Spain Wins Inaugural Team Relay World Championship - Bike Magic

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Spain Wins Inaugural Team Relay World Championship

The 1999 UCI Mountain Bike World Championships presented
the first competition of the week on Wednesday, as a brand-new discipline –Team
Relay
– debuted with an exciting win by Spain’s national team. With 19
four-person teams racing against each other on the cross-country course, the action
was fast and exciting as the mixed-sex teams raced for the weekend’s first rainbow
jerseys.

The team relay in Are was a four-lap competition, with each
member of a national team racing for 9.6-km and approximately 30 minutes. After each
member finished his or her lap, they would pass off an elastic armband over a wooden
barrier, to the next rider on their team. Teams consisted of one elite male, one
junior male, one U-23 (under 23) male and one elite woman cross-country racer.

Spain’s team, consisting of Roberto Lezaun, Marga Fullana,
Carlos Coloma
and anchorman Jose Antonio Hermida, worked their way up
from a 5th-place position after lap one, to third and eventually first place by race’s
end. "We raced each leg as if it were a time trial," said Hermida.
"It was truly a team effort."

Also in the running for medals were three other national teams;
France, Canada
and the United States of America. Going into the fourth
and final lap, all four teams had riders within four minutes of each other ñ
but two of those riders were men and two were women. It made for a very close ñ
and exciting ñ final lap.

Team USA was first out of the transition area on the final
bell lap, as world cup round winner Alison Dunlap left the start/finish 35
seconds ahead of current world cup champion Alison Sydor. In third was Spain’s
Hermida at 2:42, while 1998 U-23 World Champion Miguel Martinez chased at
3:26. Denmark and Austria were also within 30 seconds of Martinez,
but with four of the world’s best racers heading out for their final lap, it was
clear who would be vying for the three medals.

As Hermida and Martinez passed the two women, they formed their
own battle for the gold medal. "The last lap was so exciting," said
Hermida. "I started with one minute behind and everybody knows Miguel Martinez.
He’s so explosive."

"But I was confident in my ability, and said to myself
‘nobody comes close to me [today]’."

Martinez chased gamely in the final lap, but after crashing
and temporarily losing his armband, conceded the win to Spain. Meanwhile, the secondary
women’s race between Dunlap and Sydor yielded a third place finish for Sydor, as
she passed her American rival on the final climb of the race.

"I think it was a fantastic way to begin the Worlds,"
said three-time World and World Cup Champion Sydor. "It really showed the
depth of the winning nations’ teams."

Thanks to Ari Cheren for this report

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