The 75-Mile Grueling Pescadero 120 km Race

Posted on 27 June 2006
Email This Post Email This Post

Road Racers
The World Deaf Cycling Championships closed spectacularly with a horde of International cyclists ready to start with the 120km race, only it was in foggy Pescadero instead of the drier, desert-like south bay area. It is a 75-mile long race for 2 1/2 laps through strong uphills at the end of each lap around the finish line. It was where the grunting cyclists went through hell as their stamina was tested with the refining fire.

It was cooler for everyone luckily for the cyclists who pedaled through the fiery trials of fire and sulphur representing the uphill course; the ones who endured to the end would finish in the top 10.

The greatest entry the world of Cycling has seen at this USA hosted event was made by South African Terence Parkin, a 2000 Sydney Olympic swimmer. He didn’t just make the transition to cycling, he is doing both amazingly.

Terence Parkin
Be an Olympic Gold Medalist swimmer and the same, a Gold Medalist at the World Games for the Deaf? Who has seen an athlete to successfully do that? While Parkin can do the 200m Breaststroke, he sure can cycle the 120km road race and surge ahead while using the swimmer’s expanded lungs for the final push!

He kept getting yellow shirts, remember? He was not only tied for the yellow shirt at the Pescadero race, he won the 120km road race at World Deaf Cycling Championships and became part of history. He won’t be the record-setter but he is capable of breaking records. The Parkin watch is on, and has always been.

“I cruised with the pack of the other cyclists but had a hard time in the first two laps. When I reached the uphill parts of the course, I took the lead. I knew that I could do it and that it was to my advantage,” exclaimed Parkins.

Adds Parkin, “I surprised myself because I was able to beat the uphills which pushed me as a winner”

Carlos Luis SanchezColombia’s Carlos Luis Sanchez echoed the same sentiments, but he fell behind Parkin eventually.

Sanchez, the 2nd place finisher, is a remarkably resilient cyclist who managed to finish closely in several of the cycling events during the week. He proved himself to be an excellent endurance type of athlete. He was seen gulping a banana just before the road race began. Sanchez also felt bloated throughout the race needing to be relieved throughout the course; but he kept up with the time and finished strong.

Frantisek Kocourek, of the Czech Republic, finished third despite a mechanical problem with his bike’s downshifting. He had to manually adjust it with his hands while cycling at the same time, while keeping pace, like a multi-task finisher. He might as well be scratching his back while racing and still finish in the top three!

Later Robin Horwitz, WDCC’s director was seen telling Parkin that if he defeated Schreiber, a category 2 rider who is a pro then Parkin should become a pro cyclist as well, with no questions asked.

USA's SchreiberUSA’s Schreiber ended up winning the WDCC championship edging Terence Parkin with Daniel Carruthers of New Zealand finishing third, after the overall results were announced. Schreiber captured two Golds in the 35 km Individual Time Trials and in the 40 km Points Race, and a silver in the 1000-meter Sprint, and 6th place in the 120 km Road Race. Schreiber exhibited great spirit and humility in capturing the Gold Medal in this historic event which took place for the first time on U.S. soil.

Terence Parkin was the big surprise but then again didn’t we miss the fact that he is a world class athlete who is a Gold Medalist?

Never underestimate an Olympic Gold Medalist. It took a pro to beat him.

120km Road Race Winners
Click here for 2006 WDCC Results

1 Comments For This Post

  1. wayne reid says:

    hiya terence, i can’t believe that u won 75miles. what’s the next one(3rd)?triathlon or decathlon?ah anyway, i ve met u in denmark and was good at swimming , however i gave up cos i’m still busy in college. yeah i do triathlon which my first time this year. i clocked 2hrs16mins for olympic distance. not bad for 1st time. i target under 2hrs!!!!

Leave a Reply

English flagItalian flagKorean flagChinese (Simplified) flagPortuguese flagGerman flagFrench flagSpanish flagJapanese flagArabic flagRussian flagGreek flagDutch flagBulgarian flagCzech flagCroat flagDanish flag
Finnish flagHindi flagPolish flagRumanian flagSwedish flagNorwegian flagCatalan flagFilipino flagHebrew flagIndonesian flagLithuanian flagSerbian flagSlovak flagSlovenian flagUkrainian flagVietnamese flag 
By N2H

DEAFNATION EXPO

The DeafNation Expo began in 2003, starting with 6 Expos. Today, DeafNation hosts 14 Expos annually, having attracted in excess of 250,000 attendees since.
2009 EXPO SCHEDULE:
Feb 21: Greensboro, NC
March 7: Austin, TX
March 14: Orlando, FL
March 21: Kansas City, MO
March 28: Minneapolis, MN
April 4: Phoenix, AZ
April 18: Atlanta, GA
April 25: Indianapolis, IN
May 2: Pomona, CA
June 13: San Juan, Puerto Rico
Sept 26: Secaucus, NJ
Oct 3: Oklahoma City, OK
Oct 10: Pleasanton, CA
Oct 17: Portland, OR
Nov 7: Chicago, IL