Mountain Bike Races
18 Reasons We Can’t Wait Until Summer
0We can’t wait for summer. Triathlons. Swimming. Mountain Biking. Tour de France. Road bike rides with friends. Sunsets. The whole gamut.
- The Hustle
- The Cold Water
- Butterflies
- The Initial Dash
- First Water
- The Race Fans
- Peloton
- Time Trials
- Tour de France
- The Fun of the Finish
- Riding with Friends
- Moab, Utah
- Accomplishing New Goals
- Being Daring
- Downhill MTB Rides
- Road Trips to Beautiful Places
- Mountain Biking Views
- Sunsets
Images Courtesy of jolisoleil,foleymo,kwinkslag, Allie_Caulfield, smudge9000, Zach Dischner, David Barker, AndyC
2011 Sea Otter Classic Roundup
0We’re back from Sea Otter Classic, and instead of posting a bunch of jibber jabber about what happened, we figured we’d just show you some of the fun.
Can You Spot the Fezzari Team Van?
The New Guy
1Here I am, the new guy racing downhill for Fezzari in 2011. I’ll be racing several series in the NW aboard the 2011 Widows Peak DH frame.
I’ve got it almost all the way built for winter training and I’ve got to say this bike is SICK. Look for me at the Fluidride Cup series, the NW Cup, the Blackrock FlowCup, and some Super-D style endurance downhill races. I’ll also be spending time helping to maintain and build trails in my area this year as well. I’ll have pictures and stories/updates regularly so check back often. See you on the trails.
One One Hundredth of a Second(0.01)
0Hey, Kade Salisbury here. So the Utah Downhill Race Series as come to an end with the last race at Brian Head Resort in Southern Utah a week ago. And I must say it most definitely didn’t disappoint. The course was absolutley a pure adrenalin rush and being set at 11.000 ft overlooking Cedar Breaks adds a spectacular view, not to mention it’s quite literally breath taking. Haha. It’s crazy what an effect it has on one’s body. Fortunately, the body was prepared for the challenge. Which looking at the weeks prior I’m suprised I’m still in one piece. Fortunately I survived at Nationals in Sol Vista, Colorado. The week after racing at Nationals I was off to Canada for my3rd annual Whistler trip. I only went over the bars once up there, But managed to survive. The week after B.C. I was off to race up in Pomerelle, Id. where I sorta hit a tree up there, ok I pretty much nailed a tree booking it with my shoulder on the first day of practice. I’d say the tree won, but I feel I fought a good fight. Haha. But I ended up winning 2nd place the next day.So I was stoked on that. A week after Idaho I was off to my parents cabin down in central/southern Utah at Fishlake. That is where I tried my hand at sailing. Yeah Yeah. It’s been a dream of my sister to pick up sailing and this year she did just that. So I went sailing with her, and talk about a rush. We about went over board a time or two, but it was a blast and I didn’t die. The week after risking my life at sailing I was off to risk my life in the final Utah Downhill Series Race at Brian Head resort. Now usually these DH races are on Sunday, but this was actually on Saturday thus shortening practice time, so I had to make due. I made my trip on Friday and was able to get some good practice in. All went well… As for race day it was a bit different. I ended up meeting up with fellow Fezzari rider Robbie Bamgartner and we took a couple practice runs together before our final race runs, I believe it was 2nd or 3rd run down this course when I was following Robbie and all I saw was him bookin it as always. But he got caught up in some rocks and totally got ejected. So he ended up going down in a nice jagged rocky part of the trail, and somehow one of the rocks entered in his helmet and managed to do some damage. He had a tore up lip with blood on his neck anda nice wound to his elbow which didn’t look fun at all. I believe it took 20 to 30 stitches to fix him up, so he didn’t get to race the downhill. An hour or two later it was time… So this is where it went down. Off the line I was feeling good, I managed to put down a solid first run until I got to the last corner to the finish. This was a corner I’ve yet to practice due to the fact that there is a car to jump over if you go straight instead of taking this corner. So I ended up taking a bit to much speed into it and I just remember breaking loose probably 7-8 feet before the finish line. Luckily I made it across but kinda in the wrong direction. I had pulled off a sweet 180 skid though for a out of the ordinary finish. Now I believe that is what costed me. So I had a time of 3.31.69 and i was sitting in 2nd place. I was just hoping now that I could improve my 2nd run time and that no one would improve on my time. Little did I know that someone would end up getting the exact same time on their 2ndrun as me. HOW IS THAT POSSIBLE? So I ended up tied for second place. This wasn’t how I envisioned it. It turns out that we got our overall points for the race andI was a mere 1 point from taking Silver in the state. Thus if I was only one one hundredth of a second faster it would have put me second, Landon 3rd, and Kade Salisbury (aka myself) In 2nd place behind the National Champion Spencer Mehr. But I’m happy to say the body survived, and my bike the Widows Peak did awesome, as for my brain, it is hangin in there. But I’m looking forward to a few more races this season and doing some late summer/Fall biking. Peace out.
Kirchmeier makes it 2 for 2
0
Round two of the Utah DH series landed me my second win of the season. Another beautiful weekend of weather after such a wet spring was a welcomed sight for everyone at Wolf Mountain Resort in Eden, UT.
The Wolf Creek Mountain Mayhem was the second stop in the Utah series and it was a great one. The race course went down the famous Fezzari trail up top to the lower mountain cross course. This is a course that is easy to ride but hard to ride fast. The top is all about tight, twisty turns and maintaining momentum. The mid section consisted of set of very tricky table top jumps that lead to some fast berms in the 4X style course. From there, it was an all out sprint across a relatively flat fire road and a smoking fast downhill finish. The tight turns were a blast on Saturday when the dirt was moist and tacky but as Sunday wore on, the course dried out and a few of the turns got blown out bad. To win you needed to maintain good speed through the upper turns and pedal your guts out at the finish. The jumps were really tricky. I tried several times in practice to hit them at full speed with poor results but thankfully no injuries. I decided to just grab a handful of brakes for the race run and just get through them smoothly rather than risk catastrophe. I watched a few racers through that section and a high percentage of them crashed so I think I made a wise choice.
I had a good run the first time down the hill with two bobbles in the turns but no complete stops which set me up in first place after run 1. The second run, as with Sundance, the wind kicked in and most riders posted slower times. Mine was one second slower than the first but good enough for the win.
Great Start to the 2010 season, Damon Kirchmeier
0Wow, what a great race! The Sundance Showdown was held June 6th at Sundance Ski Resort near Orem, Utah. This was the first race of the 2010 Utah race series and it was the first Utah DH race in memory to sell out. I waited until the las minute to enter and darn near lost out on a great race weekend. The weather was perfect for the whole race weekend after raining the week before. That rain left the dirt nice and tacky for super fast racing. Saturday’s practice session was just plain fun – lots of fast laps on a course that isn’t technically challenging to ride. The fresh cut through a 100 yard snow field made it just messy enough to splatter your goggles and dirty my nice white Fezzari kit but didn’t cause any real trouble.
Sunday, the conditions held and we had perfect racing conditions for run 1. I decided to race the first run without pedaling, saving myself to give it everything on run 2. The first run went well with no major flaws and the time reflected it. I was in first place and confident I could improve on the second run. Well, that turns out to be a poor strategy because a wind picked up between runs and despite pedaling until my lungs nearly blew out, I was one second slower. Fortunately, the first time held and was good enough for the win.
Good start to the season.
Dave Beeson 1st @Triple dip DH Sol Vista Colorado
0I just got back from the Triple Dip DownHill stage race in Sol Vista Colorado. For any of you that have not ridden Sol Vista I highly recommend that you road trip out and enjoy the amazing mountain that they have made into one of the best mountain bike parks in the nation. The Three stages where all Down hill with one chainless race in the middle, and all combined times determined the winners.
My first race I had a great run and ended up Second overall with the fastest Vet Pro time. In the chainless race I had a small fall and ended up .03 seconds behind the stage winner for the day, and it gave me a 8 second lead over second place my division. On the third stage I won by .15 seconds and held on for the win in my division, and I ended up 8th overall (pro). If only i had not crashed.
I had a great weekend and my Fezzari Widows Peak downhill bike kept me going fast, and got me down the hill fast. Thanks to Chris, and all the guys at Fezzari for the help and I will report soon.
Next up = Wolf Mountain 6 hour enduro downhill. Where I happen to be the defending Champion.
Erin Collins 1st place Expert @ Stan Crane Memorial ICUP in Draper
0I was a little worried how my legs would feel on Monday morning since I did a triathlon just 2 days before.
I did everything I could to get my legs to recover asap after the tri on Saturday…I ate some good food immediately after and even managed to get back into the icy lake that we swam in. This is a big recovery secret! Sunday I went out for a nice spin on my cross country solitude bike. Monday when the race began I just thought to myself be patient and don’t start out too fast. I was sitting in the middle of the pack for the first few miles of the first lap and I had the first place girl in my sights. I started feeling good so I picked up my pace a bit and passed 3 girls…now I was in 2nd position.
On one of the last steep climbs before the final descent for that lap I saw a pro girl up ahead and thought ‘no way is the KC Holley’ well it wasn’t, but it was another fast girl that races the pro circuit Xterra race series. I rode in front of her for the remainder of that lap and then right behind her for the 2nd lap. On the second lap I saw the first place expert girl stopped to “unsuck” her chain, I yelled some words of sympathy and encouragement and took off. I managed to put four minutes on her during my remaining descent and half lap. She told me after the race that one of the expert riders was giving her a hard time and told her that we both needed to move up to pro. Well that’s good I told her because I was planning on doing the next race in the pro category!





















