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U.S. citizens: Chloé Dygert easily wins the second match; Quinn Simmons wins easily on her own.

Col de Granon - France - cycling - Vingegaard Jonas (DEN) of Team Jumbo-Visma & Pogacar Tadej (SLO) of UAE Team Emirates & Cherel Mikael (FRA) of AG2R Citroen Team pictured during 109th Tour de France (2.UWT) stage 11 Albertville > Col de Granon (149KM) - Photo: Vincent Kalut/PN/Cor Vos © 2022

Competing in just one event this year at Pro Nationals after a last-minute flight back from Europe, Quinn Simmons (Trek-Segafredo) made his appearance count, taking an emphatic solo win in the road race. The win meant a lot to Simmons as showed in a heartfelt post-race interview.

“Coming after one of the worst days I’ve ever had on a bike I just feel super lucky to be here with my family, racing with my brother, Dad jumped into the team car for the last few laps, Mom in the feed zone. To be honest today could have saved my career, I’ve been really thinking what do I want to do and this brings the mojo back and now for the first time in a long time the Stars and Stripes is going to do a lap of France,” said Simmons, who wore a black band and dedicated the win to the late Gino Mader.

Simmons had been constantly on the attack throughout the race, finally getting off the front with Tyler Williams (L39ion of Los Angeles) with 40 miles remaining. Simmons would finally distance himself from Williams on the last ascent of the Sherrod Road climb and ride the remaining seven miles solo to his first professional road race title. Brandon McNulty (UAE Team Emirates) and Tyler Stites (Project Echelon) would break free of the remaining peloton to try to bridge the gap but would not be able to make it and had to settle for third and fourth on the day.

How the race played out:

There was a chaotic start to the men’s race with delays due to thunderstorms, and heavy rain for the first 30 miles of the race. There were plenty of attacks and more than a few times a large group would get away that looked like it could be the selection of the race, but they would eventually be brought back together.

Eventually, a group of 19 rolled off the front, with the bigger teams of Echelon, Human Powered Health, L39ion of Los Angeles, Q36.5 as well as race favorites Simmons, crit champion Luke Lamperti (Trinity) and McNulty all represented. But they, too, got caught as they rolled back through town, expanding the front group to approximately 45 riders. This would be the final peloton of the day.

Along the highway and through the feed zone, another group would jump off the front containing big names in Simmons, defending champ Kyle Murphy (L39ion of Los Angeles) and Lamperti. They were dragged back by McNulty. Williams (L39ion of Los Angeles) was quick to make the counter attack, deciding to go it alone.

With 47 miles to go, a small chase group tried to bridge to Williams but the reduced peloton was not having it and quickly brought them back, while Williams (L39ion of Los Angeles) remained up the road with a gap of 25 seconds. Simmons attacked again, trying to bridge up to Williams solo. Simmons was successful, making contact with Williams on the Sherrod Road descent, and immediately the two started working tigether.

With 30 miles remaining, the duo’s lead had ballooned out to three minutes as Colby Simmons (Jumbo-Visma Devo) ran interference for his brother up the road. Going up the Sherrod Road climb, McNulty attacked out of the group bringing Colin Joyce (Human Powered Health), Stites and Riley Sheehan (Denver Disruptors) with him. The four riders started rotating and slowly gained time on the duo up front. Coming through the line with three laps to go, this chase group was 2:30 behind.

McNulty once again attacked on Sherrod, dropping Joyce and Sheehan. Stites held onto the wheel of McNulty and the duo continued to chase, 2:20 back from the leading duo with 18 miles of racing left.

With two laps to go, the chasing duo of Stites and McNulty had closed another 30 seconds and were now 1:50 down on the leaders of Simmons and Williams. Behind, Sheehan and Joyce were being collected by the remaining peloton led by Sean Quinn (EF Education-Easypost).

Coming through with one lap remaining, Simmons attacked Williams but was not able to distance him. McNulty and Stites followed at 1:20 behind.

As the leaders took on Sherrod Road for the last time Simmons put in a blistering attack and dropped Williams to go solo. The massive acceleration was just too much for the L39ion rider to follow.

Simmons put his head down, staying aero to put a 30-second gap into Williams on the flat roads leading back into downtown. Williams was still digging, trying to hold off the duo of Stites and McNulty to secure second place.

Simmons would successfully hold his lead to take a commanding solo win after forcing a breakaway for nearly 50 miles. Williams managed to hold off the chasers as well to take a well-deserved silver medal. Stites would win the two up sprint with McNulty to take third place. Competing in just one event this year at Pro Nationals after a last-minute flight back from Europe, Quinn Simmons (Trek-Segafredo) made his appearance count, taking an emphatic solo win in the road race. The win meant a lot to Simmons as showed in a heartfelt post-race interview.

“Coming after one of the worst days I’ve ever had on a bike I just feel super lucky to be here with my family, racing with my brother, Dad jumped into the team car for the last few laps, Mom in the feed zone. To be honest today could have saved my career, I’ve been really thinking what do I want to do and this brings the mojo back and now for the first time in a long time the Stars and Stripes is going to do a lap of France,” said Simmons, who wore a black band and dedicated the win to the late Gino Mader.

Simmons had been constantly on the attack throughout the race, finally getting off the front with Tyler Williams (L39ion of Los Angeles) with 40 miles remaining. Simmons would finally distance himself from Williams on the last ascent of the Sherrod Road climb and ride the remaining seven miles solo to his first professional road race title. Brandon McNulty (UAE Team Emirates) and Tyler Stites (Project Echelon) would break free of the remaining peloton to try to bridge the gap but would not be able to make it and had to settle for third and fourth on the day.

How the race played out:

There was a chaotic start to the men’s race with delays due to thunderstorms, and heavy rain for the first 30 miles of the race. There were plenty of attacks and more than a few times a large group would get away that looked like it could be the selection of the race, but they would eventually be brought back together.

Eventually, a group of 19 rolled off the front, with the bigger teams of Echelon, Human Powered Health, L39ion of Los Angeles, Q36.5 as well as race favorites Simmons, crit champion Luke Lamperti (Trinity) and McNulty all represented. But they, too, got caught as they rolled back through town, expanding the front group to approximately 45 riders. This would be the final peloton of the day.

Along the highway and through the feed zone, another group would jump off the front containing big names in Simmons, defending champ Kyle Murphy (L39ion of Los Angeles) and Lamperti. They were dragged back by McNulty. Williams (L39ion of Los Angeles) was quick to make the counter attack, deciding to go it alone.

With 47 miles to go, a small chase group tried to bridge to Williams but the reduced peloton was not having it and quickly brought them back, while Williams (L39ion of Los Angeles) remained up the road with a gap of 25 seconds. Simmons attacked again, trying to bridge up to Williams solo. Simmons was successful, making contact with Williams on the Sherrod Road descent, and immediately the two started working tigether.

With 30 miles remaining, the duo’s lead had ballooned out to three minutes as Colby Simmons (Jumbo-Visma Devo) ran interference for his brother up the road. Going up the Sherrod Road climb, McNulty attacked out of the group bringing Colin Joyce (Human Powered Health), Stites and Riley Sheehan (Denver Disruptors) with him. The four riders started rotating and slowly gained time on the duo up front. Coming through the line with three laps to go, this chase group was 2:30 behind.

McNulty once again attacked on Sherrod, dropping Joyce and Sheehan. Stites held onto the wheel of McNulty and the duo continued to chase, 2:20 back from the leading duo with 18 miles of racing left.

With two laps to go, the chasing duo of Stites and McNulty had closed another 30 seconds and were now 1:50 down on the leaders of Simmons and Williams. Behind, Sheehan and Joyce were being collected by the remaining peloton led by Sean Quinn (EF Education-Easypost).

Coming through with one lap remaining, Simmons attacked Williams but was not able to distance him. McNulty and Stites followed at 1:20 behind.

As the leaders took on Sherrod Road for the last time Simmons put in a blistering attack and dropped Williams to go solo. The massive acceleration was just too much for the L39ion rider to follow.

Simmons put his head down, staying aero to put a 30-second gap into Williams on the flat roads leading back into downtown. Williams was still digging, trying to hold off the duo of Stites and McNulty to secure second place.

Simmons would successfully hold his lead to take a commanding solo win after forcing a breakaway for nearly 50 miles. Williams managed to hold off the chasers as well to take a well-deserved silver medal. Stites would win the two up sprint with McNulty to take third place. Competing in just one event this year at Pro Nationals after a last-minute flight back from Europe, Quinn Simmons (Trek-Segafredo) made his appearance count, taking an emphatic solo win in the road race. The win meant a lot to Simmons as showed in a heartfelt post-race interview.

“Coming after one of the worst days I’ve ever had on a bike I just feel super lucky to be here with my family, racing with my brother, Dad jumped into the team car for the last few laps, Mom in the feed zone. To be honest today could have saved my career, I’ve been really thinking what do I want to do and this brings the mojo back and now for the first time in a long time the Stars and Stripes is going to do a lap of France,” said Simmons, who wore a black band and dedicated the win to the late Gino Mader.

Simmons had been constantly on the attack throughout the race, finally getting off the front with Tyler Williams (L39ion of Los Angeles) with 40 miles remaining. Simmons would finally distance himself from Williams on the last ascent of the Sherrod Road climb and ride the remaining seven miles solo to his first professional road race title. Brandon McNulty (UAE Team Emirates) and Tyler Stites (Project Echelon) would break free of the remaining peloton to try to bridge the gap but would not be able to make it and had to settle for third and fourth on the day.

How the race played out:

There was a chaotic start to the men’s race with delays due to thunderstorms, and heavy rain for the first 30 miles of the race. There were plenty of attacks and more than a few times a large group would get away that looked like it could be the selection of the race, but they would eventually be brought back together.

Eventually, a group of 19 rolled off the front, with the bigger teams of Echelon, Human Powered Health, L39ion of Los Angeles, Q36.5 as well as race favorites Simmons, crit champion Luke Lamperti (Trinity) and McNulty all represented. But they, too, got caught as they rolled back through town, expanding the front group to approximately 45 riders. This would be the final peloton of the day.

Along the highway and through the feed zone, another group would jump off the front containing big names in Simmons, defending champ Kyle Murphy (L39ion of Los Angeles) and Lamperti. They were dragged back by McNulty. Williams (L39ion of Los Angeles) was quick to make the counter attack, deciding to go it alone.

With 47 miles to go, a small chase group tried to bridge to Williams but the reduced peloton was not having it and quickly brought them back, while Williams (L39ion of Los Angeles) remained up the road with a gap of 25 seconds. Simmons attacked again, trying to bridge up to Williams solo. Simmons was successful, making contact with Williams on the Sherrod Road descent, and immediately the two started working tigether.

With 30 miles remaining, the duo’s lead had ballooned out to three minutes as Colby Simmons (Jumbo-Visma Devo) ran interference for his brother up the road. Going up the Sherrod Road climb, McNulty attacked out of the group bringing Colin Joyce (Human Powered Health), Stites and Riley Sheehan (Denver Disruptors) with him. The four riders started rotating and slowly gained time on the duo up front. Coming through the line with three laps to go, this chase group was 2:30 behind.

McNulty once again attacked on Sherrod, dropping Joyce and Sheehan. Stites held onto the wheel of McNulty and the duo continued to chase, 2:20 back from the leading duo with 18 miles of racing left.

With two laps to go, the chasing duo of Stites and McNulty had closed another 30 seconds and were now 1:50 down on the leaders of Simmons and Williams. Behind, Sheehan and Joyce were being collected by the remaining peloton led by Sean Quinn (EF Education-Easypost).

Coming through with one lap remaining, Simmons attacked Williams but was not able to distance him. McNulty and Stites followed at 1:20 behind.

As the leaders took on Sherrod Road for the last time Simmons put in a blistering attack and dropped Williams to go solo. The massive acceleration was just too much for the L39ion rider to follow.

Simmons put his head down, staying aero to put a 30-second gap into Williams on the flat roads leading back into downtown. Williams was still digging, trying to hold off the duo of Stites and McNulty to secure second place.

Simmons would successfully hold his lead to take a commanding solo win after forcing a breakaway for nearly 50 miles. Williams managed to hold off the chasers as well to take a well-deserved silver medal. Stites would win the two up sprint with McNulty to take third place.

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