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A GOOD Break For Andy Jacques-Maynes
After suffering a Memorial Day race crash that left him with 15 broken bones, Andy Jacques-Maynes (Cal Giant Berry Farms) spent the remainder of the road season recovering on his couch at home in Capitola, Calif. Then, after his first race back, he broke his collarbone while running across the venue after the race. Saturday in the Masters Men 30-34 race, Jacques-Maynes got another break, but this time it was a good one.
Defending national champion Grant Berry (Rocky Mtn Chocolate Factory) lit a fiery pace from the start and left Jacques-Maynes behind, along with Weston Schempf (C3-Sollay.com), Molly Cameron (Vanilla), and Donald Reeb (CMG-Giant) in his wake. Riding in second, Jacques-Maynes ceded his place to Reeb and Schempf after getting tangled up in course tape toward the end of the first lap.
“The whole race was about how many mistakes you made,” Jacques-Maynes said. “If you made one mistake, it was a good lap; if you made five mistakes, it was a bad lap.”
Jacques-Maynes caught back on to Schempf and then bridged to Reeb. His big move came late in the race, when he took aim at Berry and shot past to win by three seconds.
“This race has been a goal since I crashed,” he said. “I was sitting on the couch, looking for something to get me moving and this race was it.”
Crash Halts McCormack’s Chances
With less than half-a-lap to go in the Masters Men 35-39 race, Brandon Dwight (Boulder Cycle Sport) was doing his best to fend off a challenge by Mark McCormack (Clif Bar).
McCormack was glued to Dwight’s wheel, poised to make the kind of late-race charge that won him dozens of races during his professional road career.
But with the finish line nearly in sight, suddenly McCormack was gone.
“We got to the last two stair run-ups and he was right behind me,” Dwight said. “But then I didn’t hear anything. I turned back and he (McCormack) was nowhere in sight,”
What the Boulder, Colo., resident did not see was in the congestion of passing several lapped riders behind him, a narrow gap on the rutty trail quickly closed for McCormack, sending him crashing down hard to the snow-covered ground.
“We caught a couple guys in the very last little down-up off-camber and I had nowhere to go and crashed,” McCormack said. “The line that we were using disappeared. He (Dwight) got through the lapped guys really well and I didn’t get by them in time. Once you fall that close to the line, you’ll never catch up.”
Racing his age group at nationals for the first time, McCormack traded the lead with Dwight and eventual third-place finisher Richard Feldman (Durance Cycleworks-Lehma). But with two laps to go, Dwight closed the gap to McCormack knowing he would have to make his move as soon as possible.
“I knew that if it came down to a sprint finish, there was no way I was going to be able to beat him,” Dwight said. “I was fortunate to be in the right spot at the right time.”
The race was supposed to feature the largest field of the four-day event, with 171 riders registered. But with the bitterly cold conditions and steady snowfall, only 93 riders opted to take to the starting grid.
Back Row Start Doesn’t Stop Coats
The last time Alan “James” Coats (Morgan Stanley/Specialized) raced cyclocross in Kansas City, the temperature was in the single digits, the wind chill was 30 degrees below zero and the course was a sheet of ice. It was the 2000 USA Cycling Cyclocross National Championships.
Coats swore at the time he’d never come back. But there he was on Saturday, ready to give it another go in the Masters Men 40-44 race, in conditions that were only somewhat nicer.
“My teammates and my co-workers at Specialized Bicycles - where I work - convinced me to come out,” he said.
But even when he lined up for the start, Coats said he was second-guessing his decision. With the starting order determined by order of registration, the Morgan Stanley-Specialized rider found himself looking at the backs of a lot of racers from his vantage point in the 12th row.
“I’ve been a past national champion, but it was back in 2003 and in a different age group, so the official wouldn’t give me a break,” he said. “But with the amount of road section at the start, I moved my way up as far as I could, then backed off and started charging forward.”
In the end, Coats won by 30 seconds over Gannon Myall (California Giant Berry Farms) of Lafayette, Calif.
From the sounds of it, Coats won’t be swearing off a return trip to Kansas City for nationals next year.
“The course was awesome and this venue was just amazing,” he said.
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