Cycling News

Elite men: Tyler Clark wins first elite men’s Canadian cyclocross title since 2019

Elite men: Tyler Clark wins first elite men's Canadian cyclocross title since 2019

Rain started to fall on the start line the elite men’s race, adding some excitement to an already heated battle for the first cyclocross national championship to be awarded since 2019.

Tyler Clark took the race to the field early on then backed that up with a last-lap surge. The CHC Armada rider is the 2022 elite men’s cyclocross national champion.

Elite Men: Clark classes field

Coming into Saturday’s elite men’s race, it was Canadian veteran Michael van den Ham (Giant-Easton) expected to set the pace. The 2019 champ faced a field of younger contenders and, with no national races for two years, everything was a bit unknown. Instead, it was Tyler Clark (CHC Armada) leading the field off the line.

A lead group of five quickly formed, led by Clark. Van den Ham, Gunnar Holmgren (Pivot Cycles-OTE), Tyler Orschel (CHC Armada) and 2019 XCC mountain bike national champ Quinton Disera all settled in on Clark’s wheel.

That group held stable until the fourth of seven laps. Clark, Holmgren and Disera traded leads on the front while van den Ham and Orschel started to show signs of cracking. Brody Sanderson (AWI Cycling) started to put pressure on the chasing group from sixth position.

Tyler Clark. Photo: Nick Iwanyshyn

As the rain picked up, making Layritz Park’s off-camber corners treacherous, Clark continued to put on pressure. The CHC Armada racer has built momentum all fall, finishing fifth overall in the USCX series, one spot behind van den Ham. That cyclocross-specific experience paid off on Saturday, as Clark split the front trio on the final lap.

Tyler Clark wins his first elite men’s Canadian cyclocross national championships.

“Lead from the front was definitely the goal. I wanted to be the first person into the technical section,” Clark said of his strategy going into Sturday’s race. “I didn’t want to be behind someone making a mistake or just lose a wheel. When it started racing on the start line, and I looked around and I was the only one on full mud tires, I guessed it would be a good plan.”

With few of the favorites having had much time on course with each other, Clark said there was plenty of unknowns going into the elite men’s race.

“Everyone knew van den Ham was the guy to beat. You don’t win the race three times and not come in considered the favorite at the fourth,” Clark shared of who he was watching for. “I was expecting Gunnar [Holmgren] to be up there for sure, which he was early on. He came by me on the…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Canadian Cycling Magazine…