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The 2016 Jingle Cross weekend offers three levels of UCI racing for Elite cyclocross racers, with Friday night's C2 event, the World Cup on Saturday (watch live here) and a C1 on Sunday. The question was, who would race on Friday, and risk using up energy, or crashing, before Saturday's World Cup?

Points, Practice and Promotion

Racers making the trip to Iowa City varied in their approach to the three days of racing. Some coveted a chance to bag C2 points, get in an "opener" for the World Cup, or just reward the promoter and fans for hosting three straight days of racing. Newly retired Ryan Trebon is a fan of this approach:

However, a quick glance at the start list or results reveals that most of America's top racers, including Jeremy Powers, Stephen Hyde, and Jamey Driscoll, opted to stay clean, dry and rested heading into the second U.S. World Cup. In the men's race, Curtis White (Cannondale p/b CyclocrossWorld), teammates Danny Summerhill and Travis Livermon (Maxxis Shimano) and the ageless Jonathan Page (Fuji) all took to the start despite the heavy conditions.

Summerhill surveying the damage of Meisen's fast first few laps. 2016 Jingle Cross Day 1, Elite Men. © A. Yee / Cyclocross Magazine

Summerhill opening up the tired legs and surveying the damage of Meisen's fast first few laps. 2016 Jingle Cross Day 1, Elite Men. © A. Yee / Cyclocross Magazine

The decision to rest or "open" the legs depended on whose legs were in question, and also perhaps a rider's desire to reacquaint himself with mud. Summerhill explained his rationale, "I don’t even think that my legs were fresh to begin with so I figured I may as well try open them up tonight and hold on for dear life tomorrow basically and see what Sunday brings. It could have gone two ways, use today as a rest day but...coming from [Tour of] Alberta, I’m on this fine line of just being real tired. I’m already fairly tired so once this weekend is over, I think next week is just going to be sleeping the whole time, trying to recover that way. I didn’t want to be here and be in my room wishing ‘hey why aren’t I racing tonight.’ So I’m glad that Travis and I obviously raced and just got a feel for mud again. I haven’t raced mud in a long time."

"I didn’t want to be here and be in my room wishing ‘hey why aren’t I racing tonight.’ So I’m glad that Travis and I obviously raced and just got a feel for mud again. I haven’t raced mud in a long time" -Summerhill on his decision to race Friday's UCI C2 event.

At 40 years old, some might think Page would value recovery time after racing CrossVegas and before Saturday's World Cup, but the upside of competing on Friday was a good chance of landing in the UCI points, as he did in 2015.

The crowds were rowdy and helped distract from the pain of the climb. 2016 Jingle Cross Day 1, Elite Men. © D. Mable / Cyclocross Magazine

The crowds were rowdy and helped distract from the pain of the climb. 2016 Jingle Cross Day 1, Elite Men. © D. Mable / Cyclocross Magazine

Some could argue the same about White, that being just 21 years old, he shouldn't be burned out with a ton of volume. White and his team had an opposite view. "I’m young, I’m developing as a rider and I want to race as much as possible," White explained. He also hinted at sharing former teammate Trebon's philosophy. "It was a fantastic race. Why not? The atmosphere under the lights...you don’t get to do that very often."

"I’m young, I’m developing as a rider and I want to race as much as possible." -White

Of course, a bit of prize money never hurt for motivation for any racer not expecting to contest for overall World Cup placings, but most European racers stayed indoors on Friday night, with just ninth-placed Antonin Marcecaille from France being the other European race to take the start. All but three of the 41-rider field were from North America.

Fighting for a Sloppy Second

All four Americans' decision and risk taking paid off, as all landed in the top five, but on Friday night, they were upstaged by a similarly-risk-taking German in Marcel Meisen (Steylaerts-Verona). Meisen is no stranger to top-level cyclocross, racing World Cups, winning the German National Championship, finishing ninth overall in the Superprestige series in 2013 and (perhaps his least-known claim to fame) was the most consistent racer of the entire men's field in Tabor at the 2015 Cyclocross World Championships.

Marcel Meisen going clear - 2016 Jingle Cross Day 1, Elite Men. © D. Mable / Cyclocross Magazine

Marcel Meisen going clear - 2016 Jingle Cross Day 1, Elite Men. © D. Mable / Cyclocross Magazine

Meisen, unlike the Americans giving chase, did not race CrossVegas, and made the trip from Germany just for the Jingle Cross event. The German wanted to get his money's worth, and it showed early on in the race. The German pressed forward up Mt. Krumpit and through the heavy, muddy course, putting 30 seconds into most of his competitors with only White, Summerhill and 2016 Junior National Champion Gage Hecht keeping him within sight. Just one lap down, Page and Livermon were a whopping 34 seconds in arrears.

On lap two, Meisen, warmed up from his first lap effort, put on an impressive display to distance the rest, and in the process set the fastest lap of the day and showed everyone his Iowa City trip was serious business. It quickly became a race for second.

Behind, White and Summerhill were locked into a battle for the silver medal, while Hecht would slowly fade. Summerhill put together some impressive lap times, passing White on the fourth of seven laps, looked to have second locked up until White found his second win with two to go and reconnect.

Two generations of cyclocross racers. 40-year-old Page and 18-year-old Hecht. 2016 Jingle Cross Day 1, Elite Men. © D. Mable / Cyclocross Magazine

Two generations of cyclocross racers. 40-year-old Page and 18-year-old Hecht. 2016 Jingle Cross Day 1, Elite Men. © D. Mable / Cyclocross Magazine

"Marcel was kind of another level today, above us," White recalled. "I know that I would kind of implode if I tried to stick with him too long so he went up the road. Danny came up to me and he ended up passing me with about four to go. I just tried to ride my own race, it’s one of those courses that you need to ride within yourself. He started getting away from me for a bit and I brought him back on the last lap, caught him just by the pits. He and I had a couple quick exchanges, and then I attacked going up Mt Krumpit and I think that was the gap all the way to the finish."

Summerhill did his best to hold his position, but he was taking on water and used any means necessary to stay above White. "I don’t think [Curtis] saw what I did to him coming into the pits because he lit me up, like a bat out of hell on the straights before the pit, and I knew that if he got much space on me, he was going to hold it to the finish," Summerhill admitted. "So I surged and totally chopped him going into the pit like a motocross race and that was fun for sure. Curtis is a good guy and I know that he knew that it was racing. At that point, we were having fun, we were both on the podium. Rubbin' is racing."

"So I surged and totally chopped him going into the pit like a motocross race and that was fun for sure...Rubbin' is racing." -Summerhill on his battle with White

A Race for Youth, and Mechanics

The race was also an opportunity for non-World Cup racers like Gage Hecht (Alpha Bicycle / Vista Subaru) to strut his stuff.

Gage Hecht had a fast start and finished seventh. 2016 Jingle Cross Day 1, Elite Men. © A. Yee / Cyclocross Magazine

Gage Hecht had a fast start and finished seventh. 2016 Jingle Cross Day 1, Elite Men. © A. Yee / Cyclocross Magazine

The first-year U23 racer showed his maturation, with a fast start and consistent race until the last lap, when the young racer would be passed by Yannick Eckmann (Boulder Cycle Sport/Yogaglo) and Livermon.

In the pits, the competition for power washers was fierce as well. Many racers were pitting every half lap, making for repeated sprint workouts for the pit crew.

The action in the pits was intense with racers pitting every half lap. 2016 Jingle Cross Day 1, Elite Men. © A. Yee / Cyclocross Magazine

The action in the pits was intense with racers pitting every half lap. 2016 Jingle Cross Day 1, Elite Men. © A. Yee / Cyclocross Magazine

Washing bikes was just as much a race out on the course. 2016 Jingle Cross Day 1, Elite Men. © A. Yee / Cyclocross Magazine

Washing bikes was just as much a race out on the course. 2016 Jingle Cross Day 1, Elite Men. © A. Yee / Cyclocross Magazine

Full photo gallery below the results.

2016 Jingle Cross Day 1 UCI C2 Results - Elite Men

PlaceBibLastFirstTeamNatRacing AgeTimeGap
12MEISENMarcelSteylaerts-VeronaGER281:02:49
23WHITECurtisCannondale p/b Cyclocrossworld.USA221:03:0415
36SUMMERHILLDanielMaxxis-ShimanoUSA281:03:4859
47PAGEJonathanFujiUSA411:05:262:37
55LIVERMONTravisMaxxis-Shimano Pro CyclocrossUSA291:05:272:38
611ECKMANNYannickBoulder Cycle Sport/ YogagloUSA241:05:342:45
741HECHTGageAlpha Bicycle Company - Vista SUSA191:06:223:33
88LINDINEJustinApex / NBX / TrekUSA331:06:273:38
919MARECAILLEAntoninAVC aix en provenceFRA251:06:453:56
1014MATTERBrianTeam WisconsinUSA391:09:106:21
1113HAIDETLanceRaliegh ClementUSA201:09:306:41
1222HILDEBRANDTCaseyThe Underground ProjectUSA231:10:457:56
1325DRUMMONDChrisSPCX p/b RK BlackUSA351:11:268:37
1418FIXBrannanAlpha Bicycle Company - Vista SUSA201:11:569:07
1515KAISERCodyLangeTwins / SpecializedUSA25@2Laps
1663LEMKENicholasKona/HiFi/Cycle-SmartUSA34@2Laps
1723THOMPSONEricHED p/b Molten Speed WaxUSA28@2Laps
1820LASLEYJacobSPCX pb RK BlackUSA40@3Laps
1954POSTIERDylanRenewed Professional CyclocrossUSA26@3Laps
2043SELANDERBjornBorah TeamwearUSA29@3Laps
2110AITKENChristopherFocus Attaquer CX TeamAUS23@3Laps
2248CLOUTIERTylerRenewed Professional CyclocrossUSA28@3Laps
2364MCCONNELLKevinIowa City Cycling ClubUSA36@3Laps
2447BAUMHOVERBrianUniversity of Iowa Heart and Vausa32@3Laps
2549DUTCZAKMichaelThe Pony ShopUSA24@3Laps
2659REYESDavidTen Speed HeroUSA33@3Laps
2742SENKERIKBenTeam ExtremeUSA24@4Laps
2816BRADFORD-PARISHKevinSET/coaching Giro ScratchLabsUSA35@4Laps
2961TURNERAndrewSynergyUSA30@4Laps
3024MACKEYSkylerKCCX Elite Cyclocross TeamUSA22@4Laps
3160THOMPSONCalebCRC-SCOTT-2ND AVE SPORTSUSA34@4Laps
3257SUNDQUISTChristianThe Hub Cycling TeamUSA25@4Laps
3352DILGERConnorAbove and Beyond Cancer CyclingUSA23@4Laps
3462RUSSKyleBrazen Dropouts Cycling TeamUSA31@4Laps
3544REEVESMatthewCyclesmart Grassroots TeamUSA31@5Laps
3655GLASSElwoodALL-CITY x BLACK HAND COFFEE COUSA32@5Laps
3751BICKMORECadeMARIAN UNIVERSITY CYCLING TEAMUSA19@5Laps
3845WALKERJasonPeet's Coffee RacingUSA46@5Laps
DNF46LOUDERStuALL-CITY x BLACK HAND COFFEE CUSA32
DNF17CHAPMANTomFocus Attaquer CXAUS22
DNF21O'DONNELLTrevorReal Deal D'Ornellas p/b GarneaCAN21
DNS4VANDEKINDERENJensKalas-H.Essers-Nnof cycling teaBEL24
DNS9HELMIGChristianLUX36
DNS12MCCONNELLMarkHot Sauce Cycling x GarneauCAN29
DNS50TALERICODominicFoundry CyclesUSA34
DNS53KLUCKJeffQueen City CyclingUSA37
DNS56REIMANNAndrewJalapeno CyclingUSA34

2016 Jingle Cross Day 1 Photo Gallery - Elite Men

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The two flyovers added even more vertical to the hilly course, but were a rare mud-free zone. 2016 Jingle Cross Day 1, Elite Men. © A. Yee / Cyclocross Magazine

The two flyovers added even more vertical to the hilly course, but were a rare mud-free zone. 2016 Jingle Cross Day 1, Elite Men. © A. Yee / Cyclocross Magazine

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