University of Florida cycling club explained

University of Florida
Cycling Club
Formation:1985
Predecessor:Gainesville Cycling Club
Founding Location:Gainesville, Florida
Website:Team Florida

The University of Florida Cycling Club (also known as Team Florida during competitions) is a cycling club and student organization of the University of Florida. The club was established in 1985. The organization has won numerous Southeastern Collegiate Cycling Conference and National Collegiate Cycling Association championships.

History

The first known Cycling Club at the University of Florida was started in the late 1970s by a group of students who began meeting informally for recreational rides. By 1981, they were still meeting, but since almost all had graduated, they changed the group's name to the Gainesville Cycling Club.[1]

In Fall 1985, students of Richard Beck's Cycling Class and other racers organized a separate, university sanctioned bicycle racing sports club, Team Florida.[2] From 1986-1988, with significant funding from student government, and sponsor support from various local and national brands and organizations, the team's top riders competed in pro-am United States Cycling Federation (USCF) races throughout the United States, but primarily within the Southeast. Team Florida joined the Southeastern Collegiate Cycling Conference (SECCC) of the National Collegiate Cycling Association (NCCA) in 1989 and began racing in both USCF and NCCA races.

Team Florida's first participation in an organized race was a Primo Bike Works' 10 mile time trial starting and finishing at the Hopewell Baptist Church on Wacahoota Road Southwest of Gainesville in late 1985 or early 1986. The first Team Florida win was achieved by Paul Chludzinski in a Citizen's Class criterium in Cocoa Beach in spring 1986. The team's first USCF licensed win was secured by Michael Franovich in a Category IV road race on the Sawgrass Expressway, prior to its July 3, 1986 opening. The first collegiate race win was accomplished by Geoff Rogers in a “B” Category Race at the University of Georgia in 1989.

Although bike races had been held on campus as early as the 1950s, the first race hosted by Team Florida was held in Fall 1986.[3] The six turn USCF sanctioned criterium ran clockwise. It featured a start/finish in front of the Florida Gym on Stadium Road, turned right onto North South Drive (now known as Gale Lemerand Drive) pass the stadium, turned right onto East West Drive (turn no longer exists due to North stadium stands construction), from East West Drive right onto Fletcher Drive, left on what was a road between Pugh and Dauer Halls, right onto Buckman Drive which becomes Stadium Road, and past the Hub before returning to the start/finish. Andy Woodruff, who would eventually ride for Team Florida in the early 1990s, won the Men's Pro, 1,2,3 race. Team sponsored circuit races around Lake Alice were held in 1987 and 1988. The first Stage Race was held in 1989 and featured a downtown twilight criterium and a road race on Dungarvin Road.

In 1992, a Team Florida cyclist, Tom Hayes, was killed in an accident while cycling through Paynes Prairie. Team uniforms the following year included a memorial black armband in the cyclist's honor.

Team Florida was recognized as the University of Florida's Sports Club of the Year for 2015-2016. In 2017, with student interest in racing declining, Team Florida leadership chose to have the club focus on noncompetitive recreational riding, the team lost its standing as a sports club, and stopped participating in SECCC events. As of October 2019 however, the team had regained its status as a UF Sports Club. Following a lengthy delay associated with the pandemic, Team Florida began competing in SECCC collegiate races again in Fall 2021. In 2022 Team Florida returned to the top of the SECCC Standings with a conference win for Tyler Austhof in Cyclocross.

Southeastern Collegiate Cycling Conference Championships

Road

Mountain Bike

Cyclocross

National Collegiate Cycling Championships

Road

Track

Notable alumni

Club Presidents

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Early History of the Gainesville Cycling Club . 2019-07-11 . Gainesville Cycling Club.
  2. Web site: 2001-01-24 . UF Cycling . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20010124104800/http://grove.ufl.edu/~cycling/history.html . 2001-01-24 . 2019-07-12 . Team Florida.
  3. Web site: Bicycle race on the University of Florida campus . 2019-10-26 . University of Florida . en.
  4. Web site: UF Cycling. https://web.archive.org/web/20010124104800/http://grove.ufl.edu/~cycling/history.html. dead. 2001-01-24. 2001-01-24. 2019-07-12.
  5. Web site: UF cycling team rides to win. Writer. Erika Oakvik, Alligator Contributing. The Independent Florida Alligator. en. 2019-07-12.
  6. Web site: UF Cycling. https://web.archive.org/web/20010124104800/http://grove.ufl.edu/~cycling/history.html. dead. 2001-01-24. 2001-01-24. 2019-07-12.
  7. Web site: August 29, 2019 . Karen Bliss inducted into US Bicycling Hall of Fame . US Bicycling Hall of Fame.