rainbow stripes, but even if that mission doesn't go as
planned, it's still unlikely that anyone will consider the team anything
but wildly successful.
PhotographyFor a thumbnail gallery of these images, click here
Images by
James Huang/Cyclingnews.com
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