Photo by Photo Submitted
ROAD RACER 鈥 Zachary Bell, a Yukon-born pro cyclist with two Olympics and a national road title under his belt, looks to heighten his racing trajectory as well as focus more on his two charitable initiatives.
Photo by Photo Submitted
ROAD RACER 鈥 Zachary Bell, a Yukon-born pro cyclist with two Olympics and a national road title under his belt, looks to heighten his racing trajectory as well as focus more on his two charitable initiatives.
Zachary Bell, the Yukon鈥檚 own Olympian cyclist,
Zachary Bell, the Yukon鈥檚 own Olympian cyclist, returned to his home nation this week to reflect on his future and on Canada鈥檚 performance at the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow over the past two weeks.
鈥淚 think the team made pretty good progress,鈥 he said in an interview yesterday. Canada placed fourth in the 4,000-metre team pursuit, behind top finisher Australia, England and New Zealand.
鈥淚 think the stuff on the road I wasn鈥檛 quite as happy with, but ... we spent quite a lot of time working on those track events,鈥 he said.
Bell also finished 10th in the men鈥檚 20-kilometre scratch race.
A Team Canada member for nearly a decade, Bell finally earned a national road title in June 2013. The Watson Lake native won the Canadian Road Championships Men鈥檚 Elite road race in St. Georges, Que., more than a dozen years after taking up the sport.
That crown bestowed the right to wear the Canadian National Champion jersey at every race for 12 months.
鈥(A)t first, I felt almost unworthy of the weight of it,鈥 Bell wrote on his blog last month. 鈥淎thletes in this sport dream of what wearing the jersey for a year will be like. Personally, I was first and foremost proud.鈥
Bell, a two-time Olympian 鈥 London in 2012, Beijing in 2008 鈥 and five-time Canadian Road Championships medalist, actually found the laurels of the jersey a let- down, at least in some ways.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 reap huge financial rewards,鈥 he wrote. 鈥... My jersey turned into little more (than) the extra bag of peanuts on the plane. They are nice to have but no one picks an airline because of them.鈥
Then again, he admitted, the national title did help secure his place on a new, top-tier Canadian pro-cycling crew, Team SmartStop. 鈥淭hat home, SmartStop, seemed like a small shack with modest beginnings when I first arrived, but it has proven to be a band of brothers,鈥 he wrote.
At age 31, Bell is also taking stock of his situation in life.
鈥淚鈥檓 playing it year to year right now, and I鈥檒l know when it isn鈥檛 feeling right for me,鈥 he told the Star from Vancouver, where he鈥檚 made his home on the North Shore for the past seven years.
鈥淚 think as long as I can continue to make progress on the road and make some positive contributions to my team, I鈥檒l keep on rolling.鈥
Coaching is one hat Bell could see himself wearing in the years ahead.
鈥淚 think it would be wrong to turn my back on the experience I have in the sport, and there鈥檚 a chance that I鈥檒l remain in it completely, but I definitely want to have a bit more of a dynamic lifestyle after.鈥
Part of that dynamism may include expanding on the charitable efforts he鈥檚 made over the past couple years.
Bell recently founded Paxton鈥檚 Lights for Hope, a fund for the BC Women鈥檚 Hospital neonatal intensive care unit.
The initiative emerged out of a profound tragedy. In October 2012, he and his wife Rebecca lost their infant son Paxton to an acute, severe brain event suffered in utero. 鈥淩ebecca and I love him with all our hearts after only a short time,鈥 Bell wrote on his blog.
鈥淓ven though he never had a chance with us here we got to know him and his personality over the last nine months. He has forever changed things for us. 鈥淐ycling and its challenges seem small compared to what he fought against,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淲e will miss him.'鈥
Bell is also working on a second project, the Zach Bell Rural Youth Sport Initiative. 鈥淲e have some backers for it, we just have to figure out the logistics,鈥 he said.
Bell has been in touch with Sport Yukon, a non-profit, to establish funds for teams and individual youths in the communities, money that could also be put toward camps and coaches in remote areas.
鈥淚t would be for those athletes that are talented enough to be able to do it, but for whatever reason haven鈥檛 been identified or haven鈥檛 had the chance to do it,鈥 he said. Beyond athletics, Bell is considering going back to school for a graduate degree in architecture, 鈥渙r something a bit more hands-on like the trades.鈥
He has a general studies degree with an architecture minor, having studied at the University of Calgary and Queen鈥檚 University.
For now, though, Bell is already in Colorado gearing up for the week-long USA Pro Challenge, which will take riders through 11 cities on a gruelling seven-stage affair of mountains, wind and energy bars. It begins in less than two weeks.
In early September, he will take on the Alberta Pro Cycling Event, another 11- community race with six stages that kicks off Sept. 4.
In order to encourage thoughtful and responsible discussion, website comments will not be visible until a moderator approves them. Please add comments judiciously and refrain from maligning any individual or institution. Read about our user comment and privacy policies.
Your name and email address are required before your comment is posted. Otherwise, your comment will not be posted.
Be the first to comment