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Deuel at the summit of Pikes Peak with the mismatched wheelset that he sported for a few years
Deuel at the summit of Pikes Peak with the mismatched wheelset that he sported for a few years (Photo: Courtesy Drake Deuel)

Meet Drake Deuel, the New King of the Strava KOM

The former Harvard rower is making the most of a six-month sabbatical from his new job at Zwift

Published: 
Deuel at the summit of Pikes Peak with the mismatched wheelset that he sported for a few years
(Photo: Courtesy Drake Deuel)

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Drake Deuel鈥檚 postcollegiate path could have been relatively clear: work as a software engineer while training for a spot on the U.S. Olympic rowing team.

Now, as of a month ago, the 22-year old Harvard grad is a full-time Strava KOM hunter who plans to go back to work in six months. I have my doubts.

On March 4, on the Haleakala 鈥榃orld鈥檚 Longest Paved Climb鈥櫬燬trava segment on the Hawaiian island of Maui by three minutes. A few weeks before that, he sustained a 430-watt effort for 17 minutes to take the KOM in Southern California from Phil Gaimon.聽

That was the day after he finished an eight-month internship as a software engineer at Zwift.

So聽why is Deuel, who doesn鈥檛 have any personal sponsors and isn鈥檛 making any money by riding his bike, taking the next six months to see how many other records he can break?

鈥淚t is a way to get attention, to get noticed,鈥 the 22-year old told VeloNews. 鈥淓specially with no racing, if I want people to see the fitness that I have there鈥檚 not a lot else that I can do other than smash some KOMs.鈥

Row Your Boat

Deuel spent eight years as a competitive rower until the coronavirus pandemic abruptly ended his season鈥攁nd effectively, his rowing career鈥攊n March聽2020. He was barely into his junior year at Harvard (and just back from the Maui trip that would inspire his Haleakala KOM a year later) before he was sent home to Dallas. He didn鈥檛 know it then, but the day he left campus would be the last day he was in a boat.

Deuel told me that at one time he had aspirations to try and make it to the Olympics as a rower, so I wondered if he was crushed to have his career ended so abruptly by something so out of his control.

鈥淚 loved rowing, and I think I got a ton out of it, but rowing is more difficult after an academic setting, where it鈥檚 harder to find a team, and a lot of the value is in the team aspect,鈥 he said. 鈥淧eople describe cycling as a team sport, but rowing is much, much more so. So without that aspect, you鈥檙e just rowing by yourself.鈥

Deuel (third from right) rowing on the starboard side for Harvard during the Head of the Charles Regatta
Deuel (third from right) rowing on the starboard side for Harvard during the Head of the Charles Regatta (Courtesy Drake Deuel)

Fortunately, Deuel had discovered that he loved cycling right around the time he entered college. In fact, while the school year was dedicated to the boat, summers were for the bike.

Multiple rowers have crossed over to cycling and thrived, among them Olympic champion Rebecca Romero, as well as German rider . Deuel had some rowing achievements that hinted at potential successes on the bike: in 2018, he set two world records on the Concept2 indoor rowing machine in the 10,000-kilometer and half-marathon distances.

When I asked Deuel to ID himself in a photo he sent of his team rowing in the Head of the Charles Regatta, he said that he is the one in three-seat, which is considered the 鈥渄umb muscle鈥 seat for people who are really strong聽but not as technically proficient.鈥澛

鈥淪o I knew my fitness translated well to cycling,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 a matter of getting out on the road and actually learning about cycling, so that even if you have the base fitness, you can develop more.鈥

Ride Your Bike

Fortunately, in addition to his physiologic affinity for it, Deuel said he also found cycling to be really fun.

鈥淛ust before freshman year of college, I was invited by a soon-to-be classmate to take a cycling vacation in Switzerland for ten聽days,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 did that, and the first day I got there was the first time I ever clipped into a road bike. We went for a full day trip around Geneva and into France and back, I crashed six times, and decided that I loved it. Less than a year later, I bought my first road bike.鈥

Then, during his summer breaks from school, Deuel rode more. After his freshman year, he raced in New England for a month and a half. After his sophomore year, he took a trip to Colorado and did the Mount聽Evans Hill Climb, finishing three minutes behind EF Education-Nippo鈥檚 Lachlan Morton. Because 聽wasn鈥檛 enough, he pedaled up Pikes Peak, too. That ride turned into a different kind of race.

鈥淚t was the first KOM hunting I ever did,鈥 Deuel said. 鈥淚 think the reason I went for it is there was a former rower at top of the leaderboard that I wanted to take down.鈥

Deuel was still rowing at Harvard, but bikes were becoming more than just a side hustle.

In the fall of his junior year, Deuel heard about Zwift Academy, the talent ID program that the online-racing platform has hosted since 2016. He signed up and made it to the semifinals. That wasn鈥檛 the only success of the program, however. After he鈥檇 completed the Academy, Zwift CEO Eric Min鈥檚 secretary reached out to Deuel, asking him if they could meet on Harvard鈥檚 campus before the holiday break.

鈥淚 gave them my r茅sum茅聽at that point,鈥 he said. 鈥淥f course there was no way I could have anticipated the dramatic increase in popularity of Zwift then.鈥

Deuel landed the internship at Zwift; it was meant to be a buffer between his junior and senior years of college. Then聽COVID-19 canceled in-person classes, and Deuel spent the months leading up to the internship at home in Dallas. He also realized he had enough credits to graduate early, so in May, he had a diploma聽and a month before his internship鈥攁nd postcollegiate life鈥攂egan.

鈥淚 borrowed my dad鈥檚 van, drove from Dallas west, and managed to take some big KOMs from Phil [Gaimon] in L.A.,鈥 Deuel said. 鈥淭hat was when I really started getting into it.鈥

Back to Life, Back to Reality

Deuel came back from the mountainous landscapes of his road trip to a massive array of computer screens. His internship at Zwift began in late June, and because he鈥檇 finished early at Harvard, he was able to stretch it out nearly eight months, until last February.

When you work from home and you work for Zwift
When you work from home and you work for Zwift (Courtesy Drake Deuel)

He said that the experience was invaluable.

鈥淎s far as learning time management, personal well-being, mental health, I found a much more balanced approach than what I had in college. The structure of that time definitely helped me move forward,鈥 he said.聽

At Zwift, Deuel dove into various elements of the game. His first project was to help develop a function that would remove uncooperative players. He was also part of a project that developed key game-play elements, like in-game steering, and he built the calibration tool for the Sterzo, an electronic steering device made by Elite.

鈥淎nd聽at end of the internship was some more internal tooling that I can鈥檛 disclose right now,鈥 Deuel said.

Deuel said that Zwift was generous with his request to take six months off between the internship and the full-time job he was offered as a software engineer. After hearing the story of his Haleakala KOM and looking at his other Strava accolades, I asked Deuel whether he thought聽cycling could become his full-time profession.

鈥淲ell, I was almost on a traditional development path,鈥 he said. 鈥淟ast spring, right before [COVID-19], I was supposed to guest-ride with Aevolo at Redlands聽and then do Gila with CS Velo.鈥

Although he鈥檚 not unfamiliar with performing at a very high level and setting records, Deuel doesn鈥檛 think that his KOM project will land him on a pro team. Currently, he rides for the amateur-development squad Team California, which tries to help talented riders advance from the junior ranks to the pro level. He plans to return to Zwift in September, perhaps even in聽person in Los Angeles. However, when I asked him one more time if his recent celebrity could be an indication that a different pathway was presenting itself, he said he was open to the idea.

鈥淚 think USA Cycling just announced that pro nationals is back on in June, so that鈥檚 a big goal now,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen am I going pro? As soon as I win the time trial at nationals. I just didn鈥檛 realize it could happen this soon.鈥

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