Since XTERRA started opening its season in the desert outside the Las Vegas strip in 2009 Josiah Middaugh has been dropping faster swimmers one brutal hill climb at a time. In doing so he’s won the XTERRA West Championship two of the last three years, and placed 2nd to Conrad Stoltz in the other three.
This year, with Stoltz racing at XTERRA New Zealand on the same weekend, Middaugh enters Sunday’s race as the clear-cut favorite, the fastest in the field. He’s the reigning West Champ, the defending XTERRA U.S. Pro Series Champ, and the top American at both the U.S. and World Championships last year. Still, humble is the rule for the 35-year-old…
“I think both the men’s and women’s races are wide open,” said Middaugh in a phone interview this morning from his home in Eagle-Vail, Colorado where he took his daughter sledding yesterday.
“There are a lot of fast guys in the field and with it being so early in the season it’s hard to know what to expect. I know Dan (Hugo) has been racing fast on the Asia-Pacific Tour, and the kid Mauricio (Mendez) is amazing, and Luke McKenzie is one of the better cyclists in all of Ironman so you know he can pedal, Chris Legh can make up a ton of time on the run, and Matt Lieto is tough too, so it’ll be fun to see how it goes. I’m definitely excited about starting the U.S. season.”
Others wouldn’t be so fast to agree that the race is “wide open.” In fact, even after Hugo won XTERRA Guam two weeks ago, his third World Tour race win of the season, he made a point to say it would be “a different game in Vegas vs. Josiah.”
That’s because Hugo, and the other dozen or so pros that beat him out of the water have seen Middaugh’s “beast mode” in full effect. He traditionally exits the swim one-to-three minutes behind his toughest competitors, then unleashes on the bike and run.
“I’ve actually been working a lot on my swimming in the off-season…haven’t gotten any faster though,” chuckled Middaugh, the epitome of dedication when he’s walking out in sub-zero temps to do laps in the pool in January
His most interesting counterpart for Sunday has to be rookie sensation Mauricio Mendez, an 18-year-old from Mexico City. Last year Mendez took the XTERRA World by storm here in Vegas by posting the fastest swim and run splits of the day and finishing 7th overall. He proved it was no fluke repetitively for the rest of the season which culminated with the amateur world title in Maui. Two weeks ago Mendez finished third behind only Leonardo Chacon and Middaugh in his pro debut at XTERRA Costa Rica.
“When I passed him on the bike he put up a strong fight, and he can outrun me on the flats” said Middaugh. “I’m going to need to catch him as soon as possible on the bike in Vegas and put some time in on the climbs.”
WOMEN’S RACE
In the last five years of racing in Vegas Melanie McQuaid (twice), Shonny Vanlandingham, Renata Bucher, and Lesley Paterson have won the titles. Of that bunch, only Vanlandingham, the 2010 winner, will line-up on the sandy shores in front of the Reflection Bay golf club on Sunday.
The 44-year-old is fresh off a win at XTERRA Costa Rica, and living proof that age is just a number. One of the greatest mountain bikers in U.S. history, Vanlandinhgam consistently posts the best bike splits at the biggest races. She’ll need to do that once again if she wants to catch the likes of Flora Duffy, a 26-year-old Olympian from Bermuda who swims as fast as the best men in the sport.
Duffy, who was third at the XTERRA World Championship last year and won the XTERRA South Africa Championship in February, enters her first season as a full-timer with the XTERRA U.S. Pro Series on Sunday. One could guess she’ll do great on this course, which is deemed to be more about fitness than technical mountain biking skills, but as Middaugh pointed out, “it’s still rough out there, and you’ll need some courage to get through some of the downhills and the sandy washes require some skill.”
There are a host of proven XTERRA women pros familiar with those sandy washes that will certainly be factors on the day with Emma Garrard (pictured above), who was the top American at both the U.S. and World Championships last year, the “Big Fish” Christine Jeffrey (top 3 here in 2009-2011), Danelle Kabush, and last year’s runner-up Suzie Snyder.
The pro race starts at 8am PST on Sunday. Follow along @xterraoffroad and check facebook.com/xterraplanet for race updates and photos.