
LEADVILLE, Colo. (ST) — Todd Wells and Rebecca Rusch (both on the Specialized team) won Saturday’s Leadville Trail 100 on a sparkling clear warm day in the Rockies.
Wells, who was third last year after having a mechanical early in the race, rode most of the second half of the 100 miler alone; he briefly appeared on track to match the course record set by Levi Leipheimer last year, but faded in bit in the last 15 miles.
Former marathon world champion Alban Lakata of Austria was second. He had a flat in the first quarter of the race and, when his inflator malfunctioned, was forced to push his bike for a way to an aid station.
Rusch shattered the course record she set last year, by nearly 16 minutes. In fact, the top four women across the line finished ahead of the old record. 2007 Leadville winner Gretchen Reeves, of nearby Avon, Colorado, was second, followed by endurance specialist Pua Mata and Gunnison, Colorado’s Jenny Smith.
Mata had gone on a solo attack early, and Rusch at one point was almost three minutes behind. But Mata suffered some mechanical problems and Rusch poured on the speed up the Columbine climb and held off the chase in the final miles.
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BIO
Rebecca Rusch wasn’t thinking about world championships when she joined the Downers Grove North High School cross-country team. “I just wanted the free track suit,” recalls Rusch, who, 28 years later, finds herself among the ranks of the world’s elite endurance athletes. In July of 2009, Rusch won her third straight mountain biking 24-hour Solo World Championship.
Since donning those gray cotton sweats and Lycra shorts, Rusch has outfitted herself in the kit of numerous other disciplines: racking up ascents of big walls from Yosemite to Zion, paddling on the world-famous Offshore Canoe Club’s women’s outrigger team in the brutal Molokai crossing and winning adventure races around the world.
When not training in one of the five mountain ranges surrounding her hometown of Ketchum, Idaho, the 41-year-old known as the “Queen of Pain” can be found chasing adrenaline from Tibet to New Zealand to Kyrgyzstan, constantly adding titles to her impressive and extensive resume.
In addition to those three 24-hour solo mountain bike World Champion rainbow jerseys, Rusch is a three-time national champion in 24-hour team mountain biking. She’s Idaho’s Short Track state championship (twice), and its Cyclocross state title. An accomplished Nordic skier, she’s won the Masters Cross Country Skiing World Championship, in addition to taking the top prize at Raid Gauloises Adventure Racing World Championships. And although that’s just cross-section of her palmares, it’s easy to see why Rusch has been profiled by Sports Illustrated, Outside Magazine and Adventure Sport Magazine.
Talking about age draws a laugh as she gestures at her surroundings. "People around here are all 10 years younger than they actually are. And I don’t mean they just look it; they are actually 10 years younger," she said. "Everyone’s out there constantly doing stuff, from biking to skiing to hiking. There’s a collective mentality that if you don’t use it, you’ll lose it."
This mentality, along with what she calls "perfect terrain for training," provides a home base for the typically itinerant Rusch. She is part of the community; for more than two years she has been a stalwart volunteer emergency medical technician and firefighter for the Ketchum Fire Department, and a homeowner. On breaks from her race schedule, she works on her condominium, though the domestic idea continues to bemuse her; the last home she owned was a 1975 Ford Bronco.
Career Highlights
