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Chlo茅 Dygert, just 22, attacked the elite women鈥檚 time trial and won the event by the widest margin in history.
Chlo茅 Dygert, just 22, attacked the elite women鈥檚 time trial and won the event by the widest margin in history. (Photo: Tim de Waele/Getty)

This Is the New Golden Age of American Cycling

Pro cycling in the U.S. is actually kicking ass鈥攜ou just need to look beyond the men's WorldTour

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Chlo茅 Dygert, just 22, attacked the elite women鈥檚 time trial and won the event by the widest margin in history.
(Photo: Tim de Waele/Getty)

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For the first time in my life, it feels great to be wrong.听

This summer, I wrote a听Washington Post听听about the dearth of talent in American cycling听and the Walton Family Foundation鈥檚 plan to develop young riders as a response to it.听

While the Waltons鈥 efforts are still positive news, the premise that the article was built on鈥攖hat American cycling needs resuscitation鈥攚as faulty.听

I watched the UCI Road World Championships in September with my mouth agape as my flawed image of American cycling leaped听off its gurney, ripped the IVs from its arms, and went sprinting, open-backed gown flapping in the wind, out of the hospital. In its wake, it left nothing but a string of rainbow jerseys and one journalist trying to fit her cycling shoe in her mouth.听

Pro cycling in the U.S. is very much alive and kicking ass.听听

Exhibit A? , just 22, attacking the elite women鈥檚 time trial with such ferocity that I was jumping on my couch, , as I watched. She won the event by the widest margin in history.

Exhibit B? , who is 18, winning the junior men鈥檚 road race at the world championships, riding away from the pack with 30 kilometers to go. His teammate, Magnus Sheffield, won the sprint for the bronze.

Exhibits C through H? Ian Garrison, 21, and Brandon McNulty, 21, taking second and third, respectively, in the under-23听individual time trial;Megan Jastrab, 17, winning the women鈥檚听junior road race (we all still remember when 鈥攐n junior gears鈥攁t the 2017 Redlands Classic, right?);听and Zoe Ta-Perez, 17, Lawson Craddock, 27, and Coryn Rivera, 27, all cruising to top-ten听finishes in the junior women鈥檚 time trial, the men鈥檚 time trial, and the women鈥檚 road race, respectively. By the end of the week, America听听and was听second in total medals听only to the Netherlands.

Exhibits beyond the road-world champs: Kate Courtney, 23, becoming the first American in 17 years to听win the overall cross-country title for the UCI Mountain Bike World Cup earlier in September; at the same event, teammates Chloe Woodruff, 32, and Lea Davison, 36, finishing 9th and 14th, respectively, inthe final race of the season; our mixed-relay team, winning silver at the mountain-bike world championships; and听Tokyo 2020 favorite Ashton Lambie, 28鈥攚ho only started racing on the velodrome in 2016鈥攂reaking his own听world record in the individual time trial on the track in September.听


I鈥檝e been thinking about how I got things so wrong. My mistake, I now realize, was looking to the men鈥檚 UCI WorldTour peloton as an indicator of American success.听I am old, which means I came听up in the cycling era of Lance,听when the pro tours were, for so many Americans, what cycling was all about. That鈥檚 changing.

Today, cycling is streaming cyclocross at your desk and hoping your boss doesn鈥檛 notice. It鈥檚 refreshing your live tracker as ultra-enduranceracer Leal Wilcox crushes the Navad 1,000听bikepacking race across Switzerland. It鈥檚 road-tripping to Snowshoe, West Virginia, to take selfies with Lea Davison at the UCI World Cup. It鈥檚 following your favorite Dirty Kanza riders on Instagram. It鈥檚 taking a last,听desperate听mid-thirties鈥櫶齭tab at a pro-racing career by signing up for the Zwift Academy. Oh, and maybe if you have time, you might turn on Le Tour for a stage or two.听

Cycling is widening its funnel, and that鈥檚 a good thing for development. The more participants we havein our sport, the more robust our talent pool. But that鈥檚 hardly the only reason that Americans are cleaning up on the world stage.听

When I asked elite-development coaches what we did ten听years ago that led to this past year鈥檚 success, I heard about a number of factors. 鈥淭here鈥檚 not any one person who can take credit for the success we saw at world championships,鈥 says Nicola Cranmer, founder and general manager of听the听Sho-Air Twenty20 women鈥檚 pro team and Twenty20 junior teams. Cranmer has worked in young-athlete development in the U.S. for 15 years. 鈥淭rue development begins at the grass roots, not only the coaches, the clubs, and teams that support junior athletes, but the race promoters, too.鈥

Although many folks likely deserve a small amount of credit, one organization was resoundingly echoed by all my sources as being crucial to this moment鈥檚 success. It, too, began at the grassroots level: the National Interscholastic Cycling Association (NICA).听

NICA started in 1998, when Matt Fritzinger, a math teacher at Berkeley High School in California, tried to form a road-cycling team. 鈥淏ut all the kids showed up with mountain bikes,鈥 says Steve Matous, current president of the group. Now听NICA has 22,500 members in 31听states participating in middle and high school level mountain-bike races.听

I am old, which means I came up in the cycling era of Lance,听when the pro tours were, for so many Americans, what cycling was all about. That鈥檚 changing.

What NICA has done extraordinarily well isbring both racers and nonracers into the sport, says Tim Johnson, a former professional road, mountain-bike, and cyclocross athlete who now heads up fundraising for USA Cycling鈥檚 foundation. He adds, 鈥淭hey鈥檙e introducing both the sport and the activity of biking all at once.鈥澨齏hile some of the kids entering the program will go on to be the next Kate Courtney (a NICA grad, along with under-23听national champion听 and several听pro roadies, including听Megan Jastrab), most of them will grow up to simply be adults who love cycling. Johnson says that鈥檚 the genius of NICA: we need those cycling enthusiasts to fund teams and sponsor races for both elites and weekend warriors.

NICA is giving high school bike racing a structure that lasts. 鈥淭en years ago, if there was a high school team, it was usually run by one dad with a fast kid, and when that kid went to college, the team kind of died,鈥 says Chad Cheeney, cofounder of Durango Devo, a program for young mountain bikers in Durango, Colorado. And NICA provides actual training on how to coach鈥攊t鈥檚 no longer just one or two parents trying to figure it out as they go.听听

But NICA alone doesn鈥檛 fully explain our recent results, especially on the women鈥檚 side of the sport, where there鈥檚 particular momentum.


It鈥檚 been well-documented that women performbetter in everything from to science to when they have female role models. Technically, we鈥檝e had icons, like the dominant Connie Carpenter-Phinney and tough-as-nails Juli听Furtado, to look up to for decades. But the women racing today had an abundance of heroes on which to affix their gaze: three-time Olympic gold medalist Kristin Armstrong,听Alison Powers,听investment banker turned WorldTour racer Evelyn Stevens, Mara Abbott, and mountain biker Georgia Gould. Even better, athletes like Gould and former pro road racer Kathryn Bertine fought hard for wage equality鈥擝ertine made the documentary Half the Road on the topic鈥攊n an听effort听to make pro cycling a viable career choice for women.

And of course, these young women have each other, says Powers, who is now retired and owns her own coaching business. 鈥淲hen one person has success, it鈥檚 really motivating. When Evelyn Stevens got a medal at worlds, it was like, If she can do it, I can do it,鈥 says Powers. 鈥淣ow we have Kate Courtney, and all the American women are raising their game because they see that she can do it.鈥

Armstrong, who now coaches Chlo茅 Dygert, offers another reason why the American women are suddenly so on top of their game: the generation before them is breaking down the institutional sexism of male-dominated coaching. 鈥淚 frequently get asked by other female cyclists to review their training programs. I often scratch my head and ask, Why aren鈥檛 they being pushed to their capabilities?听Female athletes are capable of so much more,鈥 Armstrong听says. She gives a nod to Jim Miller, her own coach, who now also coaches Courtney. 鈥淎fter working with me, he鈥檚 like, I know what women can take,鈥澨齭he says. Plus, athletes like herself and Powers have become coaches in retirement, meaning young female athletes can now be coached by someone who has also navigated women鈥檚 pro cycling. Perhaps even more important, we鈥檙e beginning to actually study women in sports science, which, believe it or not, is relatively new. Armstrong points听to Stacy Sims, who has devoted her career to both calling out inequalities in researchand fixing them by doing her own studies. Because of Sims, for example, we now know how to adapt training plans to capitalize on women鈥檚 hormone cycles.


But perhaps what makes all this success for American cyclists even more remarkable is that it鈥檚 happened despite a shortage of resources for young cyclists. For one, there just isn鈥檛 enough money to go around, particularly in women鈥檚 racing. Here鈥檚 a factoid that will blow your mind: Armstrong spent 18 months trying to finance a wind-tunnel trip for Dygert. (Aerodynamics are crucial to the individual time trial, where there is obviously no drafting.) 鈥淚 joked about putting a GoFundMe out there,鈥 Armstrong听says, because she couldn鈥檛 get a single sponsor to pick up the bill, which would have been about $10,000. In the end, they did without, trying to perfect Dygert鈥檚 position as best they could in a velodrome. (Red Bull will听now likely pick up the tab. But, Armstrong says, 鈥淲hat about the athletes who aren鈥檛 lucky enough to be sponsored by someone like Red Bull?鈥)听

There are other structural problems with our development programs, too, for both women and men. In Europe, track racing is a key tool for developing both strong and tactical young riders. In the U.S., track racing is only an option if you live near one of our country鈥檚 26 velodromes. Meanwhile, there are 23 tracks in the UK alone.

And there just aren鈥檛 enough high-level races here in the U.S. to compete in, says Twenty20 coach Nicola Cranmer. The Chrono Kristin Armstrong听time-trial event, for example, is the only UCI-recognized time trial in the U.S. And the best junior and under-23 racing is still happening abroad. 鈥淲e just don鈥檛 have much junior racing in the U.S.,鈥 says Jeff Pierce, USA Cycling鈥檚 director of athletics for road and track. Sure, there are races, but 鈥渢here are small fields, and the competition isn鈥檛 very high.鈥澨

In 2013, USA Cycling announced its plan to build a permanent training hub for young American riders in Sittard-Geleen, a town in the Netherlands. But while that听center may be giving some of our young male racers a much needed chance compete across the pond with support from the organization, Armstrong feels like opportunities are still too sparse for women.听鈥淭he USAC will take a group of younger [women] riders for a couple weeks at a time to race in Europe,鈥 she says.听But beyond that, Armstrong听says, the riders can mostly expect to get European racing experience from their trade teams.听听

In the context of all these challenges, the results we鈥檝e seen this year are truly spectacular. And there鈥檚 so much more promise on the horizon with the 2020 Olympics. According to a spokesperson for USA Cycling, we could have as many as four women in the Olympic road race and two in the time trial. On the men鈥檚 side, we鈥檒l likely have two shots at medals in the road race and the time trial. There may be as many as seven women and five men headed to compete on the track. Currently, we may even get to send three women mountain bikers to Tokyo, though听of course, this is all subject to how racing over the next few months plays out.听

Cycling interest in the U.S. has broadened way beyond pro road racing: even pro road teams like EF Education First Pro Cycling are filling out their schedules with gravel grinds and the occasional just-for-fun fondo.

And I鈥檇 be remiss if I didn鈥檛 point out one last latent variable that鈥檚 been favorable to pro cycling in the U.S.: the dog that dogged cycling for so long鈥擫ance Armstrong鈥攊s becoming less and less relevant every year.听

Today鈥檚 young stars missed the truly bad behavior (and, let鈥檚 face it, the glory days) of the Postal Service era. However, thanks to Armstrong throwing the sport under the bus in his 2013 interview with Oprah, riders who came right after him were stuck with the perception that the entire sport was tainted by doping. Former professional听road cyclist Phil Gaimon says that after Lance鈥檚 career blew apart, so, too, did听sponsorship dollars. 鈥淸Before], there was a strong scene domestically, with big-budget teams like Toyota United, something like 15 men鈥檚 teams, and probably 100 jobs,鈥 he says. Now听there are only a handful of teams, he says, and it鈥檚 difficult to听make听a living wage.

鈥淎s a millennial coming up in the sport of cycling [during that time], there was an unwritten playbook built by our predecessors,鈥 says Lucas Euser, who quit pro cycling in 2016. He says that he, and other racers around his age, wanted to race clean, but the American public wasn鈥檛 ready to trust. 鈥淲e were a sort of lost generation听of cycling,鈥 he adds.听

These days, Lance鈥檚 barking is just background noise. And cycling interest in the U.S. has broadened way beyond pro road racing: even pro tour听teams like EF Education First Pro Cycling听are filling out their schedules with gravel grinds and the occasional just-for-fun fondo. 鈥淭he new crop of Gen Z talent gets to write their own playbook,鈥 says Euser.听

And the babies of the seventies听and eighties听are helping them. They鈥檙e building teams and coaching athletes. They鈥檙e putting on new kinds of events and fundraising for USA Cycling.听In pushing forward this new era of American cycling, the lost generation has found its calling. And that鈥檚 a good thing for every cycling fan in America鈥攁nd a great thing for every kid with a bike and a dream.

Correction: An earlier version of this article stated that NICA had 22,000 members in 27 states.听

Lead Photo: Tim de Waele/Getty

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