Cycling's Crucible
Maxim Africa|July 2017

It’s messy, it’s dangerous, and it’s the fastest-growing sport on two wheels. Can you survive cyclocross?

Paul Kix
Cycling's Crucible

On the Sunday afternoon when he should be resting, Jeremy Powers instead takes the road to the left, and soon his bike hums over the gently sloped lane, the stunning, but foreboding forests crowding the path, and humidity curdling the air, until he sees the pavement rise before him, rise and curve and rise again, epically, endlessly. His pedalling slows, and then nearly stops, so steep is the incline, and now he’s up off the saddle and pumping, the bike swaying wildly with each downward stroke. He has already this morning done the lunges and box steps and side crunches that he hates, movements that strengthen his comically slim core, but will leave him with a soreness that lasts until Wednesday. He has also already gone on an 8-kilometre run. And yet this notorious King’s Highway, the kind of relatively empty, but challenging path that abounds in this region, which is why he chose to live here, seems uniquely torturous today, each push of the legs an attempt to re-establish not so much a good pace as just forward movement. No one has reached Powers’ level in the cycling world, let alone his highly unusual subspecialty, without answering a question he often poses to those who ask his advice, “How much do you want to suffer?”

At 32, Powers is the best American rider in cyclocross, a sport that is as demanding as it is deranged, and the fastest-growing discipline in biking. At the highest level, it is a one-hour race around a course studded with obstacles, cyclists fly around gravel, down grassy hills, over man-made roadblocks (forcing riders to run, bikes slung over their shoulders), and up steep staircases (where they sprint some more).

This story is from the July 2017 edition of Maxim Africa.

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This story is from the July 2017 edition of Maxim Africa.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.