Denzel
& Goodall Win Stars 'N Stripes
At
REDLINE headquarters, they have a wall solely dedicated
to framed stars n striped jersies; right next to the
rainbow striped jersies of our BMX World Champions. Ysee;
in every cycling discipline (whether it is mountain bike,
road bike, velodrome or cyclo-cross), USA Cycling holds
a U.S. Championships. Much like all European
and Australian associations do, its a one-shot, one-day-only
National No.1 title. And in all of those forms of cycling,
winning and wearing the stars n stripes of a U.S.
National Champion is the ultimate. Its like being
crowned ABA National No.1 (only without the 10 wins and
11 months of consistency).
For
the past decade, Redline riders have won their share of
the red, white and blue jerseys in the mud n
crud sport of cyclo-cross. In fact, Logan Owen
the young BMX starturned-Cyclocross racer, has already
won two Stars n Stripes. Other BMXers who know the
prestige of the patriotic jersey are Brian Lopes, Eric
Carter, Mike King and Jill Kitner. They have
all fought hard for, and won this jersey, in the suspension-realm
of mountain bikes. To Carter and King, who are both No.1
title holders in the ABA, donning the stars n stripes
is probably as meaningful as holding an ABA No.1 Silver
Cup above their head in Oklahoma.
When you show up at a major mountain, road, cross
or track bike race and are wearing an earned Stars n
Stripes jersey people treat you as if you are a
well, uh
Bubba Harris or Lance
Armstrong. You are a U.S. National Champion. And they
should bow down to you like Wayne & Garth did to Alice
Cooper in Waynes World 1.
Recently,
USA Cycling held the first ever BMX version of the National
Championships. And in time, winning this race should mean
something BIG. For the past 30 years, both ABA and NBL
have been crowning National Champions their
own way, so its been etched in our brains that to
become National Champ in BMX, you must race 10 or more
events a year, chase points, win at the Grands and be
lucky enough to get the biggest rider count.
Thats the way its always been. Until now.
The
infamous Waterford Oaks BMX track was the site of USA
Cyclings first attempt at the BMX National Championships.
And with a UCi Worlds qualifying-spot reserved for all
of those who made the main, the finals were fairly action-packed.
Team Redline's, Denzel Stein and Gorgeous
George Goodall scored impressive wins, and have now
earned the right to wear the sports first-ever stars
n stripes jersey. Denzel literally won his 16x main
after his third crank out of the gate, where he pulled
away from the pack with his amazing big-gear power, while
Goodall was on a mission to make a statement, after taking
a 5th in his 20? semi. They both proved their point, and
now have their tickets to Victoria, BC for a shot at the
World Championship titles.
For the rest of the Redline gang in Waterford, it was
a crazy string of 2nd place scores. Although they wont
be wearing a stars n stripes jerseyRedline
pros Bubba Harris and Kim Hayashi put on
quite a show on their way to the 2nd tier of the podium.
In
the Elite Mens main, it was three abreast down the first
straightaway with elbows locked and loaded. Bubba had
the inside line, with Matt Pohlkamp sandwiched
in the middle and Donny Robinson controlling the
outside. Over the giant step-table, Bubba ran out of track
and veered in to the grass and rocks, while Donny and
Pohlkamp fought for the front spot. Amazingly, Bubba corrected
his slight detour and got back on the track, entering
the first turn at a slightly different angle than all
others. By the time he exited turn one, hed fallen
back to fourth place, but quickly passed Mikey Day
in Waterfords burly rhythm section.
Coming out of turn three and heading for the dog-legged
double-infested downhill finish straight, Bubba and his
Flight Pro XXL opted for the outside line of the pro section,
and caught up with Pohlkamp for a finishline spint. Meanwhile,
Donny Robinson nabbed the nicer inside line to
take over the win, while Bubba laid down his power to
nip Pohlkamp for the two-spot.
In Elite Women, it looked as if Kim Hayashi would
have the advantage with her being one of the only ones
to jump the giant doubles on the first straight. In the
main, she was skying them at the front of the pack but
a swerving Arielle Martin right beside her balled
things up, leaving some of the Pro women in a huge, dusty
pileup and giving Stephanie Barrigan the lead. Kim was
fortunate not to crash and got back in to the 2nd position,
yet couldnt make up ground quick enough to score
the National Championship. She too, would take a 2nd.
The string of seconds didnt stop there; as Elite
Masters turned out to be another battle of Jason Carne$
-vs- Whipperman; the newly-turned 30 year old. With all
of these youngsters coming in to the class, C-Money has
his work cut out this season, but is up for the challenge.
As hard as he laid down his incredible power, Carne$ couldnt
catch the smooth, skinny white kid with skills.
Adding yet another 2nd place to the Redline camp was Eugene,
Oregons Dakota Senger; who was right on track
to nab the national championship, but one slight bobble
in the final turn cost him the win. Between class and
cruiser, Dakota put on a hard fought battle for the wins,
and wound up on the podium for both - ensuring the entire
BMX World that he will be a name to contend with come
UCi Worlds-time in Victoria, BC this July.
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