In the biking family, cyclocross comes off as a bit of a wild child — ready to get messy, take some risks, and do it all again if necessary.
Right down to the messy part, that was the playbook last weekend in Crystal at one of the premier events of the Minnesota cyclocross season.
The Fulton Star Cross is one in a series of weekend races that cyclocross riders have circled on their calendars when the season arrives in late August. By the time riders went over, up, down and around Lions Valley Place Park in Crystal, many had their bike legs. The weekend series began Sept. 9 at the All-City Intercontinental Championships at Theodore Wirth Park in Minneapolis.
In the two-day event, Sunday might have lacked Saturday's free Fulton beer garden and the heckling that is cyclocross etiquette, but it had all the mud, grit and wheeled acrobatics.
In this sport, competitors deal with twisty courses (at Lions Park, switchbacks on a downhill, too). They might deal with thick muddy sections, like they did Sunday, forcing some to hop off, shoulder their frames, and pick up with the ride. It's a delicate dance best not underestimated.
After his race, Matt Leizinger was peppered with brown chunks up and down his black All-City X Fulton Racing team kit.
"I personally had a lot of fun. I like racing in the mud, in stuff like this," said Leizinger, 35, of Richfield. "I don't like the aftermath, going and tearing your bike apart and cleaning it up, but that's just part of it."
Star Cross featured six races (or really, start times) both days, with 22 categories of riders taking part. Each start line is a mosaic of multiple riders of different skill levels, genders and ages who will find themselves all off at the same gun. Kind of like a race within a race. Individual riders have their category, or "cat" in cyclocross vernacular, based on their ability. In general, their category improves as they gain experience. Over the two days, 347 riders competed.