Cycling News

Andrew L’Esperance second by 0.6 seconds at snowy Moab Rocks

Snow and mountain bikes

TransRockies three-day Moab Rocks is, usually, a chance for riders to escape winter and get some warm early-season racing in. This year, the Utah mountain bike stage race looked a little different. In fact, there was so much snow piled on the iconic Slickrock trails that organizers had to neutralize stage one.

The remaining two days of racing saw freezing temperatures and smoking hot racing, with Andrew L’Esperance coming in second place to the U.S.A.’s Cole Patton by a total of just 0.6 seconds.

A neutralized and snowy ride on Stage 1, looking down at drier rocks for Stage 2 and 3. Photo: Tony Campono / TransRockies

Snow stops timing, but not riders

With overnight snow covering an icy base, TransRockies organizers made the last-minute call that racing Stage 1 would be unsafe for riders. With the course already marked and racers already dressed, riders were allowed to ride the course, but no times would be recorded.

Some racers went home to warm up. Others rode the official route to get the full Moab Rocks experience. A sizable group of the pro men’s and women’s field, including Fernie, B.C.’s Carter Nieuwesteeg, headed out to ride Falcon Flow and Slick Rocks, two trails not on the official route.

“That was probably one of the cooler things I’ve seen at a race,” Nieuwesteeg said. “It was really special being able to do a party lap with most of the pro field, men and women. It would have been nice to race but, and I think this is a testament to why the mountain bike community is so rad, we understood through the decision TR had to make and the vibes were quickly turned around when we realized we could still go for an awesome ride. Of course it was laid-back mountain bikers who quickly made a pretty special day out of the cards they’d been dealt.”

Primed trails make for fast finishes

With just two days of official racing counting towards the results, racing on days two and three was fast and fierce. With the disappearing snow making for near-perfect trail conditions, and fast and grippy dirt replacing the…

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