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Cyclo
Cross
Winter Fun: Cyclo-Cross (often
abbreviated to 'Cross) is generally an
autumn and winter sport. Massed starts make
for exciting races, usually no more than an
hour in length – and shorter for juniors,
women and veterans. There are usually
free-to-enter races for younger riders. Some
organisers are now starting to run summer
series, which are proving very popular.
Lapping it Up! Cyclo-Cross races are usually
multi lap events, held on short (typically
less than a mile and often less than half a
mile), grassy courses, generally in public
parks or on school playing fields. Less
technically demanding than Mountain Biking,
Cyclo-Cross often requires riders to
dismount to clear artificial obstacles –
often wooden boards. The ability to swap
smoothly and quickly from riding to running
and back to riding in one fluid motion is a
key skill for advanced riders.
Private
Battles: The short lap lengths mean that
better riders often lap some of the slower
competitors, but that’s not the end of the
race – you can still submerge yourself in
the action, enjoy your own private battles
and forget whether you are first or a
hundred and first – that’s the beauty of the
sport: it’s what you make of it that counts.
Bike Facts: Cyclo-Cross machines look
very similar to road bikes, with dropped
handlebars and thin tyres - however the
latter have a knobbled-tread for grip,
powerful brakes, low gears and better frame
clearances to prevent clogging with mud, all
of which adds up to make them easy to handle
on the rough.
All
the information on this page originally from
British Cycling. |