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Josiah Middaugh and Lesley Paterson win the XTERRA Southeast Championship

B.C.'s Melanie McQuaid finishes second, and Brandi Heisterman third.

Josiah Middaugh and Lesley Paterson captured the 8th annual XTERRA Southeast Championship at Oak Mountain State Park on a rainy day in Shelby County, Alabama.

It’s the first time Middaugh – an 8-time XTERRA National Champ – has won the event as Conrad “the Caveman” Stoltz swept the last six races here in Shelby County.

Today Stoltz held the lead through the swim, mountain bike, and first half of the six-mile run before pulling with an injured calf.

“I had a big crash (at the XTERRA West Champs) five weeks ago and cut my hand quite badly and got five stitches and surgery.  One week after that I was doing mountain bike racing, and because I couldn’t put weight on the handlebar it made me compensate so the left hip started cramping up and caused the hip to get semi-injured, and that transferred to my calf muscle.  I’ve been struggling with the calf injury all week, and knew it was going to be touch and go if I was going to be able to run well.  I felt good on the run but the injury got worse and worse and worse and I knew I had to stop because if I kept running it was probably going to tear,” explained Stoltz.

Despite the injury to Stoltz, due credit belongs to Middaugh who came out of the water about a minute-30 behind the leaders then posted the fastest bike split of the day to bridge the gap and took over on the run to capture his second straight win to start the 2013 XTERRA U.S. Pro Series.

“I was happy to be able to keep the tires down and stay focused on my own race,” said Middaugh.  “I really had no idea how far back I was on the bike so kept riding hard.  I usually lose a lot of time in that last four miles of switchbacks so I didn’t know if I was going to come off the bike four minutes behind or one minute behind.”

Turned out he was about 1:15 behind Stoltz and a minute or so behind Dan Hugo coming into T2.  Middaugh caught Hugo a little past the halfway point on the run then passed Stoltz right as he pulled up at the end of the first lap.

“I asked if he was OK and he said his leg was hurting.  When I came around the second lap to the finish he was there cheering me in.  He’s a good sport,” said Middaugh.

Hugo, who took a nasty spill in the bike-to-run transition as he slipped on the wet concrete coming in, stayed strong to finish in second.  Of note, Hugo has placed 2nd at 13 of his last 14 XTERRA races since winning the South Africa title in 2011.

“Josiah is the man to beat. At the end of last season he won Nationals, was incredible at Worlds and won last month’s West Championship. I knew that coming in today and he lived up to it easily, he really had it covered,” said Hugo.  “I think he had it sewn up before the run.  We’re going to have to lift our game to compete with him this season.”

Craig Evans from Tennessee continued his hot streak on his ‘home course’ – where he placed second last year – by finishing third this time around.  It marks the seventh straight year Evans has placed in the top six at the XTERRA Southeast Championship race.

In fifth and on the podium for the first time was rookie XTERRA Pro Nick Fisher from Ogden.

For all the competitors, Mother Nature was their biggest competitor.

“The roots and bridges were really slick,” said Middaugh.  “My front wheel slide out on the roots a lot but luckily hooked back up on the dirt. The dirt was tacky but anything root or rock was slick and the bridges were bad so I really made a point out of lining those up straight.  Better to take a few seconds here and there and play it safe then lose a couple minutes by crashing.”

More than a few took a spill on the wet bridges.  Bradley Weiss, who won the ITU u23 Cross Tri World Championship on this course last year, slid out and ended up in a ravine on the first one.  Repeated it again on the next bridge but still managed a fourth place finish – his fifth straight top 5 on the XTERRA World Tour this year.

Ryan DeCook wiped out on one of the bridges as well.  To make matters worse he had a tire pump tucked in to his racing kit – which of course he landed on directly.

“We’ve never raced on this course when it was wet and the rain really changes it,” said Stoltz.  “Slippery roots and the bridges were really slick so it was quite an adventure out there…everyone has a story.”


PRO MEN
Pl    Name    Age    Hometown    Time    Points

1    Josiah Middaugh    34    Vail, Colorado    2:17:00    100
2    Dan Hugo    39    Stellenbosch, South Africa    2:18:44    90
3    Craig Evans    35    Hendersonville, Tennessee    2:22:49    82
4    Bradley Weiss    24    Somerset West, South Africa    2:25:32    75
5    Nick Fisher    27    Ogden, Utah    2:27:23    69
6    Branden Rakita    32    Colorado Springs, Colorado    2:27:48    63
7    Will Kelsay    32    Boulder, Colorado    2:29:33    58
8    Matt Mangen    30    Ivins, Utah    2:32:04    53
9    Chris Ganter    35    Boise, Idaho    2:34:18.03    49
10    Cody Waite    35    Lakewood, Colorado    2:34:18.08    45


PATERSON’S DOMINATION CONTINUES

Reigning and two-time XTERRA World Champion Lesley Paterson overcame four crashes on the bike to take her fifth straight World Tour win and second-in-a-row here in Alabama.

“I was really nervous coming in because I’ve never ridden in slippery conditions like this in Southern California and although I grew up in this kind of weather in Scotland) I wasn’t a mountain biker back then,” said Paterson.  “The roots, those things are buggers, you hit them at the wrong angle and you’re off.  So, I only had four crashes, thought that was quite impressive.”

Today Paterson was pushed by three-time XTERRA World Champ Melanie McQuaid, who posted the fastest bike split of the day and was first into transition.

“She was riding well, she’s really good on the technical stuff,” said Paterson. “I had a goal of just trying to hang as long as I could and make time on the climb so she wouldn’t take too much time out of me in the last part of the course which is really technical.”

McQuaid, who has won here three times, was happy to get back on a great mountain bike course with some good fitness and happy with her runner-up performance today.

“I was injured for a long time. It takes a long time to get your body back, then after that chip away at fitness.  Happy I made the choice to skip some racing and go home for four weeks and try to right the ship,” said McQuaid.  “I’m not in super Lesley shape but starting to feel better for sure and I’ll chip away at it as the year goes on.”

Brandi Heisterman, who placed second at her XTERRA debut in Canada two years ago, put up her best effort in the U.S. to finish third.

“I took some chances on the bike to get in to the race and ripped down Blood Rock, it was so fun,” said the mother of two and teacher by trade.  Heisterman was one of the few – and most seemed to be Canadian – that was not bothered by the slippery roots.

“That’s what we ride on every single day, I love that stuff,” smiled Heisterman.

Former XTERRA World Champ Shonny Vanlandingham – who’s also won on this course at XTERRA and the BUMP-n-Grind mountain bike races – was solid all-around to finish fourth while reigning XTERRA National Champ Suzie Snyder came in fifth.
PRO WOMEN
Pl    Name    Age    Hometown    Time    Points

1    Lesley Paterson    32    San Diego, California    2:32:40    100
2    Melanie McQuaid    39    Victoria, B.C., Canada    2:36:25    90
3    Brandi Heisterman    38    Brackendale, B.C., Canada    2:41:32    82

4    Shonny Vanlandingham    43    Durango, Colorado    2:42:42    75
5    Suzie Snyder    31    Fredericksburg, Virginia    2:42:51    69
6    Emma Garrard    31    Park City, Utah    2:46:03    63
7    Danelle Kabush    37    Calgary, Canada    2:46:19    58
8    Christine Jeffrey    41    Tucson, Arizona    2:48:50    53
9    Katie Button    28    Victoria, B.C., Canada    2:56:55    49
10    Caroline Colonna    49    Taos, New Mexico    2:59:09    45

XTERRA U.S. PRO SERIES UPDATE

Josiah Middaugh and Lesley Paterson both stayed perfect in the pro series and put the pressure on the rest of the field to catch up.  Pros count their best three of four regionals (there’s two left – the East Championship in Richmond on June 9 and the Mountain Championship at Beaver Creek Resort on July 20) plus their score at the USA Championship in Utah to determine the Series winner.

With his DNF today and no previous plans to race at the Mountain Championship, Stoltz is effectively out of the title chase as he’d have only two counting scores heading into Nationals.

“It’s tough because I’m not going to be able to contest the XTERRA Series, and that’s unfortunate,” said Stoltz, who has won six-in-a-row and an unprecedented 10 U.S. Pro Series crowns since his inaugural season of 2001.
2013 XTERRA U.S. Pro Series Standings (after 2 – 5.18.13)

PRO MEN
Pl    Name    West    S’East    Totals

1    Josiah Middaugh    100    100    200
2    Craig Evans    63    82    145
3    Branden Rakita    82    63    145
4    Will Kelsay    49    58    107
5    Matt Mangen    53    53    106
6    Nick Fisher    37    69    106
7    Jason Michalak    58    34    92
8    Conrad Stoltz    90    DNF    90
9    Dan Hugo    DNS    90    90
10    Bradley Weiss    DNS    75    75
11    Ryan Ignatz    75    DNS    75
12    Matt Lieto    69    DNS    69
13    Chris Ganter    DNF    49    49
14    Brian Astell    45    DNS    45
15    Cody Waite    DNS    45    45
16    Lewis Elliot    41    DNS    41
17    Will Ross    DNP    41    41
18    Andy Lee    DNS    37    37
19    Matthew Sheeks    34    DNS    34
20    Zach Winter    31    DNS    31
21    Tim Snow    DNS    31    31
22    Damian Gonzalez    28    DNP    28
23    Tom Eickelbert    DNS    28    28
24    Joshua Merrick    DNP    DNS    0
25    Ryan DeCook    DNS    DNP    0

PRO WOMEN
Pl    Name    West    S’East    Totals

1    Lesley Paterson    100    100    200
2    Melanie McQuaid    75    90    165
3    Suzie Snyder    90    69    159
4    Shonny Vanlandingham    82    75    157
5    Danelle Kabush    69    58    127
6    Brandi Heisterman    41    82    123
7    Emma Garrard    58    63    121
8    Christine Jeffrey    31    53    84
9    Caroline Colonna    37    45    82
10    Kelley Cullen    63    DNS    63
11    Jaime Brede    53    DNS    53
12    Jen Gersbach-Venzara    49    DNS    49
13    Katie Button    DNS    49    49
14    Tamara Donelson    45    DNS    45
15    Heather Holmes    DNS    41    41
16    Rachel Challis    34    DNS    34
17    Lauren Harrison    28    DNS    28

DNS    Did Not Start
DNF    Did Not Finish
DNP    Did Not Place