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health + wellness - Explore Big Sky

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8 July 15, 2011<br />

biG sky<br />

big sky’s first criterium<br />

tour de bozeman bike racing event in the town Center a hit<br />

story and photos by eMily stiFler<br />

A criterion bike race is like man-powered<br />

go-cart racing, says Alex Hassman,<br />

who competed in <strong>Big</strong> <strong>Sky</strong>’s first<br />

ever criterium or “crit” on Friday,<br />

July 11. That evening, 75 men and<br />

women road bike racers from across<br />

the Northwest came to town as part<br />

of the first stage of the Tour de Bozeman<br />

bike race.<br />

Participants raced a 6/10-mile road<br />

loop in the Town Center for 30, 45<br />

or 60 minutes, depending on the<br />

category in which they’d entered.<br />

In a crit, “The track is small, and the<br />

corners are tight. It’s a circuit, and<br />

the race pulses as the group speeds<br />

up and slows down. It’s brutal in a<br />

way, because of the speed,” Hassman<br />

explorebigsky.com<br />

said. “It’s fast, and guys are jockeying<br />

around tight corners. A couple<br />

times [on the] corners, my pedal hit<br />

the asphalt.”<br />

When a race official rings a cowbell<br />

and announces a prime lap (pronounced<br />

preem), the pack takes off<br />

at a sprint because the winner of<br />

that lap scores a prize – cash or otherwise.<br />

With $8,000 in prize money<br />

in the three-day Tour de Bozeman,<br />

and $4,500 worth of prizes in the<br />

<strong>Big</strong> <strong>Sky</strong> event alone, racers had a<br />

reason to stand up and crank on<br />

their pedals. Other events in the<br />

four-stage Tour included a time<br />

trial and a road race (both in Bridger<br />

Canyon), and sprints in downtown<br />

Bozeman.<br />

ONLY - $15]<br />

BSCC@BSCCMT.ORG OR 406-993-2112<br />

“I love bike racing – that’s my thing,”<br />

said Ryan Hamilton, Project Manager<br />

of <strong>Big</strong> <strong>Sky</strong>’s Town Center. The crit<br />

was his idea, and his bike team, Team<br />

Rockford/Clif, organized the race in<br />

<strong>Big</strong> <strong>Sky</strong>, which Hamilton said was a<br />

ton of work. He was especially appreciative<br />

of the volunteer help.<br />

“I think it was a fantastic course, a<br />

unique course, and a very exciting<br />

course,” Hamilton said. “I’m<br />

hopeful the race will continue<br />

to grow over time. If this thing<br />

grows it could be a really big deal<br />

for <strong>Big</strong> <strong>Sky</strong>.”<br />

The Tour de Bozeman has grown<br />

since its inception three years ago,<br />

said race director Amy Frykman.<br />

big sky weekly<br />

This year had approximately 150 participating<br />

racers and 100 volunteers.<br />

Frykman runs the Bridger Canyon<br />

road race with help from volunteers,<br />

and said the original idea<br />

behind the Tour was to create an<br />

event based around “the coolest,<br />

most beautiful, most unique, and<br />

best [venues] Bozeman has to offer.”<br />

<strong>Big</strong> <strong>Sky</strong>’s race also had a connection<br />

to the international road racing<br />

community: Marcel van Garderen.<br />

Father of Bozeman hometown hero<br />

Tejay van Garderen, who races professionally<br />

for HTC-Highroad and<br />

is racing well in the Tour de France<br />

this year, Marcel raced competitively<br />

in the <strong>Big</strong> <strong>Sky</strong> crit.

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