Rick Crawford (cycling)

Rick Crawford is an American endurance sports coach based in Durango, Colorado.[1] He has coached endurance athletes including Lance Armstrong, Levi Leipheimer and Willow Koerber, and managed elite/pro level cycling programs, including coaching the Fort Lewis College cycling team.[2][3]

Rick Crawford

Career

edit

Crawford started his coaching career guiding a young Lance Armstrong through his first paces as a professional triathlete. Chann McRae was the next prodigy to be influenced by Coach Crawford's counsel. After retiring from his own professional athletic career in 1992, Crawford started coaching full-time, boosting the careers of Todd Wells, Levi Leipheimer, Chris Wherry into the limelight. Shonny Vanlandingham and Jamie Whitmore earned XTERRA world championships under Crawford's tutelage. Willow Koerber credits Crawford for rescuing her career and taking her to the top of the world MTB rankings. Tom Danielson continues to improve under Crawford's watchful care. Olympic Biathlon twins Lanny and Tracy Barnes are now working directly with Crawford.

Rick was head coach for the Mercury–Viatel program during its heyday as a top-ranked Division 1 professional cycling program in 2001. He built a collegiate cycling dynasty at Fort Lewis College, leading them to ten national championships and the number one ranking over an eight-year stint.[3] Crawford co-founded the TargeTraining Professional Cycling Team, co-directing and managing the team. He was also involved with professional cycling outfit Team Type 1 in its formative years, and was instrumental in constructing the team's mission statement and management structure, handled all coaching and assisted in directing duties. Crawford was the coach/DS for the Bahati Foundation Pro Cycling Team and was progenitor of the RealCyclist Pro Cycling Team.

Crawford is now a staff member with the Chipotle Development Pro Cycling Team, Garmin–Cervélo's feeder squad. In December 2012, he was fired from his position as a coach at the Colorado Mesa University when he became apparent that he was involved in doping numerous cyclists, including Levi Leipheimer.[4][5]

Other work

edit

Crawford is involved in research at his physiology lab, the Durango Performance Center, in Durango, Colorado in conjunction with cardiologist/exercise physiologist Dr. Bruce Andrea.[2] Crawford is also working on the Dryside Velodrome Project in Durango that hopes to bring a velodrome to the town.[3]

Clients

edit
 
Rick and Lance Armstrong

References

edit
  1. ^ Polito, Rick (28 July 2009). "Mile-High Club: Do Oxygen Tents Boost Athletic Performance?". Gadget Lab. Wired. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
  2. ^ a b "Rick Crawford of Colorado Premier Training". Nashville Cyclist. 19 January 2010. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
  3. ^ a b c Sands, Will (21 October 2010). "Birth of a velodrome". The Durango Telegraph. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
  4. ^ Laura Weislo (18 December 2012). "Rick Crawford loses coaching job as new doping allegations emerge". Cycling News. Retrieved 18 December 2012.
  5. ^ Benson 2013-11-21T22:37:00Z, Daniel. "The story of Rick Crawford". cyclingnews.com. Retrieved 2020-01-16.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
edit