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FALMOUTH, Mass. — The second day of racing for the Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross at the Cape Cod Fairgrounds continued Sunday with completely new conditions, the presence of sunshine and the absence of strong winds.

On a postcard day in Falmouth, Mass., racers were treated to a fast and dry course for USA Cycling Pro Cyclocross Calendar (ProCX) events.

Crystal Anthony (Newbury Park, Calif./Liv Cycling) took her second win of the weekend in the Elite Women’s contest. Scott Smith (Westhampton, Mass./Dirt League) celebrated his first UCI win of the ProCX season.

The event is a continuation of the Plymouth Festival of Cyclocross, which started as the Plymouth Cyclo Cross in 1977. One of the first cyclocross races in the Northeast, the event was host to the 1984 and 1986 USCF Cyclocross National Championships. In 2015, it was rebranded as the Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross.

Two-for-Two for Anthony

The Elite Women’s race started with clear skies and light winds, unlike the blustery conditions on Saturday. Anthony vaulted early to the front of the 27-rider field with Arley Kemmerer (Palmerton, Penn./Fearless Femme Racing). The two rode together for most of the race.

“We wanted to work together, because it was a really fast race, so it benefited us to take turns,” said Anthony, who rode away to her third ProCX win of the season. “And then Arley had to get off on the stairs (back section of course), so I got a gap there. That’s when I decided to go for it.”

Arley Kemmerer and Crystal Anthony hit the barriers together. 2018 Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross Day 2. © Angelica Dixon

Arley Kemmerer and Crystal Anthony hit the barriers together. 2018 Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross Day 2. © Angelica Dixon

Anthony, who currently lives in California, crossed the line in her home state after six laps just 10 seconds ahead of second-place Kemmerer. The duo finished in the same order the day before. On Sunday, Kemmerer said it was about working together and taking turns to extend their lead.

“We were hanging out with each other because it was too long and too much pedaling to not do it (lead) with somebody else. And we knew there was a group of five people, at one point, behind us,” said Kemmerer.

Crystal Anthony moves through the sand. 2018 Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross Day 2. © Angelica Dixon

Crystal Anthony moves through the sand. 2018 Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross Day 2. © Angelica Dixon

The duo remained together until late in the race, even running the barriers side by side. They had a 40-second lead with two laps to go over the field. Then Anthony would seize an opportunity on the bell lap and attack.

“I think we were evenly matched power-wise for the whole course,” said Kemmerer. “We kept it pretty fast the whole time. I wouldn’t say we sat up much. It probably was a little bit of waiting for somebody to make a mistake, and it was me that did it. That was it.”

Crystal Anthony celebrates her win. 2018 Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross Day 2. © Angelica Dixon

Crystal Anthony celebrates her win. 2018 Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross Day 2. © Angelica Dixon

The comeback ride of the day came from Cassie Maximenko (Watertown, Conn./Van Dessel Factory Team). After having mechanical trouble off the start, Maximenko had to fight her way back throughout the six laps to a three-rider chase group, Anna Megale (Boise, Idaho), Danielle Arman (Boulder, Colo./Tenspeed Hero), and Regina Legge (Salem, N.H./Trek Cyclocross Collective).

“So right off the start, my bike just wasn’t shifting great. I noticed it especially after we went through the sand the first time. I was like, shifting, and nothing was happening. So I lost some spots because I couldn’t shift up to a harder gear,” explained Maximenko. This put her back well outside of the Top 10. She would not reconnect with the chasers until the final half lap of racing.

“With two laps to go, I could see the group that was fighting for third in front of me. I was like, ‘oh man, they are really far head.’ I finally caught on to the group, maybe halfway through the last lap,” said Maximenko, who was fifth on Saturday. “Then we started battling with each other. If I hit the pavement first, I knew I could outsprint them. So I just got in the drops, head down, shifted through the gears and managed to get it.”

Maximenko would have to outsprint the three riders for third place. She finished one second ahead of Megale, two seconds ahead of Arman, and three seconds ahead of Legge. This trio completed the Top Six in that order.

Women's podium: Crystal Anthony, Arley Kemmerer and Cassie Maximenko. 2018 Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross Day 2. © Angelica Dixon

Women’s podium: Crystal Anthony, Arley Kemmerer and Cassie Maximenko. 2018 Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross Day 2. © Angelica Dixon

Scott Smith Scores First Win of New Privateer Program

The Elite Men’s race had much more group racing on the fast Falmouth track. While Smith has stood atop three ProCX podiums so far this year, this is his first ProCX and UCI win.

“I knew it was going to be a group race today with the course being so fast,” said Smith, who was second on Saturday at the Cape Cod Fairgrounds races. “It was really punchy, so you wanted to be in the front of the group, like second wheel. And that’s what I tried to do all day, I just tried to stay second wheel. Justin (Lindine) kept attacking us a lot and he was putting us under pressure. And finally I got Nick Lando to pull through for a couple of laps. And he put us under a lot of pressure.”

Scott Smith won out of a group of three on Sunday. 2018 Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross Day 2. © Angelica Dixon

Scott Smith won out of a group of three on Sunday. 2018 Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross Day 2. © Angelica Dixon

With three laps remaining in the nine-lap affair, Lindine (N. Ogden, Utah/Hyperthreads/Apex Pro Cycling), Saturday’s winner, got a front flat tire and lost valuable seconds. The lead group was down to three riders – Smith, Nicholas Lando (Ringwood, N.J./UVM Cycling), and Kevin Bradford-Parish (Spokane, Wash./Setcoaching p/b FSA).

Scott Smith scored his first win of the year on Sunday. 2018 Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross Day 2. © Angelica Dixon

Scott Smith scored his first win of the year on Sunday. 2018 Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross Day 2. © Angelica Dixon

“Kevin hit it with one to go and strung us out. I didn’t know if I could get him back,” added Smith. “But I rode back on his wheel around the log-hop and the uphill. I passed him there and put the pressure on through the technical sections. Then I rode as hard as I could in the straightaways. I had about five seconds (in the lead). I rode the stairs on the last lap pretty clean. And when I came onto the start/finish, I was by myself so I was really happy with that. I was happy to pull the win out of thin air. I mean, I’ve been having a rough season, with fitness and sickness. I am so happy right now!”

Scott Smith celebrates his win. 2018 Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross Day 2. © Angelica Dixon

Scott Smith celebrates his win. 2018 Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross Day 2. © Angelica Dixon

Bradford-Parish improved from a third-place finish on Saturday to second on Sunday, nine seconds behind Smith. It was his fourth ProCX podium of the season. Twenty-one-year-old Lando would finish third, 20 seconds behind Bradford-Parish.

Bradford-Parish said it was a tactical race. He thought he had a good chance to win until he lost track of the laps.

“Guys were attacking and I was just trying to follow wheels and stay in contention and not get too far off the lead group. I was still trying to be patient,” said the Washington State native, who took two silver medals last week at HPCX in New Jersey. “I was not on the right laps in my head, and so I put in a pretty hard dig on the second to last lap, which was trying to be a win. So, I went too early and paid for it. Scott just feathered by me and I was too far in the red to really respond and do anything.”

Lando, who earned two silver medals this year’s at U.S. Collegiate Mountain Bike Nationals (short track cross-country and cross-country disciplines), was third at KMC Cross Fest earlier this season. He claimed his second ProCX podium of the season in Falmouth.

“I could tell from pre-riding that it was going to come down to group racing,” observed Lando. “I kind of just stalked the back and make sure not to let any gaps open up. If they did, close them down. The group just whittled down until three to go, and it was just the three of us. It just exploded with one to go. Scott and Kevin kept drilling the attacks. I just couldn’t hang. I managed to come around for third.”

Men's podium: Scott Smith, Kevin Bradford-Parish and Nicholas Lando. 2018 Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross Day 2. © Angelica Dixon

Men’s podium: Scott Smith, Kevin Bradford-Parish and Nicholas Lando. 2018 Really Rad Festival of Cyclocross Day 2. © Angelica Dixon

Lindine would roll across the line in fourth, 43 seconds off the winning time. Merwin Davis (Star City, W.V./Cycle-Smart), who took the holeshot for the second day, would finish fifth.

ProCX competitions remain in New England next weekend, Nov. 10-11, with the 28th edition of the Verge Northampton International Cyclocross presented by Cycle-Smart (NohoCX) in Northampton, Mass. The event prides itself as the oldest UCI cyclocross race in North America. It is the second stop for the 2018 Vittoria Northeast Cyclocross Series presented by Clif Bar and Cycle-Smart. The series provides four weekends of competition on classic courses with points and award jerseys for the best UCI Elite, U23 and junior athletes in 10 categories.

USA Cycling ProCX features the premier cyclocross events in America and uses an overall ranking system to determine the best individual male and female ‘cross racers over the course of the season. The 2018 ProCX calendar includes a total of 39 UCI-inscripted category 1 and 2 races across 19 states and the District of Columbia. The calendar spans from September to December, culminating with the USA Cycling Cyclocross National Championships in Louisville, Ky., Dec. 11-16, 2018. To learn more about USA Cycling, visit usacycling.org, and follow ProCX all season on Twitter – @USACyclingLive (#ProCX).

Elite Women's Results: 2018 Really Rad Festival of 'Cross Day 2

RankBIBLast NameFirst NameCountryResult
11ANTHONYCrystalUSA 0:46:41
22KEMMERERArleyUSA 0:46:51
33MAXIMENKOCassandraUSA 0:47:53
49MEGALEAnnaUSA 0:47:54
58ARMANDaniUSA 0:47:55
64LEGGEReginaUSA 0:47:56
75ORTONBeth AnnUSA 0:48:32
87RUBINORachelUSA 0:48:34
932BOWMANBrittleeUSA 0:48:54
106GROSSRebeccaUSA 0:49:14
1115USHERAnneUSA 0:49:29
1222CURLEYEmilyUSA 0:49:41
1328MEICHSNERAnja GeniaGER 0:50:07
1418ENGELSTEDAnna "Katrina"USA 0:50:15
1526MARIONPhiliciaUSA 0:50:17
1614LUPIENLeslieUSA 0:50:18
1719VETTERJauronUSA 0:50:26
1812ROSSIJaneUSA 0:51:08
1917SEIPPCarolUSA 0:51:26
2029RICHARDHeatherUSA 0:51:34
2127WOJEWODAJennyUSA 0:51:45
2223MUDGETarynUSA 0:52:20
2316LARSENAnna SofieDEN 0:52:40
2431HUUKIElizabethUSA 0:55:17
2525MOLDENEmilyUSA 0:55:44
2624MINERYJennUSA 2 LAPS
DNF13REUTERChristinUSA

Elite Men's Results: 2018 Really Rad Festival of 'Cross Day 2

RankBIBLast NameFirst NameCountryResult
13SMITHScottUSA 1:02:14
22BRADFORD-PARISHKevinUSA 1:02:23
37LANDONicholasUSA 1:02:43
41LINDINEJustinUSA 1:02:57
54DAVISMerwinUSA 1:03:47
614COLLINSPatrickUSA 1:04:03
75CLOUTIERTylerUSA 1:04:16
831BORDENAndrewUSA 1:04:25
99GIELARIanUSA 1:04:42
1010SCOTTAndyUSA 1:04:57
1118BLOOMParkerCAN 1:05:13
1213CAMERONMollyUSA 1:05:13
1337SUNDQUISTChristianUSA 1:05:24
1436FREDERICKBenUSA 1:05:42
1511BLACKBURNTrentUSA 1:05:48
1617O'CONNORFinneganUSA 1:05:50
1732WOLDTravisUSA 1:06:27
1825MARIONRobertUSA 1:06:31
198THIDEMANNPeterDEN 1:06:31
2041CURTISZacharyUSA 1:06:56
2138HORSLEYBryanUSA 1:06:57
2221MARSTONMichaelUSA 1:07:07
2339NIELSENMads WeissDEN 1:07:33
2435CURBEAUMatthewUSA 1:07:55
2533LEBLANCJacobUSA 1:08:35
2620CARLSONErikUSA 1:09:29
2727RYANBenjaminUSA 1:10:56
2816CHRISTIANSENAlfred ThoftDEN 2 Laps
2924NASHRobertUSA 2 Laps
3022MACLEODPeterUSA 2 Laps
3128FITZGIBBONSDanielUSA 2 Laps
3240BRADSHAWPeterUSA 3 Laps
3342REUTERColinUSA 3 Laps
3430OWENSMatthewUSA 3 Laps
3526MCCABEDanielUSA 4 Laps
DNF6MYERSONAdamUSA
DNF12BOUCHARD-HALLKevinUSA
DNF19MINOTTAddisonUSA
DNF34HEWITTMarkUSA
DNF15LANDRYMichaelUSA