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Women’s team carries the weight of fallen teammate into Giro

In a sport where competitors try to save every gram of weight they can, the women of The Cyclery-4iiii cycling team will be carrying the weight of the world on their shoulders when they speed around The Heights in Thursday’s Giro di Burnaby.
Cycling 4iiii
The Cyclery-4iiii women’s amateur development team spends a lot of time together, especially visiting donut shops where they sometimes bump into cycling celebrities like former pro and current commentator Frankie Andreu.

In a sport where competitors try to save every gram of weight they can, the women of The Cyclery-4iiii cycling team will be carrying the weight of the world on their shoulders when they speed around The Heights in Thursday’s Giro di Burnaby.
Last December, the team lost one of its own in a traffic accident. Ellen Watters was about to graduate from the amateur junior development team to her first pro contract when she was struck by a car while on a training ride in New Brunswick.
Jenny Trew, The Cyclery-4iiii’s manager and coach, said Watters’ death hit hard.
“We have often used the phrase ‘cycling family,’ and it truly does feel like we have lost a member of our family,” Trew said. “She was an exceptionally bright light and I’m not sure it makes sense to anyone that she isn’t with us any longer.”
Trew said coming to B.C. Superweek has been especially difficult for the team as Watters loved racing in the week-long series of races around Metro Vancouver, and she thrived in the criterium style of racing like the Giro. And a new event in New Westminster would have given her the chance to race in front of her sister, who lives right near the course.
“She loved this week of racing. The criterium was a great race for her, wanting to hit out attack after attack,” Trew said. “We all have many memories of Ellen – both on and off the bike – rooted here.”
Trew said the team has pulled together and drawn strength from Watters’ memory as they barnstorm the North American racing circuit. Their kit features a white band with “RIDE ON LNH20” (LN for Ellen, H2O for Watters) on the sleeve. Some members have affixed stickers of Watters’ signature to their bikes.
But more importantly, Trew said, they try to race in a way that would have made Watters proud.
“Her style of racing was everything that our team is about, and each girl has honoured Ellen at different times this year by attacking and supporting their teammates selflessly,” Trew said. “She was a binding force during her lifetime, and the love she gave each of us will continue to bond for many years to come.”
That bond can be especially important in the hardscrabble existence of bike racers in North America, far from the glory and glamour of the UCI World Tour and renowned European races like the Tour de France. Prize money is scant, riders often bunk with local billets and cook their own meals to cut costs.
Those hardships are compounded for women racing on an amateur team, Trew said. Most of her riders have to weave their training and racing through jobs or school, or even both.
“Cycling for women is truly a labour of love at all levels,” Trew said. “It requires that the women have exceptional time management skills to excel. The travel can be hard, but working within a strong team allows the girls to enjoy many jokes and see fun places. We seem to take a lot of detours to donut shops across the continent.”
The team’s cohesion and ability to work together will be tested at the Giro. The flat, fast circuit means the bulk of the peloton will likely still be together for a massive bunch sprint to the finish, so the team that can create a strong lead-out train for their sprinter  will be rewarded at the line.
“We are here to race and to podium this week,” Trew said. “It will be a tough ask, but the girls are up