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Canada’s Van Den Ham and Clark Podium Again on Day 2 at U.S. Open of Cyclocross in Boulder

by pedalmag.com

October 16, 2017 (Boulder, Colo) – Canadian crosser, Michael Van Den Ham (Garneau – Easton P/B Transitions Life), grabbed his second podium of the weekend in the Elite Men’s race taking third on Day 2 at the U.S. Open of Cyclocross at Valmont Bike Park. On Saturday, Van Den Ham battled to second place in an all-out sprint to the line.

Van Den Ham  ©  Ethan Glading
“After coming oh so close to the win yesterday, I figured I had a good chance at being there again. And I guess I was, but I didn’t feel as strong as Saturday. Maybe it was fatigue from the day before, maybe it was the altitude, but yesterday I felt in control and comfortable while today it was a hard just to stick with the front group.

“For the last couple laps we were a three man group. I was sitting second wheel coming into the back half of the course which was right where I wanted to be, but Garry jumped around me just before the second time through the pits. I know whoever led through the last corner would win, so I tried to move back to the front on the extended straight before the last corner, but I just didn’t have the jump to get around them and had to settle for third.

“In the end, it was an alright weekend. I really wanted the win, but can’t be too disappointed with landing my first two UCI podiums of the year,” said Van Den Ham.

Van Den Ham in action  ©  Ethan Glading
Fellow Canuck, Tyler Clark (KMS Cycling Killington Mountain School) was also on the podium again finishing third in the Junior Men’s race on Sunday. Clark raced to third on Saturday as well.

US Open of Cyclocross Day 2 Report
Windy conditions continued for the start of Sunday races at the U.S. Open of Cyclocross across Valmont Bike Park. It would be the second full day of UCI Category 2 with USA Cycling’s Professional Cyclocross Calendar (ProCX) points on the line for Junior 17-18 Men, Under-23 Men, Elite Women and Elite Men.

Men’s podium (l-r) Swenson 4th, Riveros Paez 2nd, Millburn 2nd, Van Dem Ham 3rd, Driscoll 5th  ©  Without Limits
Benjamin Gomez Villafane (Top Club CycloCross) of Scotts Valley, Calif. went two-for-two in the Junior 17-18 Men’s contest, out sprinting Henry Jones (Bend Endurance Academy) of Bend, Ore. for the win. Scott Funston (Rad Racing NW) of Maple Valley, Wash. finished third. Going into the Boulder races, Villafane was second overall in ProCX points for the Junior category.

“Essentially the race played out pretty interesting today. At first there wasn’t any wind, and then throughout the race it really picked up, especially at the end. The wind really kept the race together,” said Villafane about winds reaching 20-plus miles an hour, or more, for a second consecutive day. “At the front it was me, Tyler Clark, Torin (Bickmore), Scott Funston and Calder Wood. And we were at the front just hammering the whole time. Most of us are from sea level, so it was a level playing field. Towards the end it became more of a tactical race.”

U23 Men’s podium (l-r) Denzel 2nd, Hecht 1st, Brunner 3rd  ©  Without Limits
In the U23 battle it was an all-Colorado contest. Boulder’s Eric Brunner (Evol Racing) opened a small gap in the lead group with two laps to go, leaving Saturday’s winner Gage Hecht (Alpha Bicycle Co./Groove Subaru) of Parker, Colo. to chase, along with Boulder riders Grant Ellwood (Boulder Cycle Sport), Denzel Stephenson (Evol Racing) and Maxx Chance (Evol Racing). The chasing paid off with a big kick in the final sprint and Hecht secured his second U23 race in two days at Valmont Bike Park.

“It’s always great to race a UCI-level race here at home. Yesterday was amazing. I was super stoked. It’s my first UCI win of the season, which is fantastic. Today I was able to double up,” said U23 winner Hecht. “It was so much fun racing with those guys. We always have real good competition. I think it makes us all faster.”

Second was secured by Stephenson and third went to Ellwood. Eric Brunner, who finished third on Saturday, would miss the podium and finish fourth on Sunday.

In the Category 2 Elite Women’s race, Courtenay Mcfadden (Pivot Cycles p/b DNA) pushed across the line as the winner in a three-rider sprint. Rising star Katie Clouse (Alpha Bicycle Co.) of Littleton, Colo. grabbed the silver, with the bronze going to Caroline Mani (Van Dessel) of France. Clouse and Mani switched positions on the podium on Sunday, as Clouse finished behind Mani the day before. It was the first UCI cyclocross win for ProCX points this year for Mcfadden, who came in to the weekend 15th overall in the elite women’s ProCX standings.

The C2 Elite Men kicked up a dust cloud for their xx laps on the dry course in Boulder, with Cody Kaiser of El Dorado Hills, Calif. taking the hole shot. The field began to break apart midway through the race, with 23-year-old Keegan Swenson (Cannondale/3Rox) of Park City, Utah taking a turn at the front. The lead group also contained Canadian Michael van den Ham (Garneau Easton), Saturday’s silver medalist, Colombian Hector Riveros (Stan’s NoTubes), Australian Garry Millburn (Speedvagen x MAAP), and Americans Allen Krughoff (Krughoff Racing) and Jamie Driscoll (Donnelly Sports), who was Saturday’s champion.

Three riders would make a move on the twisty course with two laps to go, and the move would stick for the final podium. It would be the Australian Millburn crossing the line for his first ProCX win this year in five events. Riveros would finish one-tenth of a second behind for second place, and van den Ham would roll across the line in third. Swenson finished fourth, and Driscoll managed fifth.

“Today certainly had enough of a challenge. It broke up a little bit and we had a few gaps. I was just trying to stay at the front,” Millburn said about how the C2 men’s race played out. “ I knew the kind of group I was with. I was confident that I could get the sprint if I just positioned myself right. So I kind of went early on this back straight and into that final corner first. I pulled a pedal. Hector was coming, and I got my foot back in (the pedal), found a few more gears and got there in the end. A great way to cap off the U.S. season for us.”

Millburn was proud to be the first Australian to win a UCI race at US Open of Cyclocross. “Today was pretty good. My wife and I love Boulder,” he continued. “I’m from Sydney, Australia, so this is kind of small town, but enough of what we need. Sydney is just hustle and bustle. This is finishing off our U.S. block now. We did the two World Cups (Iowa and Wisc.), and went to KMC (Conn.), and Interlaken (Bloomfield, Colo.) last weekend. Tomorrow morning back to Sydney.”

ProCX racing continues Oct. 21-22 at DCCX in metro Washington, D.C. Races are part of the BikeReg Cyclocross Super Series, and Elite Women and Elite Men competitions are part of USA Cycling’s Professional Cyclocross Calendar (ProCX). DCCX was named the “best local bike race” of 2017 by Washington City Paper, noting that the venue used for the two-day event, The Armed Forces Retirement Home, is normally closed to the public.

The 2017 ProCX schedule provides a total of 43 race days across 18 states and the District of Columbia. The calendar spans September to December and is comprised of UCI-inscripted Category 1 and Category 2 races. Follow ProCX updates and standings this season on Twitter (#ProCX and @USACProCX), Facebook (usacycling) and at www.usacycling.org/procx.

Results

Elite Men
1. Garry Millburn (Aus) Speedvagen X Maap 56:41.109
2. Hector Fernando Riveros Paez (Col) Stan’s Notubes P/B Maxx / Construction 00:00
3. Michael Van Den Ham (Can) Garneau – Easton P/B Transitions Life 00:02
4. Keegan Swenson (USA) Cannondale/3Rox Racing00:06
5. James Driscoll (USA) Donnelly Cycling Cyclocross Team 00:07
6. Cody Kaiser (USA) 00:10
7. Allen Krughoff (USA) 00:32
8. Skyler Mackey (USA) 01:37
9. Chris Baddick (Gbr) 01:48
10. Jake Wells (USA) 01:52
11. Yannick Eckmann (USA) 02:30
12. Cody Cupp (USA) 02:44
13. Josh Whitney (USA) 02:54
14. Kevin Day (USA) 03:07
15. Mark Flis (USA) 03:08
16. Samuel Dolzani (USA) 03:09
17. Kevin Bradford-Parish (USA) 03:28
18. Josh Direen (USA) 03:34
19. Alex Wild (USA) 04:36
20. Allan Schroeder (USA) 04:38
21. Eric Fossell (USA) 05:03
22. William Allen (USA) 05:04
23. Ryan Rinn (USA) 05:11
24. Jacob Huizenga (USA) 05:30
25. Aaron Vaughn (USA) 05:35
26. Jayson Jacobs (USA) 05:36
27. Timber Weiss (USA) 06:00
28. Zachary Dolzani (USA) 06:06
29. Christopher Ganter (USA) 07:30
30. Nick Thomas (USA) 07:55
31. Jeremy Ostrowski (USA) 08:33
DNF Ian Mcpherson (USA)
DNF Kyle Johnson (USA)
DNF Braden Kappius (USA)
DNF Terol Pursell (USA)
DNS Spencer Downing (USA)

Junior Men
1. Benjamin Gomezvillafane (USA) 41:35.049
2. Henry Jones (USA) 00:05
3. Tyler Clark (Can) KMS Cycling Killington Mountain School 00:13
4. Torin Bickmore (USA) 00:50
5. Calder Wood (USA) 01:13
6. Sam Brown (USA) 01:28
7. Conor Martin (Can) Garneau-Easton P/B Transitions Lifecare 01:38
8. Benjamin Johnson (USA) 01:41
9. Campbell Watson (USA) 02:36
10. Max Ritzow (USA) 02:58
11. Cole Limpach (USA) 03:08
12. Charles Springer (USA) 04:56
13. Tyler Reynolds (USA) 05:13

Elite Women
1. Courtenay McFadden (USA) 45:15.446
2. Katie Clouse (USA) 00:01
3. Caroline Mani (Fra) 00:01
4. Sofia Gomez Villafane (Arg) 00:29
5. Samantha Runnels (USA) 00:30
6. Laurel Rathbun (USA) 00:31
7. Rebecca Gross (USA) 00:54
8. Sunny Gilbert (USA) 00:55
9. Emily Kachorek (USA) 01:23
10. Christa Ghent (USA) 01:24
11. Dani Arman (USA) 01:44
12. Anna “Katrina” Engelsted (USA) 02:24
13. Amy Beisel (USA) 02:28
14. Georgia Gould (USA) 02:36
15. Kristen Legan (USA) 02:49
16. Petra Schmidtmann (USA) 02:58
17. Ava Lilley (USA) 03:06
18. Maria Larkin (Irl) 03:06
19. Ksenia Lepikhina (USA) 03:43
20. Shannon Mallory (USA) 03:48
21. Jolene Holland (USA) 03:53
22. Fiona Morris (Aus) 03:57
23. Meghan Newlin (USA) 04:15
24. Dana Kuper (USA) 04:21
25. Heidi Franz (USA) 04:48
26. Marsa Daniel (USA) 05:02
27. Anna Dorovskikh (USA) 05:22
28. Ashley Zoerner (USA) 05:27
29. Nicole Jorgenson (USA) 05:32
30. Jenna Downey (USA) 05:41
31. Laura Jeddeloh (USA) 05:43
32. Suzie Livingston (USA) 06:53
33. Leslie Ethridge (USA)
DNF Megan Carrington (USA)





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