Compton dominates US cyclo-cross nationals to win record 15th consecutive title
Gilbert a surprise second, Noble third




















Katie C🐼ompton (K⭕FC Racing) added a record 15th consecutive elite women's national cyclo-cross title to her long list of achievements in the sport at the USA Cycling Cyclo-cross National Championships in Louisville on Sunday. She won the race by over two minutes ahead of a surprise runner-up Sunny Gilbert (Van Dessel Factory Racing) and third-placed Ellen Noble (Trek Factory Racing).
"To win today it f♍eels really good, and it's still em🅠otional," said Compton, who now heads into the second half of her season as she looks toward the World Championships in Denmark.
"I was really excited about today. This season has been really rough, and I've had a loಌt of downs this year. I just tried to come to this race rested and feeling as good as I could. The other races before this haven't gone great, so I thought I should rest before this one.
"Then I've got a lot of racing in fron🎃t of me. I'm heading to Belgium tomorrow, and I'm there until the end of February. Right now, I feel like my season is just starting so hopefully I can start training hard and racing. I'm coming around 🌼for Worlds again.”
Compton, who just turnไed 40 this month, is still racing at the top her game and🥀 currently ranked second in the world behind world champion Sanne Cant.
She was the out-right favourite heading i꧃nto the championships race, in part because of her strength and previous success at the event, but also because the thick, muddy conditions suited her perfectly.
"This was pretty perfect," Compton said. "The🐟re was quite a bit of running, and I'm not as great as some on that, but luckily with the technical bits, I can carry speed. The running wasn't bad but it was tough uphill. I did the best I could."
She unclipped from her pedals at t🌄he start, but stayed calm and moved what seemed effortlessly through the mud to catch up to her rivals.
Sh💦e orbited the circuit and gained a handful of seconds each lap on Noble and Gilbert. She finished the race over two minutes ahead and secured her 15th title on what she called the most epic courseꩲ of all.
The race for second was a little more unpredictable as Kaitie Keough (Cannondale) was n𝔉owhere to be seen, but Gilbert, Noble and Rebecca 🍷Fahringer battled for the silver and bronze.
Gilbert's running background might have given her an advantage through the mud, and she surged ahead of Noble on the laꦚst lap and crossed the finish line in second place.
Noble crossed the line༺ a disappointing third while Fahringer faded and finished fourth.
How it unfolded
Ellen N🔯oble (Trek Factory Racing) sprinted off the pavement and into the hole-shot followed by Kaitie Keough (Cannondale), while Katie Compton (KFC Racing) struggled with her pedals and started on the grass ten riders back.
Noble cleared the field through the first half of the first lap, charging through the mud and staying well ahead of the cღh📖aotic start.
Compton found her rhythm and raced her way fo🥀rward through the field. She quickly caught Noble Keoug🔥h lost ground in the opening lap.
Rebecca Fahringer (Kona-Maxxis-Shimano) trailed the two leaders; Noble and Compton, by just a few 🎃seconds over the first 🙈significant hill.
Compton charged passed Noble on the steep descent, and weaved through hay-bale obstacles, pushing through to the front o💞f the race.
Noble fought to stay as close as possible to Compton but lost several seconds, and by the time the pair raced through the mechanic's pits and back onto the pavement to start the second lap, Compton was a comfortable 10 seconds ahea𓆉d.
T𓆉he 14-time national champion showed her experience over the very ch𝔍allenging mud sections riding very smooth. She transitioned from the riding sections to the running sections with ease and opened her lead further on each passing lap.
Noble, also a World-Cup mountain bike racer, ꦰused those skills to handle the technical sections. However, she struggled a little more than Compton through the thick mud and along the running sections.
With two laps to go, Compton pushed her lead out to over a minute. The race for second place heated up⛦ as Fahringer caught up to Noble, and passed her through the mud, and Gilbert closed in on the pair.
Gilbert, who comes frౠom a running background, used her lengthy stride to run ahead of Noble on the muddy uphill. Fahringer might have burnt too many matches to catch up to the front and began to fade.
Gilbert and Noble raced neck-to-neck through the last lap, with Noble struggling to stay on Gilbert's wheel. Gilbert opened a gap through the last lap, and despite a crash on the descent, she hel⭕d off Noble to take second place.
Full Results
# | Rider Name (Country) Team | Result |
---|---|---|
1 | Katherine Compton (USA) | 0:52:23 |
2 | Sunny Gilbert (USA) Van Dessel Factory Team | 0:02:12 |
3 | Ellen Noble (USA) Trek Factory Racing | 0:02:38 |
4 | Rebecca Fahringer (USA) Amy D. Foundation | 0:03:24 |
5 | Kaitlin Keough (USA) Cannondale | 0:04:58 |
6 | Regina Legge (USA) Green Line Velo driven by Zipca | 0:06:00 |
7 | Lily Williams (USA) The Pony Shop p/b KPMG | 0:07:16 |
8 | Sarah Sturm (USA) Specialized - Tenspeed Hero | 0:08:02 |
9 | Courtenay Mcfadden (USA) Washington State Bicycle Associ | 0:08:34 |
10 | Erica Zaveta (USA) Garneau-Easton p/b Transitions | 0:08:54 |
11 | Jennifer Malik (USA) | 0:09:31 |
12 | Raylyn Nuss (USA) Gateway Harley-Davidson Trek | 0:09:44 |
13 | Beth Ann Orton (USA) | 0:10:25 |
14 | Crystal Anthony (USA) New England Bicycle Racing Asso | 0:11:26 |
15 | Cassandra Maximenko (USA) Van Dessel Factory Team | 0:11:46 |
16 | Carla Williams (USA) Deschutes Brewery | 0:12:09 |
17 | Arley Kemmerer (USA) Fearless Femme Racing | 0:12:46 |
18 | Jane Rossi (USA) | 0:13:14 |
19 | Caroline Nolan (USA) | 0:15:08 |
20 | Samantha Runnels (USA) Texas Bicycle Racing Associatio | -1 Lap |
21 | Kristen Legan (USA) | Row 20 - Cell 2 |
22 | Taylor Kuyk-White (USA) | Row 21 - Cell 2 |
23 | Anne Usher (USA) | Row 22 - Cell 2 |
24 | Elizabeth Sheldon (USA) Crosshairs Cycling | Row 23 - Cell 2 |
25 | Anna Megale (USA) Team UpCycle | Row 24 - Cell 2 |
26 | Caitlin Bernstein (USA) | -2 Laps |
27 | Anna Dorovskikh (USA) Boulder Cycle Sport | Row 26 - Cell 2 |
28 | Laurel Rathbun (USA) | Row 27 - Cell 2 |
29 | Meghan Owens (USA) | Row 28 - Cell 2 |
30 | Rebecca Gross (USA) | Row 29 - Cell 2 |
31 | Rachel Rubino (USA) | Row 30 - Cell 2 |
32 | Emily Werner (USA) Amy D. Foundation | Row 31 - Cell 2 |
33 | Emily Curley (USA) Corner Cycle Cycling Club | Row 32 - Cell 2 |
34 | Amanda Nauman (USA) | Row 33 - Cell 2 |
35 | Gabriella Sterne (USA) Vanderkitten CX | Row 34 - Cell 2 |
36 | Chelsea Weidinger (USA) | Row 35 - Cell 2 |
37 | Taryn Mudge (USA) Mathletes Racing | Row 36 - Cell 2 |
38 | Leslie Ethridge (USA) ORNOT | Row 37 - Cell 2 |
39 | Erin Faccone (USA) B2C2 Cycling Club | Row 38 - Cell 2 |
40 | Katrina Engelsted (USA) Petunia Mafia Cycling | Row 39 - Cell 2 |
41 | Susan Livingston (USA) Amy D. Foundation | Row 40 - Cell 2 |
42 | Avanell Scales (USA) Deschutes Brewery | Row 41 - Cell 2 |
43 | Kelly Paduch (USA) | Row 42 - Cell 2 |
44 | Natalie Tapias (USA) JAM Fund / NCC | Row 43 - Cell 2 |
45 | Alexandra Campbellforte (USA) Mid Atlantic Bicycle Racing Ass | Row 44 - Cell 2 |
46 | Natalie Smith (USA) Bicycle Heaven / PVA | Row 45 - Cell 2 |
DNS | Kathryn Cumming (USA) Jalapeno Cycling | Row 46 - Cell 2 |
DNS | Danielle Arman (USA) Bicycle Racing Association of C | Row 47 - Cell 2 |
DNS | Brittlee Bowman (USA) RSCX - House Ind - DWR - Herman | Row 48 - Cell 2 |
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Kirsten Frattini is the Deputy Editor of Cyclingnews, overseeing the global racing content plan.
Kirsten has a background in Kinesiology and Health Science. She has been involved in cycling from the community and grassroots level to professional cycling's biggest races, reporting on the WorldTour, Spr🦩ing Classics,﷽ Tours de France, World Championships and Olympic Games.
She began her sports journalism career with Cyclingnews as a North American Correspondent in 2006. In 2018, Kirsten became Women's Editor – overseeing the content strategy, race coverage and growth of women's professional cycling – before becoming🅰 Deputy Editor in 2023.
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