Canadian Cyclist

 

September 16/17 11:50 am - Jingle Cross Friday Night report and results


Posted by Editoress on 09/16/17
 

What a difference a year makes. In 2016, the Friday night racing at Jingle Cross greeted cyclocross racers with fresh mud, UCI C2 points, and for some racers, tired legs from racing the CrossVegas World Cup just two nights before.



Women
This year the course was rock hard and dry and UCI C1 points were up for grabs at the Midwest UCI season opener under the lights. Although some top racers skipped Friday's race, an impressive international field took to the start, including 13-time U.S. National Champion and former World Cup overall winner Katie Compton, Dutch star Ellen van Loy (Telenet Fidea), France’s Caroline Mani (Van Dessel) and Britain’s Helen Wyman (Kona).

In 2016, in heavy mud, Brit Helen Wyman took the Friday night win under the lights, but on a dry, hot and humid night this year, might some familiarity with such Midwest conditions be beneficial?

Many of the top stars were out to prove racing experience, not Midwest experience, would be key to winning the most UCI C1 points on Friday night. Katie Compton, winner of the 2016 Jingle Cross World Cup, took to the front with holeshot queen Van Loy sprinting to retain her crown and lead the 43-strong field up the infamous Mt. Krumpit run-up. Instead, Brit Nikki Brammeier squeezed by before the flyover to spread her wings and soar up the steep, rutted climb.

What goes up must come down, however, and on the first descent Van Loy and Compton were back at the front, racing to find clean lines in the long sand pit. The two were the first to descend Mt. Krumpit, and Van Loy led the group through the sand. Behind, hot on their wheels, was U23 Worlds silver medalist Ellen Noble (Aspire).

Noble was having an inspired ride, and looked determined to ride what others ran. She rode the Mt. Krumpit stairs, and hopped the barriers, but a first lap spill sent her chances of a podium crashing down.

Kaitie and Katie Break Free from the Field
Behind 26-year-old Jingle Cross veteran Kaitlin Keough (Cannondale p/b CyclocrossWorld), was on the move. Keough, who has raced Jingle Cross since she was 15, was at home in Iowa City, just a few hours from her native Wisconsin. “I’ve raced here since I was 15,” Keough said about the Johnson County Fairgrounds course featuring Mt. Krumpit.  “I excel at courses like this, the harder the better.”

Keough set about granting her own wish after a crowded first lap. She soon connected with Compton and drew out Canadian National Champion Maghalie Rochette (Clif Bar) to put pressure on the rest of the field. 

Keogh hit the front with Compton, and within a lap the two dropped Rochette. Noble and Rochette took up the chase, and behind them, two Europeans, French National Champion Mani, who finished second at the 2016 Jingle Cross World Cup, and Wyman were roaring back to defend their Iowa City podium honors.

Keogh and Compton traded turns at the front, opening up their gap over the others as each of the seven laps went by leaving tthe others to fight for third. Keough was already studying her former coach. As the end drew closer, Keough believed her best chance for the win was for it to come down to a sprint, but wanted to avoid Compton opening up a gap on the descent.

“I tried to lead going into [the run-up], and then I noticed I had a little gap, I wasn’t really trying to attack,” Keough explained.

Intentional or not, it felt like an attack to an at-the-limit Compton. “She attacked going over the run-up, and then I had trouble in the sand,” Compton explained. “I kind of got off line and lost a bit of time there.”

An International Battle for Third
While the two Ka(i)ties battled for the win, behind, there was a suspenseful battle for third. While Noble and Brammeier faded and Mani and Wyman surged forward, former XCO mountain bike world champion Annika Langvad was out to show her mountain bike skills would be an advantage on Mt. Krumpit. She raced past more accomplished cyclocrossers and sat as high as fourth, before finishing sixth just behind a sprinting Ellen van Loy.

Mani had a strong fifth lap to surge into third, and by lap five the final podium was set.

Keough rolled home in front of her Midwest fans, with a big boost of confidence heading into Sunday’s World Cup.

Compton rolled in relaxed and content. “I did what I could, so I just tried to relax, and not bury myself too much,” Compton explained. “I like racing under the lights, it’s a C1, I need to get an effort on the course. It’s good, I want to race, it’s fun racing, it’s a great atmosphere. I want to try to race as I can, but I need to make sure I recover for the World Cup.”


Men
Jingle Cross has evolved over the last two years. A typically snowy December event turned to a hot and humid muddy World Cup in 2016, and this year, emerged as a hot, dusty and bumpy punishing course. As a result, speeds were fast, with riders consistently turning in laps under six minutes.

One of the big questions heading into Friday night’s C1 event was which riders would take to the start line to chase after the big C1 points and get a warm-up in ahead of Sunday’s World Cup. Defending world champion Wout van Aert (Crelan-Charles) and his rival Mathieu van der Poel (Beobank-Corendon) did not race Friday night, but a number of the world's top riders did.

A lead selection of Laurens Sweeck (ERA-Circus), Quinten Hermans (Telenet Fidea Lions) and Michael Boros (Pauwels Sauzen Vastgoedservice) broke free from the rest of the field early in the race when the other riders could not match their blistering pace.

Five laps into the race, Sweeck got a gap on Hermans on the technical back half of the course and then turned it into a lead he would not relinquish by putting powering through the long finishing straight. Hermans eventually broke free from Boros and finished second, and Lars van der Haar (Telenet Fidea Lions) recovered from a slow start to finish third.

Europeans Establish Lead Early On
The early stages of the C1 event started with the Europeans establishing a long line at the front of the race. When the riders hit the Mt. Krumpit climb for the second time, a lead group of eight riders had established itself at the front, with American Stephen Hyde (Cannondale p/b/ Cyclocrossworld.com) chasing behind them in ninth.

The early animator from the large group was young Quinten Hermans. He opened up a small five-second gap back to Boros, Corne van Kessel (Telenet Fidea Lions) and a host of other riders two laps into the ten-lap race.

Hermans maintained a small gap for another lap and a half before Laurens Sweeck and Michael Boros made the catch and established the lead selection.

Sweeck Makes His Move with Savvy and Power
Sweeck’s big move happened at nearly the midpoint of the race. Sweeck, Hermans and Boros were all riding together when the trio descended the Bobsled Bomb off of Mt. Krumpit and charged through the sand pit during the fifth lap.

The back half of Friday night’s Jingle Cross course weaved through a series of barns and then headed up and around a set of bleachers. It was in this section Sweeck made his move. He got a small gap on Hermans and then was able to deploy his massive power to exploit the gap through the long, flat start/finish straight. When the dust settled, he opened up a six-second gap back to his chasers.  

“There was a technical part at the end of the lap where I was feeling I was getting faster half way through the race,” said Sweeck. “I went on the front of the group and I got a little gap. Then you had the long line at the finish, and I tried to get up to a high speed there.There was a small gap and then it was pushing to the end because Quinten was also strong.”

Hermans soon followed suit and opened up a gap to take over a solo second position on Mt. Krumpit.

For the rest of the race, Sweeck held Hermans at bay and kept the gap between the two at 10 to 15 seconds. Hermans at times appeared to close it a bit on the Mt. Krumpit climb, but Sweeck was able to take advantage of the power sections to open back up the gap over Hermans.

Sweeck was not challenged the rest of the race and won Friday night’s Jingle Cross C1 ahead of Sunday’s World Cup race.

Telenet Fidea Lions Roar Late
After Hermans broke out into a solo second, Lars van der Haar made the catch on Michael Boros and Jens Adams early in the sixth lap. Once with the other two, Van der Haar blocked the chasers’ effort and seal Hermans’ grasp on second place. The rare cyclocross teamwork worked, and Hermans hold on second swelled to over 30 seconds. .

With Hermans gone to a second-place finish, the battle to be decided was the one for third place. The trio battling for third stayed together for over two laps before Van der Haar roared up Mt. Krumpit with two laps to go to establish a solid solo third. He would not be challenged for the rest of the race en route to finishing third.

Jens Adams finished fourth and Michael Boros took fifth.

Cyclocross Racing Returns Saturday Night Under the Lights

The three-day Jingle Cross Festival continues Saturday night at the Johnson County Fairgrounds. Saturday night’s race is a UCI C2 event, so many riders are expected to rest ahead of Sunday’s World Cup. The Telenet UCI World Cup race is Sunday afternoon. The women start at 2:00 p.m. Central and the men at 3:30 p.m. Central.



Results

Pro/1 Women
1 Kaitlin Keough (Cannondale pb CyclocrossWorld.com) 0:50:21
2 Katherine Compton (KFC Racing p/b Trek/Knight) at 0:17
3 Caroline Mani (Van Dessel) 0:42
4 Helen Wyman (Kona) 0:46
5 Ellen Van Loy (Telenet Fidea Lions) 0:59
6 Annika Langvad (Specialized) s.t.
7 Crystal Anthony (maxxis-shimano pro cyclocross) 1:12
8 Sunny Gilbert (Van Dessel Factory Team) 1:17
9 Nikki Brammeier (Boels Dolmans cycling team) 1:30
10 Courtenay McFadden 1:49
11 Rebecca Fahringer (Stan's NoTubes p/b Maxxis / gofahr) 2:02
12 Ellen Noble (Aspire Racing) 2:05
13 Clara Honsinger s.t.
14 Fleur Nagengast (Telenet Fidea Lions) 2:40
15 Maghalie Rochette (Clif Pro Team) 2:54
16 Amanda Nauman (SDG - Muscle Monster) 3:04
17 Bethany Crumpton (Storey Racing) 3:20
18 Elle Anderson (Elle Anderson Racing) 3:42
19 Alicia Franck (Marlux - Napolean Games CT - Belgium) 3:48
20 Emily Kachorek (Squid Squad) 3:50
21 Cassandra Maximenko (VanDessel/Atom Composite Wheels) 4:34
22 Ruby West (To Wheels Epic Sports Performance) 4:36
23 Rebecca Gross (Cannondale Cyclocrossworld.com devo team) s.t.
24 Jennifer Malik (American Classic Pro CX) 4:42
25 Sofia Gomez Villafane 5:31
26 Beth Ann Orton (Amy D Foundation) 5:36
27 Kim Hurst (Cowbell Coaching) 6:21
28 Gray Patton (Freddie Fu Cycling Team) 6:33
29 Katherine Santos (Amy D Foundation) 6:36
30 Lily Williams (Pony Shop CX Team) 7:17
31 Emily Shields (Ken's Bike Shop) 7:29
32 Suzie Livingston (TOPO Designs CX) 7:35
33 Carol Seipp (Orion Racing p/b K'ul Chocolate) -2 Laps
34 Maria Larkin (The Meteor p/b Allied) -2 Laps
35 Nicole Dorinzi (Pro Mountain Outfitters) -2 Laps
36 Katie Isermann (PSIMET Racing) -3 Laps
37 Siobhan Kelly -3 Laps
38 Anya Malarski (Transitions LifeCare p/b Easton-Garneau) -3 Laps
39 Kelli Richter (PSIMET) -4 Laps
40 Lindsay Knight (Ten Speed Hero CX) -4 Laps
41 Turner Ramsay (Alpha Bicycle Co. - Groove Subaru) -5 Laps
DNF Julie Wright (Team Averica)
DNF Nicole Mertz (The Meteor p/b Allied)
DNS Katie Clouse (Alpha Bicycle Co. - Vista Subaru)
 
Pro Men
1 Laurens Sweeck (ERA-Circus) 1:00:40
2 Quinten Hermans (Telenet Fidea Lions) at 0:14
3 Lars Van Der Haar (Telenet Fidea Lions) 0:26
4 Jens Adams 0:36
5 Michael Boroè (Pauwels Sauzen Vastgoedservice) 0:40
6 Daan Soete (Telenet Fidea Lions) 0:53
7 Corne Van Kessel (Telenet Fidea Lions) 1:49
8 Stephen Hyde (Cannondale P/B Cyclocrossworld.com) 1:59
9 Stan Godrie 2:08
10 Diether Sweeck 2:34
11 Tobin Ortenblad (Santa Cruz / Donkey Label Racing) 2:36
12 Ian Field ( ) 3:13
13 Lance Haidet (Donnelly Sports) 3:19
14 Anthony Clark (Squid Squad) 3:31
15 Gage Hecht (Alpha Bicycle/Groove Subaru) s.t.
16 James Driscoll (Donnelly Sports) 3:36
17 Kerry Werner (Kona Factory CX Team) 3:41
18 Justin Lindine (Apex / NBX / Hyperthreads) 3:56
19 Maxx Chance 4:19
20 Michael van den Ham (Garneau - Easton Cycling p/b Transitions Life Care) 4:32
21 Jeremy Durrin (Neon Velo Cycling Team) 4:42
22 Jonathan Page 5:03
23 Garry Millburn (Speedvagen MAAP) 5:13
24 Cody Kaiser (LangeTwins / Specialized) s.t.
25 Travis Livermon (Maxxis-Shimano Pro Cyclocross) 5:14
26 Brannan Fix (Alpha Bicycle Co.-Groove Subaru) -2 Laps
27 Jeremy Powers (Aspire Racing) -2 Laps
28 Bjorn Selander -2 Laps
29 Matthieu Boulo -2 Laps
30 Skyler Mackey -3 Laps
31 Eric Thompson (MSPEEDWAX.COM) -3 Laps
32 Spencer Petrov (Aspire Racing) -3 Laps
33 Kevin McConnell (Iowa City Cycling Club) -4 Laps
34 Nicholas Diniz (NCCH Elite p/b MGCC) -4 Laps
35 Jules Goguely (Apex / NBX / Hyperthreads) -4 Laps
36 Michael Larson (Team Handmade) -4 Laps
37 Andrew Giniat (Pony Shop CX Team) -4 Laps
38 Tyler Cloutier (Transitions LifeCare p/b Garneau-Easton) -5 Laps
39 Kyle Russ (Brazen Dropouts Cycling Team) -5 Laps
40 Matt Clements (Rotor Bike Components) -5 Laps
41 Isaac Niles (Garneau Easton p/b Transitions Lifecare) -5 Laps
42 Connor Dilger (Above and Beyond Cancer Cycling) -5 Laps
43 Tyler Stein -6 Laps
44 Tyler Curtis (Spin Racing) -6 Laps
45 Christian Sundquist ( ) -6 Laps
46 Andrew Thompson (Birchwood) -6 Laps
DNF Bryan Tyers (Lakeside Storage Cyclocross)
DNF Dylan Postier (Garneau-Easton p/b Transitions LifeCare)
DNF Jim Aernouts (Telenet Fidea Lions)
DNF Josh Bauer



 

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