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By Wendy Booher and Sean Weide

Kansas City, Kan. (Dec. 16, 2007) - Tim Johnson will be the first to admit his performance was hardly flawless Sunday.
But the Cannondale-Leer-CyclocrossWorld.com rider rode fast - and skillfully - enough to emerge from a muddy, ice and snow-coated course at Kansas City’s Wyandotte County Course as the national champion.
It was the second national title for the Middleton, Mass., resident. His first came in 2000 - when the national championships were last in Kansas City.
“If you could stay upright and not get into trouble, that was considered flawless, even though your speed was up and down,” Johnson said.
Jonathan Page (Sunweb-Pro Job), who has spent the entire cyclocross season racing in Europe, finished second. Todd Wells (GT Bicycles), the 2005 national champion, was third.
Johnson was one of seven winners crowned on the final day of competition at the USA Cycling National Cyclocross Championships. Joining him on the top step of the podium was Women’s Elite Champion Katie Compton (Spike Shooter), Collegiate Men’s Champion Jamey Driscoll of the University of Vermont, and Collegiate Women’s Champion Kacey Manderfield of Lees-McRae College. In the three age group categories re-run today, Lewis Rollins (Contender Bicycle) of Salt Lake City was crowned Masters 60-64 champion, Lee Willmore (Celo Pacific) of Seal Beach, Calif. earned the Masters 65-69 title, and Walt Axthelm (Durango Wheel Club) of Durango, Colo. earned the Masters 70+ title.
Defending Champion Knocked Out Of Race
At the midway point of the Men’s Elite race, it was clear the winner was going to emerge from a group of three: Page - the silver medalist at the 2007 World Cyclocross Championships - Wells and Johnson.
Defending national champion Ryan Trebon was gone, having been knocked out of the race with five-and-a-half laps to go when he collided with a rider who broke through the barrier tape on a portion of the course where it doubled back on itself.
“He hit me head-on and I landed on the ice on my back, shoulder and arm,” Trebon said. “It hurt like hell.”
Even local favorite and Masters 45-59 champion Steve Tilford of Topeka, Kan., was out of contention, the victim of a pair of double flat tires.
Johnson said he switched bikes twice, though it might have only been once had he not had a slight mechanic mishap early on in the hour-long race.
“The first couple laps I went into one of the dips and my bars slipped down so they were pointing towards the ground and my hands kept slipping off the shifters,” he said.
But Johnson looked to be in full control when he attacked Page on the second-to-last trip up the hill to the finish line. The gap he opened up was only a slight one, though, and it remained a handful of seconds until Page crashed near the pits, dropping his chain. He quickly grabbed another bike and was on his way. But the momentary bobble cost him valuable time and Page would never get any closer to Johnson again.
“I was in control except for one little bobble, and that was the bike race,” Page said. “I just ran out of real estate. That’s ‘cross, I guess.”
Johnson said the victory puts a cap on a season that started with what he called a “weak” showing at the inaugural Cross Vegas race at Interbike in September.
“(But) it got better and better and I was able to win a couple races like Granogue and Portland,” he said. “But going into this race, it’s a lot of pressure to have everybody say, ‘This is your kind of race. This is your kind of course.’ I tried not to let it affect me and weigh me down.” |