From L to R: Liz Cartwright, Brian Fawcett, Fiona Graham, Keith Fawcett, Hannah McDade, Grant McElroy, Naiqwan Pelman.
(Photos © J. Maus)
Last weekend, the Oregon Bicycle Racing Association held their annual meeting and banquet. The event was an opportunity to recognize our state’s finest racers and look back on what was another stellar year for the organization.
OBRA, an organization that promotes, officiates, and sanctions bike racing events throughout Oregon, is the foundation of a thriving race scene. In 2009, OBRA memberships ballooned to 4,442 riders, a 13% increase over the previous year.
But OBRA, in typical fashion, didn’t look to take center stage at the banquet Saturday night — it was racers that were put in the spotlight.
Gary Brannan was there to claim his fourth-place spot among in the 70+ year-old category. “There’s only four of us,” he said, smiling ear to ear, “but it’s better than being dead.”
The guy Brannan chased all season was Clark Henry, who races for the Beaverton Bicycle Club. Henry took home the award Best All-Around Rider in the Masters 70+ category. He’s 75 years old.
I had a nice chat with Mr. Henry and his wife Marge. Clark told me about his 10th place finish at the National Championship Road Race in Salem in the 1960s (he didn’t recall the year). “I took a flyer with two laps to go — and then got caught,” he said, with a slight hint of heartbreak still noticeable in his voice. “I was 10th in the nation.”
These days, Clark can’t walk normally because his knees have no more cartilage in them, forcing him to do what he calls the “old man shuffle.” But on his bike it’s a different story.
“When I’m on my bike I feel like I’m in my 30s… my knees don’t bother me at all when I’m riding.”
As we spoke near the exit door, everyone would stop, shake his hand and say “Keep racing Clark!” to which Marge would reply, “Don’t encourage him!” She thinks he’s crazy, but she still shows up at every race to cheer him on.
Congratulations to Clark, all the amazing OBRA athletes, and to the fine team of people behind the scenes that make racing in Oregon accessible and fun for everyone — from 10-year old Grant McElroy to my new, 75-year old friend, Clark Henry.