President’s Crit Results

March 20th, 2008

Hey everyone, here are the results sorry it took so long to post, I was having problems with the file.

President’s Crit Results

 

UMD President’s Crit

March 4th, 2008

Hey here is the race flyer

 President’s Crit

Collegiate Tour Baby

January 7th, 2008

Maryland Cycling is pleased to announce that on February 7th, we will be hosting a stage in Scott Coady’s *The Collegiate Tour Baby*! *The Collegiate Tour Baby* is not a bike race, but rather a nationwide tour for the screening of Scott’s newest film, *Tour Baby Deux!* (about his adventures following the 2005 tour), raffle, and silent auction to benefit the Davis Phinney Foundation and Collegiate Cycling. The event will take place from 6-10pm at the Samuel Riggs IV Alumni Center on the University of Maryland campus in College Park, MD.
More information, including ticket sales will be forthcoming and is available at the official Collegiate Tour Baby http://www.collegiatetourbaby.com/index.html website. You can also view a teaser of the film here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9NLqxA3JPzw.

If you are interested in purchasing tickets, donating items for the silent auction, or sponsoring the event in another way, please contact Colin Hebert. cghebert@umd.edu

Fall ‘07 Meeting

September 2nd, 2007

We are having a meeting on Thursday, 9/6/2007, to discuss the coming year.  Anyone interesed should attend.  It will be at 7:30 in the ERC student board room, next to the raquet ball courts.

First Ever Collegiate Female All-Star Program Announced

April 6th, 2007

Minneapolis, Minn. (April 5, 2007) - College sports fans and cycling enthusiasts will soon get the chance to meet the country’s top women cyclists from colleges and universities all across the United States when the Ryan Collegiate All-Star Team takes to the roads at the Nature Valley Grand Prix, June 20 - 24. This will be the first all-star team in the history of U.S. collegiate cycling.

The Ryan Collegiate Women’s All Star Team, sponsored by construction giant The Ryan Companies, is the result of a partnership between USA Cycling and the Nature Valley Grand Prix, a stage race ranked at the top of USA Cycling’s National Racing Calendar .

The team will be selected at the 2007 USA Cycling Collegiate Road National Championships, May 10-13, in Lawrence, Kan. Selection will be based on the final omnium standings. The Ryan Collegiate All-Star Team will be composed of eight riders from different collegiate teams, four from Division I and four from Division II, who are not members of teams already attending the Nature Valley Grand Prix.

“Each rider will be allowed to race in her own collegiate club jersey presenting a unique opportunity for college and university clubs to gain remarkable exposure,” said Daniel Matheny, USA Cycling’s National Collegiate Manager. “It will be also be a tremendous opportunity for talented collegiate riders to gain experience and respect on a national level and for fans to line the streets and cheer on their alma maters at the Nature Valley Grand Prix in June.”

As well as the honor of selection to the team, each all-star cyclist will receive free entry into the 2007 Nature Valley Grand Prix plus host housing, a team manager, an operating budget, clothing and a travel stipend.

“This isn’t just an honor for the best collegiate women cyclists,” added Matheny. “All of the country’s top professional and amateur teams attend the Nature Valley Grand. Team managers will be watching and collegiate women who ride well have a great shot at a pro contract.”

For more information:
Nature Valley Grand Prix: Steve Gill, (612)
839-9730, steve@ghost-pr.com
USA Cycling Collegiate Program: Daniel Matheny, (719)
866-4664, dmatheny@usacycling.org

President’s Criterium Results

March 20th, 2007

Thank you to everyone who made it out to campus for a cold and tough day of racing! 

The full results can be found by following the link below:
http://www.marylandcycling.com/results/umdcrit07.pdf

 

Last minute entries

March 16th, 2007

Due to high demand we are accepting a few last minute entries into the criterium, if you would like to be added please contact us through bikereg:
http://www.bikereg.com/events/ContactEvent.asp?e=4271

With the following information:
Name:
Address:
USCF License Number:
USCF Team Name:
Emergency Contact Name:
Emergency Contact Phone:
Category to race:

You will recieve a confirmation email once you have been registered.   Please bring the $25 registration fee on race day.  

President’s Cup - Update

March 15th, 2007

Tonight at 12:01am (early Friday morning) registration will close on bikereg. 
There will be no day of USCF registrations! 
Link to bikereg: http://www.bikereg.com/events/register.asp?eventid=4271

Race goes rain or shine!  We will do our best to keep the course completely clear.  The University has excellent snow removal services in the case of incliment weather, so fear not, most likely the race will be held.  We look forward to seeing everyone Sunday for a fun day of Racing!

Check out the flyer and become familiar with the turns on the course!  Make sure to get in a good warmup before your race! 

Link to the flyer: http://marylandcycling.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/02/umdcrit.pdf

 

Coach’s Tips for UMD President’s Crit - this weekend

March 13th, 2007

Coach’s Tips for… UMD President’s Cup
by BJ Basham
USA Cycling Level II Certified Coach
Article courtesy of
GamJams.net 

“.70 miles with 3 90 degree turns, a tight technical chicane and wide open finish…” That is what the flyer says and this is what you should be reading into it:

  • .7 miles = Short fast course with not much place for recovery. Get in a good warm-up so you are ready to rock from the gun.
  • 3 90 degree turns and a tight technical chicane = Being too far back could mean a very short race. Start at the front and stay in the front third of the field. Remember that as the race goes on, the field will be getting smaller and you need to be looking for places to move up all the time.
  • Wide open finish = Everyone will want to sprint so you need to be up front to avoid the mayhem.  If you are going to try and win in the sprint, then rehearse the finish by going for prime early in the race. If you are going to try to win off the front, attack in the hardest part of the course.
  • Plenty of chances to show off for your friends and family = Efforts without a competitive purpose are a waste of energy. Ok this one is not on the flyer, but it applies to every race. There is no competitive reason so sit on the front and grind away pulling the field lap after lap. Wouldn’t everyone you know be more impressed with a good result compared to the fact that you led 3 laps in the beginning of the race before being spit out the back?

Have fun. Bike racing is fun.

BJ Basham is a USA Cycling Level II Certified Coach with Peaks Coaching Group. He lives in Faifax, VA and competes in most of the same races you do. To learn more about his coaching practice and philosophy, just email him.

GamJams.net is an up-to-date local news blog for racing in the DC/Maryland/Virginia area

Philly Phlyer Press Release

March 7th, 2007

Largest collegiate road race set for Philadelphia 

Philadelphia will play host what is anticipated to be the largest collegiate race in history this weekend from March 10-11. While collegiate teams normally focus on competition within their conference during the season, this Pennsylvania-based event will serve simultaneously as the second stop on both the Eastern Collegiate Cycling Conference (ECCC) and the Atlantic Collegiate Cycling Conference (ACCC) road calendars.

It will feature teams from Delaware, New England, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Washington, DC, Virginia, North Carolina, and West Virginia. Building on the success of the 2006 event, promoters are expecting nearly 600 student racers, which would make the race larger than both the Boston Beanpot or Nationals.

University of Pennsylvania, Drexel University, Villanova, Temple University and Johns Hopkins have teamed up to host the three-event cycling weekend. “What the Philly and Johns Hopkins coalition has done is remarkable. Never before has such an important expanse of downtown metropolis been completely closed to host a collegiate cycling event,” said ECCC Conference Director Mark Abramson.

The weekend of racing kicks off Saturday morning with the Schuylkill Challenge Circuit Race along the banks of the mighty Schuylkill River. “This course is going to be epic, as the course features a number of climbs that will test the early-season legs of both conferences,” stated race director Joe Kopena of Drexel. “Plus, this course is in downtown Philly and is completely closed to traffic. Outside of the USPro championships, this simply has never been done.”

Sunday morning, a 14km Trophy Bikes team time trial will take racers on a flat course along the banks of the Schuylkill and feature views of downtown Philadelphia. Squads of up to four riders per team. “The team time trial event is one of the best parts about Collegiate Cycling. Team-building tests such as this are usually reserved for epic stage races such as the Tour de France,” said race promoter Jim Devlin of UPenn.

The weekend of racing will wrap up with the “Philly Phlyer” crit in the heart of the University of Pennsylvania campus. A new course for 2007, the one-kilo meter course will test of handling and sprinting prowess of the master tacticians of collegiate cycling. “On-campus events such as this bring our sport to the heart of the school so everyone can see how much excitement and fun there is to be had with collegiate cycling,” explained Clifton Smoot of Johns Hopkins University.