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Moberg wins Orecrusher by half a wheel

For Squamish’s Quinn Moberg, riding in Saturday’s Orecrusher race was a little bittersweet.
Orecrusher
Squamish's Quinn Moberg was leading the pack mid-race, as well as at the finish.

For Squamish’s Quinn Moberg, riding in Saturday’s Orecrusher race was a little bittersweet.

As he rode his mountain bike past the graveyard on the course through the streets and trails of Brackendale, he couldn’t help but think of his grandparents and used it as motivation, especially with the Test of Metal series, of which Orecrusher is a part, ending this year.

“My grandparents are buried just up the way,” he said after the race. “It was a little extra energy racing around the graveyard.”

As in 2015, Moberg again finished with the best overall time in the race, narrowly beating Rocky Mountain Factory teammate Greg Day by half a wheel. Moberg’s time was 1:51:37.2 compared with Day’s 1:51:37.6.

The two along with teammate Kevin Calhoun, who finished third overall, were pushing each along throughout the race, as the three made it a priority to make sure one of them came out on top.

“First was to make sure one of us won,” Moberg said. “Then it was which one of us wins.”

Orecrusher marks the second race of the year for the Ƶapprider, following the Bear Mountain cross-country event in Victoria.

“Usually, I would have a couple more races, but I did a second semester at UVic.”

He and Day are now heading south for a couple of races and will be racing at Gearjammer, the next race in the Test of Metal series.

Among the other winners was local Nick Kleban, who took the junior bracket among males with a time of 1:58:54.2, or ninth best among all 228 riders.

“This is actually my first win ever,” he said.

Kleban got off to a rough start when he and another rider’s handlebars made contact, but he was able to avoid a collision and regroup. He sensed he was doing well as the rest went on, especially when he hit the highway section and started a downhill stretch. Still, he didn’t want to take anything for granted.

“I always just kept moving,” he said. “I never let up.”

Kleban has two B.C. Cup events in the next two weeks.

“Hopefully, I can win again next week,” he said.

Among the women, West Vancouver’s Emily Handford, who also rides for Rocky Mountain Factory, finished with the best time of 2:11:32.3, about 20 seconds ahead of Jean Ann Berkenpas of Vancouver.

Handford, who had just returned from racing in Germany, was pleasantly surprised by her first-place finish.

“I hoped for podium,” she said. “That was my goal coming in.”

Both Handford and Moberg finished with the best times in the pro/elite brackets.

Joining Kleban as winners in recreational categories were: Julia Long in age 14-19; Kelsey Macdonald (Best recreational female time) and Simon Szoke, 20-29; Katharine Carter and Mikalai Panisiuk, 30-39; Dwayne Kress (Best recreational male time) and Grace Menning, 40-49; Jennifer O’Day and Andrew Handford, 50-59; and Tony Routley, 60-69.

Orecrusher director Darcy Reimer was happy with the entertaining finish to the race, the shape of the track and the weather. Still, he expressed concern that with Test of Metal coming to an end, it was a sign of how these kinds of events, which depend so heavily on volunteer hours, are harder to hold.

“It takes 70 volunteers to pull off a race like this,” he said. “They’re all doing it on their own time.”

Reimer said that with many families having both parents working, often out of town, there are limits are how much people can volunteer.

He added that it was crucial to have support from sponsors like Nester’s and the school district, which provided space at Don Ross Middle School, as well as the Brackendale residents in order for the race to happen.

He was also able to get volunteers from the Howe Sound Secondary leadership program, kids from the Rippin’ Riders programs he runs and members of the River Church, where he is pastor, to help make sure Orecrusher was a success.

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