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Mud, Snow, and Cyclocross
Molly Hurford
Mud, Snow, and Cyclocross
Molly Hurford
Cyclocross has, in recent years, become the fastest growing form of cycling in the US, according to USA Cycling. And the elite racers, race promoters and the cycling industry all are in agreement that there s no end in sight. But, until now, there hasn t been a book written about cyclocross in the US: it s past, present and future. There ve been books on training for cyclocross, and Europe has their own ompendiums about their great racers, but no one in the US has taken it upon him or herself to write about the US greats, from Jeremy Powers to Katie Compton to the US Grand Prix of Cyclocross to the Cannondale-CyclocrossWorld team. This book looks at them all, from the greats who started to build the sport in the US in the 1970s to the juniors who are the greatest hope for the future of cyclocross. And throughout the pages are the stories of triumph, of defeat, of fun and of suffering. But through each of those stories, there is a deep-seated, almost manic, love for the sport and for what it means. Cyclocross isn t road racing, it isn t mountain biking, it s an entity unto itself and with it comes a unique culture that Tim Johnson, one of the greats in the sport, laughingly described as unscented flypaper. As he explains: you don t know what you re getting into until you see it for yourself, and then you re stuck. Welcome to American cross. For a beer-drinking cowbell-ringing mud-slinging good time, look no further than cyclocross, or in this case, Mud, Snow and Cyclocross: How Cross Took Over US Cycling
Media | Books Paperback Book (Book with soft cover and glued back) |
Released | August 20, 2012 |
ISBN13 | 9781937565350 |
Publishers | Deeds Publishing |
Pages | 223 |
Dimensions | 152 × 229 × 13 mm · 336 g |
Language | English |