For family and team


Kyle Wolfe
http://www.targetraining.com/
As a member of the TTEndurance community, you'll be in great company - sharing your passion for cycling, triathlon and endurance training with other athletes from all over.
Kyle Wolfe
With less than 24hrs until the start of the Pan Mass Challenge, I find myself reflecting on a cycling season that is not only an athletic endeavor, but a learning experience that has taught me just how precious and at times how fragile our lives can be.
Having been blessed with a son last year, my wife and I spent the beginning of the year struck by how rewarding new life truly is. Yet our world was about to change in a way that neither of us anticipated.
Rick and I had agreed to participate in the Pan Mass Challenge early on and had planned our racing seasons around it. Before we could even think about the start of the year’s 1st road race, Rick was diagnosed with testicular cancer. What went from a worthy cause, in the Pan Mass Challenge, hit close to home when your fellow athlete’s life is threatened by the very disease that you were raising awareness for.
Fortunately Rick’s rehabilitation has gone well and he is back on the bike racing and getting ready to participate in the Pan Mass Challenge with me this weekend.
Yet this story has only just begun. Soon after Rick’s battle, my mother in law was diagnosed with breast cancer. She too has fought her cancer and on mother’s day of 2008 I dedicate my cycling season to her. You may have seen my fabulous pink bar tape, well that’s for Oma!
As part of my pledge to ride the Pan Mass Challenge, I have committed to not only fund raise for the event, but to match my sponsor’s generosity with my own personal challenge.
For every $100 that I have been sponsored for my completion of the Pan Mass Challenge, I will also ride up the simulated Alp D’Huez climb at TARGETRAINING in under 1hr.
This may not be an easy way to raise money, but it’s nothing like the fight against cancer. Looking beyond this weekend’s event, it is my goal to help spread the word about cancer prevention and management through diet and exercise. Mother Nature brings us life, and she provides us with the tools to nourish it.
We all know that Fig Newtons are an underground training food for pro cyclists, but for the recreational cyclist they can be a refreshing snack change on your favorite training route.
Want to take a fig bar to the next level? Then try Barbara's whole wheat all natural Fig Bars. They have no artificial colors or flavors, sweetened naturally with fruit juice, and are even tastier and juicier than your traditional Fig Newton. They pack 60 calories and 13g of carbohydrates per bar so you will be sure to keep the gas tank full with a pocket full.
The TARGETRAINING gang is focused less on racing both this past and upcoming weekend and more on dedicating itself to help those who have felt cancer touch their lives.
Cancer is hardest on family and friends who deeply care for those afflicted with the disease. For Eneas, he was touched very personally when the mother of his lovely wife Nancy was diagnosed with cancer. Eneas races with pink handlebar tape to make clear that his thoughts go beyond the realm of racing each and every day.
Jeff Keith, a co-founder of the Connecticut Challenge, lost part of his leg to cancer as a teenager. He has fought on mightily. A superb athlete, Jeff is also a tireless worker for the cause of militating against the effects of cancer. Jeff ran across the US on one leg, but more importantly, is the father of a lovely family whom he supports and who cares for him. Along with his charity's partner, John Ragland, Jeff has poured tremendous energy and intelligence into crafting Connecticut's version of the Pan-Mass Challenge.
Team Brent was founded to help the McCreesh family in their effort to support their youngest, Brent. As a 2 year old, Brent and his family found out he had a cancer that had severely metastasized (that means it spread). Brent lives today and is an incredible testament to our ability to fight on. That such a young person should have to live through this is both sad and inspiring; how hard can it be to go up a hill or to get ready for a training ride compared to Brent's travails and the struggles his family has had to endure? Endurance is life. And Team Brent, a group of 20+ cyclists, ride in honor of Brent's survival and to help others do the same.
Many clients inspire us to undertake these two weeks of contributing in a very small way to the community around us. One of our great client families had cancer strike in their midst. Last year father, mother and son rode the Pan-Mass Challenge together. Healthy. Fit. Strong. They inspire us. So does our client who has had cancer twice. She rides well every times she trains with us. You could not tell by looking at her that she has had to deal with this twice. She has a young son who probably cannot envision his mom ever sick. And the way she rides, we cannot, either. She inspires us. So many of our clients have lost family members to this multi-faceted disease. They resolutely continue. They are inspired.
Cancer is one of those uncontrollable, horrific items that happen. And then we (the collective) are faced with dealing with the fact that we are not in control of our destiny. We draw strength from each other, and we need strength ourselves, to face the reality that life and death are not that far apart. We have and will overcome. Or face death well. And we do our best to help those face their personal battle with hope and ultimately with dignity and joy. Oncologists are the heroes who everyday have to fight to allow us to survive. This never-ending battle reinforces that every day we live we have to represent who we are to our fullest, because life is certainly short. It is our only chance to be ourselves and to ensure that we live it well.
So when Eneas, Team Brent and the rest of us ride the Pan-Mass Challenge on Saturday and Sunday, we ride in support of everyone who has and will have to deal with this ongoing scourge. We are the fortunate, the ones who are healthy enough to ride fast and strong, to observe cancer, to experience it while overcoming it, even if only for a while. We certainly are not laughing at it, since cancer is an opponent always looking for weakness. We thank God for modern medicine and science, and all those who have helped get science to the point it is at now.
We will do our best to be brave for everyone who has and will have to face it. You are not alone. We are there with you, every pedal stroke of the way.
To our families and friends who suffer or worry, you are with us, always. You are with us, especially when we are riding fast and strong, going up that hill, aiming for that finish line, enjoying just being.
Sparta Cycling, organizer of the Univest Grand Prix, has invited TARGETRAINING to compete in the classic road race on Saturday as well as the Univest Criterium on Sunday. The Univest Grand Prix is one of the premier cycling races in the Northeast and its younger cousin, the Criterium, is quickly becoming important as well.
The team, including manager extraodinaire Kyle Wolfe, captain Eneas Freyre, and young guns Justin Lindine, Ben Zawacki, Lee Rosenthal, Craig Luekens, and Adam St. Germaine, along with our own Matt Baldwin, earned the right to compete in (and a chance to win) this 100+ mile race through the hills of Lancaster County.
The history of the Univest Grand Prix's race usually sees a select group of riders entering the finishing circuits, where it completes the first part (an 80+ mile road point to point race, which causes the peloton to shrink to a small gruppeto). The remainder of the shattered peloton then battle it out in what is a painful, fast 20 loop finishing circuit with a tough, repeating hill just in case anyone still feels fresh. Will Frishkorn, who got 2nd in the 3rd stage of the 2008 Tour de France, won Univest in 2007. So this is a tough race with top competition. Eneas placed 9th in the 2002 version of this race and will be a strong guiding force for the entire team. In 2005, Anthony Colby got 3rd for TARGETRAINING and in 2006, Frank Pipp got 4th racing for TARGETRAINING. This younger TARGETRAINING team will we hope live up to the tradition of responding to the challenge of this arduous contest.
Final team selection will be announced in the coming weeks. To see more about this race, please go to http://www.univestgrandprix.com/.