A great race for a great Dane
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Mike Sciacca
Dane Jankowiak isn’t two months removed from high school and already
he’s beginning to hit the big time.
In his biggest race to date the 18-year-old Jankowiak, a domestic road
bike racer, came away as the surprise winner in the 17 and 18-year-old
division road race at the recent U.S. Junior National Championships in
Gainesville, Fla.
It is the same race that Lance Armstrong won and used as a springboard
to racing stardom.
There is no more prestigious road race in the country and the victory
has even surprised Jankowiak, himself.
Jankowiak emerged from the pack of nearly 130 racers in the eighth of
10 laps to take the lead, then held off one late challenge at the finish
line to win the 63-mile race in a time of 2:27.26.
His father, Don, was in attendance on that hot, muggy day.
“I couldn’t believe that I had won it. It really took awhile to sink
in,” said Jankowiak, a 2001 graduate of Huntington Beach High. “I mean,
this is the biggest race you can win. I knew I could do it, but there are
so many good riders out there, that you just never know.”
Considered an “unknown” in the race, Jankowiak caught the rest of the
competition off-guard and conquered a course that spanned several narrow
country roads south of Gainesville near the town of Flemington. As he
broke into the lead, he was surrounded by motorcycles and cars containing
photographers, all capturing the moments leading to up to his triumph.
The victory gave Jankowiak a spot on the U.S. national team, which
will compete October 13 at the Road World Championships in Lisbon,
Portugal.
Cycling is a very popular sport in Europe, so when Jankowiak is seen
wearing his USA shirt, he’s sure to be treated like a celebrity by fans
there.
“I am really looking forward to that,” Jankowiak said of his first
trip to Europe. “When I was younger I’d look for a competition to enter
just about every week. This, though, is unbelievable.”
Jankowiak has been riding for nearly six years, first taking up
mountain bike riding with a friend. The trick, he says, to being fast on
a mountain bike is to be fit and fast on a road bike.
The speed on the road got him hooked on road racing and he’s been
serious about the sport for the past four years.
His first competition, held at Camp Pendleton, earned him a fifth
place finish in his division.
“That was the start of all this for me,” he said. “I just stuck with
it, learned how to handle a bike and began to train hard.”
Jankowiak says he trains seven days a week, anywhere from three to
nine hours per day. Sometimes he heads north toward Palos Verdes, on
other days, he travels south down to Camp Pendleton.
For the past eight months, Jankowiak has been training with Roger
Young, a two-time former Olympian.
“He’s an awesome coach. He’s taught me that cycling is really a
difficult sport that takes a lot of determination and dedication,”
Jankowiak said. “The time and training you put into it will only make you
better along the way.”
Jankowiak, Young says, is a “complete” bike rider.
“That’s the term that is used for a rider who has all the attributes:
quickness, can handle a bike on flat ground, can handle mountains and one
who is fast on time trials,” Young explained. “You don’t see his type of
talent every day. He certainly can go places and he gives every
indication that he’s the type of rider who can very well compete in the
Tour de France. That’s down the line, though; right now, we’re just
excited to see how he’ll do at the world championships.”
Jankowiak, a member of the Jax road team based out of Huntington
Beach, will leave in September to train at the Olympic Training Center in
Chula Vista. He’ll be there for two weeks before going to Irvine to
compete in a Sept. 23 race. From there he’ll fly to Belgium to compete in
four more races.
All leading up to the world championships.
He admits that there are “a few times” that he does tire from the
intense training and wishes he was doing something else. On other
occasions, he has sacrificed going out with his friends in order to get
in that training time.
“The perspective I keep is to just go out there and have fun. If I do
that, then I know I’ll be all right,” he explained. “I’ve also realized
that there’s a lot of luck involved with road racing and that things have
to work in your favor in a lot of these races.”
He has little doubt as to the direction he wants to take.
“All the way to the top, I hope” he said. “I’m shooting to make it to
the 2004 Olympics in Athens, Greece, and hope to reach the Tour de France
one day.”
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