R.O.O.T.M.
(Rider Opinion Of The
Month)
Every month, or so, we give
a team rider carte blanche to sound off, however
they see fit. So, you really never know what
you're gonna get, except yet another reason
to bookmark this site.
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Jason Mahokey |
A DIRT(Y) FAMILY
I’m not sure that Brent
really knew what he was getting himself into
when he e-mailed this past winter and asked
my family to fly the Twin Six colors.
Brent and my cousin Curt, a former NCAA cross
country runner from MN, are old buddies and
I’m sure my cousin started talking about
family and bike racing when Brent shared his
Twin Six ideas. One thing led to another, and
here I am writing something that will hopefully
be informative and entertaining.
Anyway, Brent had this idea to give a perspective
on life as a family of dirt racers. So I guess
I’d better start at the beginning. I was
born at a very early age…Seriously though,
I have been around the block a few times and
might try to incorporate a little history from
the Colorado scene as well as some comments
on the State Of The Union for off road cycling.
As far as my own cycling background is concerned,
I raced BMX as a kid. This was in the early
seventies, so around the beginnings of BMX racing.
BMX in the early seventies

Towards the end of high school, I sold my BMX’er
and began to compete in mogul skiing. I turned
pro in college and met Mike Kloser (then the
Pro Mogul Tour Director) and Wade Wilderman.
The next summer Mike and Wade convinced me to
get a mountain bike and start racing.
Pro Mogul Tour 1983

After winning my first novice class race in
1983, passing the entire expert class, and finishing
mid-pack pro, I was immediately upgraded to
pro and thrown to the wolves where I eventually
managed to survive.
The Tune-Up Pro Team
1983
Boulder Race 1983
Around 1986 our team got sponsored by Diamond
Back and the off road race scene got really
hot in Colorado.
Tune-Up / Diamond Back
Development Team 1986
Our team director, Greg Morin, developed the
Colorado Prestige Off-Road Points Series, tying
together the Iron Horse Classic, Rage in the
Sage, and several other local races. About the
same time Ned Overend switched to mountain biking
from triathlon, and John Tomac arrived from
the BMX world.
Iron Horse Classic 1987

Yours truly, chasing Tomac, Overend, Kloser,
Rishi Grewal, etc.
Ned Overend in ‘Rage’
Hill Climb
Almost overnight, mountain bike racing grew
exponentially. Kloser was the first to find
success in Europe, followed soon after by Tomac,
Ned, and our new Diamond Back team mate Dave
Wiens. As the Americans began to dominate the
World Cup, the sport grew to such tremendous
proportions that promoters and NORBA added many
classes and age groups to accommodate the masses-life
was good, some pro’s actually made a living
at their sport!
Me-I got married to my way better half, Kendra,
and our son Dylan was born in 1988 followed
close behind by Dawson in 1990. I continued
to race sporadically at the state level, but
concentrated mainly on raising my family, which
is what all this rambling is supposed to be
about.
At the same time, my dad, a former decathlete,
discovered mountain bike racing and was quite
successful racing in the master’s expert
field. The entire family would meet at races
and the boys, mom, and grandma would cheer for
dad and grandpa. It became a good way for us
all to keep in touch.
Grandpa at Rage In the
Sage
Kendra and I were very conscientious about nurturing
a love for outdoor sports with our boys. Many
a weekend was spent putting our own training
aside to enjoy family time skiing, hiking, and
biking, convincing the boys that they were in
fact having fun! Eventually it worked, and we
were able to enjoy activities together, at a
pace we could all appreciate.
Meanwhile, the pros were getting faster and
I wasn’t. I retired and eventually down-graded
to expert where I could still be competitive
while enjoying my family
Dylan’s first
bike

.
The boys became interested in racing when we
returned to Gunnison in 1998 and the following
winter they won the Steamboat Pentathlon in
the Dynamic Duo Category.
Steamboat Pentathlon

Waiting our turn

From that point on, they wanted to compete in
everything they saw. We did hockey, wrestling,
soccer, XC and mogul skiing, running, BMX, and
of course mountain bike racing. We finally had
to have a discussion about getting focused,
and narrowed it down to a few complementary
sports: Nordic skiing in the winter, bike racing
in the summer and XC running in the fall-to
keep them involved in school activities.
Steamboat MSC Race

As the boys became more serious, I felt a duty
to increase my fitness level and be a role model
and coach. Our life really did begin to revolve
around racing once again. Much to Kendra’s
dismay, we even turned our backyard into a trials
course one summer after another cousin of mine
won the National Trials Championships.
Backyard Trials
The next summer, Dylan qualified for the NORBA
Regional Development Camp in Durango and upped
the ante once again. He learned nutrition and
training techniques that I could no longer keep
up with. He got to train with Ned, and started
hanging out with a group of Durango junior riders
including Ned’s son Rhyler.
National Championship
Jr.X Finals 2003

It really started coming together, with both
boys ending up on the podium for the Mountain
States Cup Regional Series in 2003.
Dylan leading at Nationals
2003
Dawson in the Series
Leader Jersey

Grandpa had finished his last race a couple
years ago, but still kept tabs on us-meeting
at races to cheer with Grandma and mom.
Grandpa and Dad
I started racing single speed when I realized
I was actually faster and beat guys I hadn’t
ever beaten on my bike with gears.
Me – Single Speed
at MSC Finals 2004
Last year (2005) was our last summer traveling
to all the races as a family, and I miss it
quite a bit. We hit every race we could find,
and put 6000 miles on our car and camping gear,
never leaving the mountain states region. It
was one hell of a year, with Dylan, Dawson and
I all ending the year on the podium for the
MSC series. We had lots of discussions about
the future of racing and training, and how to
juggle schedules. Ultimately, we also agreed
that the boys would work and help to dig us
out of the financial hole we had dug this summer.
Racing would become more of a responsibility
for them.
Team DEAN Rules MSC
Finals
Jr. X Podium 2005 MSC
Finals

This was also the season Dylan passed me-literally.
At the Chili Challenge, Angle Fire NM, The Jr.
X class started behind us single speeders (Us
behind the pros? Go figure). I guess we were
faster last year or something. I was near the
top of the last climb when I heard “move
over fatso” and there he went. I have
never tried so hard to grab someone’s
wheel and I couldn’t do it. It was quite
a mixture of pride and “you little shit!!”
He hasn’t looked back since. I guess I
shouldn’t feel too bad, me being 43 and
him posting times that break the top ten for
the pro field. At least I can still occasionally
drop him on training rides!!! When he’s
tired!! After lots of coffee!
Full Tilt in Telluride
2005

Dawson decided to run track this spring, and
compete only in the local Gunnison and Crested
Butte MTB series. I really respect his decision
and ability to become his own person. So, now
it’s just me and Dylan traveling to most
of the races. I decided not to race this year,
to wrench and assist Dylan, and to save some
money (I’ve spent more than my share over
the years).Dylan has gotten very serious about
racing, and conversations on the road this year
focus mainly on where to go from here.
I’ve tried to explain that there aren’t
many top pro’s actually making a living
at it these days. This isn’t easy with
the Wiens-DeMattei family living just down the
street, having more National, Olympic, and World
Cup victories between them than most current
teams do!
Why is that, he wonders? Well, I guess this
is the “State Of The Union” part
I mentioned earlier. It seems that Dave Wiens
and Susan De Mattei were in the right place
at the right time, and worked very hard to take
advantage of it. A relatively new sport, with
Americans on top of the world scene, and sponsorship
was good. Ned Overend and Mike Kloser did well
also, and are still making a living.
“But mountain biking is still an Olympic
sport” he responds. Well, it’s not
the same as it was. Fields are smaller, sponsorship
is dwindling, and golf is still king. Road racing
has experienced a resurgence with Lance on top
as our hero. What will happen if the Americans
can’t hold on to the pro road spotlight?
More than likely, we’ll see it ebb and
flow again, like it did when LeMond hit the
top. Hopefully mountain biking will do the same
thing. What we need is a few Americans to take
command of the World Cup again. Maybe then the
general public, with their Lazy-boys and Cheetos
will turn off Tiger Woods and pump some $$$
to real athletics.
Until then, I advise, you’d better train
harder and realize that your sport is a lifestyle,
not a living. So, with the end of his junior
career rapidly approaching, the big decision
for Dylan now is weather to apply for a semi-pro
license at the end of the season, or suck it
up and go for U-23 pro. Or is that really it?
And are you willing to foot the bill for it?
One more year in High School also means college
is just around the corner. Cycling scholarships
are few and far between, so the grades had better
come up! Wow-what a balancing act. Lots of decisions
to make, and not many more road trips to do
it on. Then again, Nordic Ski season isn’t
far away...
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