Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Sunday's Results

A Race
Russ Griffin
Cal Hill
John Carr
Ryan Bosio
B Race CX4
Jeremy Hall
Jarrett Kinder
Hugh Colvin
Michael Modesto
B Race CX3
Edward Krei
John Carr
John Schmidt
William Morehead
B Race 35-44
Tom Spence
Matt Joiner
Cal Hill
Butch Carter
B Race 45+
Kenny Marshall
Greg Casteel
Thomas Gee
Chris Stafford
Single Speed
Russell Griffin
Jeremy Nagoshiner
B Womens
Andrea Creasy
Valerie Nagoshiner

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Some Race Pics

Here's some pics from his weekends races from Ryan Bosio. Saturday's pics and Sunday's A race pics by Andrea- the Rest were by Ryan.
Thanks guys!

Jackson Cyclocross Saturday Pics

Jackson Cyclocross Sunday Pics

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Race Results- Saturdays Race

The weather turned out perfect and the course was actually mostly dry. Here's the results and hopefully we'll have some pics up soon.

A RACE
1 Bert Hull
2 Forrest Owens
3 Cal Hill
4 Matt Joiner
B RACE
CX3
1 Edward Krei
2 Gibb Morehead
CX4
1 Ryan Bosio
2 Jeremy Hall
3 Jarret Kinder
4 Hugh Colvin
5 Butch Carter
6 John Bowman
Masters
35-44
1 Tom Spence
2 Dustin Finley
3 Beau Rathburn
4 Ray Howard
45+
1 Kenny Marshall
2 Greg Casteel
3 Tom Gee
4 Chris Stafford
Single Speed
1 Jeremy Nagoshiner
Women
1 Valerie Nagoshiner

Sunday, October 14, 2007

The Race Info!

JACKSON SPOKES CYCLOCROSS

Saturday Oct. 27th and Sunday Oct. 28th
Muse Park
Jackson, TN


EVENTS
12:00pm A Race - 50min. -USCF Pro, Cat CX1, CX2, and CX3

11:00am B Race - 40min. -USCF CX3 And CX4, Women, Juniors, S.S.
Divided into Wmn., Jr., Sr. (18-34) Master (35-44), Master (45+)

*Race Director reserves the right to combine categories and races*

FEES: $20 a Race, Race day registration only, opens at 9:00. USAC license req. One-day's will be available for $10/day.

PRIZES: Prizes for top 3 finishers in each division– Cash to top 3 A racers (Sr. and Master) and top 3 Wmn. - $50/30/20

REQUIREMENTS: USCF rules for cyclocross will apply. Mtn. Bikes allowed w/o barends

DIRECTIONS: MUSE PARK– From I-40 –Take Exit 82 South– Follow N. Highland south for 1.4 miles to Hwy 412 (N.Parkway) Take Left on Hwy 412.

Muse Park is 1.2 miles on the left.

COURSES: Both courses will be traditional ‘cross courses. Details will be available on the website.

SPONSORS: Outdoors Inc – Bicycle City – Moe’s Southwest Grill

Alpha Q - Greenway Nursery

For More Info Call- Outdoors Inc. 1.731.512.1766

Thursday, October 4, 2007

'Cross at Murph's this weekend!

This Sunday, Oct 7, at 2:00pm, we will race again at Richard Murphy's house for the first time of the 07/08 season.

Everyone that raced last year had a blast and we hope to share the fun with more folks this time around. The .75 mile course should be in great shape and is a perfect course to learn the sport. 'Cross bikes will have a slight advantage but mountain bikes will do just fine. This is a great chance to try the sport and get ready for next fall. If you can get there a little early we'll have quick lesson for anyone new.

$0 entry fee-

Race starts at 2:00 - We'll start out with a practice lap first then start the real race. Race will be 35 minutes or so.

To get to Richard's house take the Hwy 45 Bypass (Exit 80 North) north to Humboldt- When you get to Humboldt take a left on Carriage Ln. then a left on Woodgate- House # 1312

Call 512-1766 for more info about the race

Monday, October 1, 2007

Even The Commercial Appeal is into 'cross!


Cylocross is ideal off-season cyclist activity

Monday, October 1, 2007

Competitive bicycle riding and running are difficult enough, so what would happen if you combined the two?

You would end up with a grueling form of bike racing designed to test the rider's ability to endure and overcome pain. In a word, you would get cyclocross.

Cyclocross races are typically done on road bikes outfitted with knobby tires and the courses are short circuits between one-half and one mile long, usually laid out on a grassy expanse that includes short, steep hills and strategically placed barriers.

Cyclists jump from the bike in advance of the barrier and, bike in hand, leap over the obstacle and remount the bicycle without slowing down.


Cyclists race around the cyclocross track like this for about 45 minutes.

Since 2005, Memphis cyclists Joel Glasgow and Robert Taylor have been hosting informal cyclocross races in Midtown's Toby Park. Riders trickle in around dusk, drop $5 and race for 40 minutes around an impromptu course that circles baseball diamonds, traverses gravel roads and challenges riders to trudge through strength-sapping grassy fields.

Taylor has been a part of the cyclocross community in Memphis for more 20 years, since Joe Royer, co-owner of Outdoors Inc., started cyclocross racing in Memphis in 1986 with a race at Shelby Farms.

Twenty-one years later, Royer's race -- the Outdoors Inc. Mid-South Cyclocross Championship Race -- is world-renowned.

The City of Memphis Chamber of Commerce has featured the race as a major attraction in its Relocation Guide and Professional Cyclocross National Champion Paul Curley has called it "a race worth traveling to."

Cyclocross originated as a form of off-season training for road-bike racers looking to stay fit and stay on the bike during the winter -- the "dead season" of cycling.

It is an ideal off-season activity for cyclists as the races are typically short, and jumping off the bike to leap over a barrier "brings your feet back" from the numbing chill of a cold winter wind. Plus, the occasional jog keeps the heart rate high and the insides warm.

Cyclocross gained more converts in the early 1990s as mountain bike riders joined the ranks of off-season road racers in this chilly test of endurance.

"There used to be eight people lined up at the cyclocross starting line," Taylor recollects. Now, cyclists from all over the country travel to Memphis to join a cadre of Bluff City cyclocrossers at Harbor Town's Greenbelt Park, each seeking victory in the Outdoors Inc. Cyclocross Championship Race.

"Cross is not an every man sport," Royer cautioned. "It's a training exercise." Taylor agreed, saying its "the hardest thing to do on the bike. It's very demanding."

As with any form of athletic competition, cyclocross racing requires intense physical preparation and unfaltering dedication, if one intends to compete seriously.

But beginners to cyclocross have the opportunity to push their physical limitations, and both runners and cyclists might find it just the sport they've been looking for.

The informal and unofficial races at Toby Park offer first-timers an excellent opportunity to try cyclocross racing. For the racers among us, October races provide an opportunity to condition for the Outdoors Inc. Cyclocross Championship on Nov. 11th.

Robert Taylor recalls that the neatest thing he's seen at a cyclocross race was "a 10-year-old at the race trying to lift his 30- or 40-pound bike over the barricades."

In the spirit of the determined 10-year-old, join us this winter for Memphis cyclocross.

Memphian Anthony Siracusa is a student at Rhodes College, a member of Memphis' Bicycle Pedestrian Advisory Committee, executive director of Revolutions Community Bicycle Shop and a daily cycling commuter. Contact him at revolutionsmemphis.com or comment on his column at our Healthy Memphis blog at commercialappeal-web.com/health.

More info:

Joe Royer, co-owner of Outdoor's Inc., will present a program on cyclocross at 7 p.m. today at Earnestine and Hazel's. Info: memphishightailers. clubexpress.com

Cyclocross Races at Toby Park will be on Tuesday, Oct. 9 and Oct. 16. Races begin at 7p.m. The entry fee is $5 per race.

Outdoors Inc. Mid-South Cyclocross Championship: Nov. 11 at Greenbelt Park. Registration at 8 a.m., beginners' race at 9 a.m., experts' race at 10 a.m. For info: outdoorsinc.com.