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Can
you introduce yourself?
My name is Katie Compton, I'm a US cyclocross racer and riding for the
Planet Bike team.
Why did you choose cycling, especially cyclocross
and MTB, as your sport?
Because I love riding my bike. I've been doing it since I was a little
girl and was hooked from the beginning. I enjoy the technical aspects
of off road riding and it's more fun than the road.
Which
hobbies do you have next to cycling?
Skiing in the winter, driving our BMW M3 in the summer, track (velodrome)
racing, mtb riding, following F1, cooking, drinking wine, reading, playing
with the dogs.

Katie Compton in action during the 2009 CX World Championships in Hoogerheide
Photo © 2009 Bart Hazen
How do you look back on the early part of the
CX season with the win in Treviso and lots of races on American soil like
Las Vegas, Sun Prairie, Covington, Middletown etc.?
I'm super excited with the way the season has started. I'm riding well
and have had some great races so far. I've also managed to avoid my leg
cramping issues so far this year, so any time I can do that, I'm a happy
person. It's a long season so I hope to keep this form and build on it.
Due
to your win in Treviso you are the first leader of the 2009/2010 World
Cup. Is the World Cup a goal for you this year? You already have a comfortable
lead on girls like Vos and Kupfernagel who recently started their season.
Yes, winning the World Cup overall is an important goal of mine this season.
I'm off to a great start but there's a lot of racing left to do. I'm looking
forward to races with Hanka and Vos because they will help make the races
more exciting.
You have won a silver (2007) and a bronze (2009)
medal at CX World Championships. How do you see your chances to gain the
missing gold medal at the World Championships in Tabor?
I think I have a good chance this year, as long as I come in with good
form and the course is hard and technical, I'm confident I'll have a great
race.

Katie Compton finished as second in last season's World Cup of Pijnacker
Photo © 2009 Bart Hazen
What
is a typical training week and preparation towards a big race looks like?
It all depends on where I am in my training period and how much travel
I have to do prior to the race. I ride anywhere from 12-19hrs/week with
long aerobic intervals and also cross specific high intensity. I make
sure to get plenty of recovery and rest in the week prior to a race. My
training differs from a typical pro's training plan in the amount of recovery
I need. Due to my leg cramping issues, I have to add more recovery to
the plan and need more easy days than most in order to feel good. I still
manage to get all the necessary workouts in to ride fast, I just can't
follow a typical periodization.
What kind of CX races/race conditions you like the most?
The harder and more technical the better.
Last
year you missed a part of the season with a chronic leg cramping issue.
Is this problem totally solved or how do they control it?
It's always there so I just have to manage the symptoms and try my best
to avoid the cramping. It puts me off the bike for 3-4 weeks at a time
so I need to make sure I do everything I can to stay healthy. They are
also extremely painful so I get really cranky since I can't ride or do
much of anything when they come on. I just have to wait it out till my
legs finally recover. There isn't any cure for it so I'm proactive about
moving around and stretching when I travel and I never take a day off
the bike since rest days seem to trigger an episode. If I don't have time
to ride then I get on the rollers for at least 30min a day. Now I travel
with rollers too so I can always spin my legs out.

Compton won three World Cups last season. She won in Koksijde, Nommay
and Roubaix
Photo © 2009 Bart Hazen
What
performance/achievement you are the most proud of in your career thus
far?
Winning the gold medal in the 3km tandem pursuit with my partner at the
Athen's Paralympic Games. It was a great ride and I had great legs, the
kind of legs where you just want to go faster and faster because you can.
And winning the Roubaix cross World Cup last year because the conditions
were tough and I overcame an amazingly bad start to win the race.
What
race(s) has been a favorite of yours?
Koksijde World Cup and Asper-Gavere because they are tough, technical
races.
Some might know you have won two gold medals,
a silver medal and a bronze medal at the Paralympics together with your
blind partner Karissa Whitsell. Any chance to consider it again in a later
stage of your career with another partner? It was a problem back than
to combine both because riders were not allowed to enter any bicycle races
which award UCI points.
Yes, I would race tandems again if the opportunity arises. I really enjoyed
racing on the tandem and got a lot out of it. It made me stronger and
taught me how to train better too. I love the speed and the teamwork factor,
it feels so great when two riders mesh well and can ride fast. Karissa
and I had lots of success racing together and made a good team.

Compton took the bronze medal at the 2009 Worlds in Hoogerheide
Photo © 2009 Bart Hazen
You and your husband have coaching programs for
beginner athletes to world class athletes. What is the program all about?
We have both coached for a long time, I was a coach before I was a pro
cyclist. I still coach about 12-15 athletes of all levels and disciplines
and really enjoy it. It keeps me busy all year. Mark still coaches as
well and he has about 5-8 athletes at one time. Since he has quite a bit
more bike work to do than I, he doesn't have time to coach many more than
that. We don't advertise our services and mainly pick new athletes up
through referrals so we can keep a manageable level of work.
Cyclocross isn't a Olympic Sport. More and more
CX riders start to combine CX and MTB, like Sven Nys for example, in order
to compete for their country at the 2012 Olympics in London. Do you have
any plans for the 2012 Olympic MTB event? And does that mean as from 2011
more MTB races, less CX races. Or just combining them like you do now.
I've always been a mountainbiker and did that before I started cross and
before I was good at cross. This year I started doing more mtb races at
the top level to see how I fair at that, and I'm happy with my results
so far. There is still room for improvement and mtb racing is something
I want to race better. I will make 2012 a goal of mine and will have to
trim back the cross racing a bit prior to 2012 in order to do that, but
I never cut cross completely. If I can realistically qualify for the Olympics
then it's something I will work towards 100%. I think racing cross makes
me a better racer in general so I will always have that in my plan. Mtb
racing requires the ability to be a great climber, which isn't something
I do naturally well, so I really have to train that aspect of my racing
in order to compete at the top level of the sport. That is something I
will do but cross is still what I love the most and think is much more
fun than mtb racing. Cross is just a faster more dynamic race. Sometimes
I feel like I'm racing in slow motion on the mtb, and it's about as exciting
as watching paint dry.
How do you combine coaching with your career as a bike racer?
Coaching fits in well with our schedule. We can coach from anywhere and
do it along with traveling, unlike many jobs. I like having something
else to think about other than my own training and racing. Also, racing
while coaching keeps our minds fresh with how intervals feel, how fatigue
effects your training, as well as how traveling and stress can have an
impact on your results. We feel we can empathize with our athletes better
because we are consistently feeling those emotions, and if you're away
from racing and training for too long, you can forget how they effect
your daily training.

Katie Compton on her best in the tough races
Photo © 2009 Bart Hazen
Who has inspired you, or currently inspires you
to race?
I don't have anyone that inspires me to race. I've always just loved riding
my bike and racing is a part of that. I want to be the best that I can
and that is a motivator in itself. I like the feeling of being tired and
how kicking my own ass makes me tougher. I do have some friends I train
with along with my husband to push me every day and can make training
more enjoyable, but I can't think of any one person who inspires me to
do this. I think the feeling of winning is all the inspiration I need
to push myself and suffer in training.
What are your goals for the remaining 2009/2010
season? and if you don't mind
. long term career goals as a person
and cyclist?
I actually don't ever think about long term goals, I don't know what I
want to do 2 years from now, let alone my "long term" plans.
I know for this year, my goals are to win the World Cup overall, win cross
worlds and win nationals. Not sure what I want to do after that, cycling
wise. I guess if I don't accomplish one or more of those goals this season
then those will carry on to be my goals in the coming years. If I can
qualify for Olympics on the mtb then that will be a goal. As for plans
after cycling, I'm thinking about going back to school for nursing and
then we'll see after that. As long as my husband and I are happy with
what we are doing then we'll be satisfied with whatever the outcome is.
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