Bike Day LA is a group of cyclists that organizes events to support and promote bicycles in the Los Angeles area

Visit our website at BikeDayLA.org


Thursday, September 10, 2009

Another Busy Morning.



So did anyone go ride with Lance Armstrong this morning? I want to know how it went! Here's what I've found via Twitter:

"Joshua_Porter: Rad early morning ride in Griffith park with @lancearmstrong. Me & 5 other idiots rode it fixed. Passing roadies going uphill is priceless."
"roadbikeaction: Rode with Lance in LA today. Great morning with 750-1,000 other cyclists. Thanks @lancearmstrong for showing up"
"BlEdMitch: Just got back from a ride with @lancearmstrong. The pace was tough and the Griffith Park route was tougher. Road bike next time."
"dikpose: Got home from riding with @lancearmstrong ... or as I like to call it, riding alone and almost getting lapped by Lance. It was a great time!"
"FMSwild1Chris: @lancearmstrong awesome ride.........thanks for reminding me that I still have asthma lol"

As well here's what I found from the LA Time Blog:
"It started as a tweet from one of the world's greatest cyclists:

"Hey LA - get out of your cars and get on your bikes. Time to ride. 7:30 tomorrow am. Griffith Park, LA Zoo parking lot. See you there.." Lance Armstrong wrote Wednesday on Twitter.

The message spread quickly, and when 19-year-old Richard Ponce of Silver Lake saw it online, he immediately got on the phone and called his friends to join.

"I've been following Lance Armstrong, and he's always been a hero to me," Ponce said this morning, perched atop his yellow bicycle in the zoo's parking lot. "He comes to L.A., brings everybody together."

Sure enough, hundreds of people turned out this morning to ride for an hour alongside the seven-time Tour de France winner in Griffith Park. Some woke up early and drove to Los Angeles from San Diego and other Southern California cities. Others, such as Ponce, live just a few minutes away.

Armstrong arrived at the parking lot a few minutes after 7:30 a.m. and was surrounded by cyclists hoping for autographs and a handshake, and news crews hoping to catch the athlete on camera before he sped off.

"It's mayhem; it's crazy," said Dave White, 27, of Burbank. "I'm looking for an autograph."

In a black jersey and yellow helmet, Armstrong led the group through three loops around a section of the park. Not everyone at Griffith Park knew what was happening. As the cyclists went by and photographers positioned themselves along the route, onlookers wondered about the commotion.

"Did you hear this? Lance Armstrong is coming by!" one woman, who said she was visiting from New York, told a friend near the Wilson-Harding Management Center. "What?" the friend asked. "Lance Armstrong is coming by! That's why all the photographers are here," the first woman said.

Most riders said they wanted to get a glimpse of Armstrong, the man they had seen so often on television but seldom, if ever, in person.

Some said he had inspired them with his story of battling cancer. Margaret McGlynn, 44, said she is on a Disney triathlon team and trains on her bicycle in the area about twice a week.

McGlynn said she went to see him "because he's awesome," but also because members of her family had been diagnosed with cancer in the last year. She held up her wrist, which sported a yellow Livestrong bracelet.

The ride ended about 8:30 a.m. and most of the cyclists, after trying to get an autograph at the end of the ride, talked of beginning their days and going to work.

Armstrong said he enjoyed the event, and joked that a couple of the cyclists had given him a "hurt on the climb" up a hill.
"It was good," he said. "Be back soon."

A little later, he sent out another tweet:

"Great ride in Griffith Park. Thanks, LA!" he wrote. "... Off to Montreal ..."

-- Ari B. Bloomekatz in Griffith Park"


Here's what the route looked like.

And the link to the route.

No comments:

Post a Comment