The Kids from Cool Lane Just Want to Ride Bikes
In May 2022, we took a spin with the Richmond Cycling Corps, a mountain-bike-racing team from the Virginia capital鈥檚 public-housing system. Coaches teach young riders how to shred trails and prepare for adult life. The kids, meanwhile, measure happiness one pedal stroke at a time.
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Pizza. At an Italian restaurant in a strip mall just outside an idyllic town in the Blue Ridge Mountains, seven teenage mountain-bike racers and two coaches crowd around a table. It was a busy Saturday in May 2022 at Virginia鈥檚 interscholastic mountain-biking series, known as VAHS.
The team, the Richmond Cycling Corps (RCC), consists of sixth-to-twelfth-graders who attend a variety of schools, but all have lived in or near public housing in the same part of Richmond, Virginia. I鈥檓 seated near the far end of the table. To my right, two eighth-grade boys talk excitedly: Chip, with his closely shorn hair and dimples, and Knowledge, a big, curious kid who鈥檚 somewhat new to mountain biking. Chip鈥檚 trying to persuade Knowledge to participate in a highly competitive racing series that鈥檚 part of the National Interscholastic
Cycling Association, or NICA.
Chip is serious about the idea. 鈥淏ro,鈥 he says. 鈥淣ICA?鈥
Knowledge enjoys mountain biking and loves being part of the team, but he鈥檚 on the fence about racing. 鈥淭here鈥檚 college recruiters at NICA races. And I鈥檓 not going to college,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 going to do four years of high school, then another four years of college?鈥
Chip鈥檚 giggling, twisting his soda straw. 鈥淏ro?鈥
Knowledge: 鈥淚鈥檓. Not. Racing NICA!鈥
Chip: 鈥淏ro. Bro. Bro. Bro. Bro.鈥
They both crack up.
Kamari, also in eighth grade and Knowledge鈥檚 longtime bestie, looks up from her pizza crust with light hazel eyes and whispers to me, 鈥淲here all have you been?鈥 She鈥檚 shy鈥攈er sibling, Tawante, an RCC alum, told me, 鈥淪he鈥檚 even shy with me, and I鈥檓 her brother!鈥濃攂ut she鈥檚 eager to explore the world beyond her home. Kamari described a favorite trip she鈥檇 been on with the RCC. 鈥淲e went up to Bryce鈥濃攁 skiing and mountain-biking resort about two and a half hours northwest of Richmond鈥斺渁nd we made a campfire. We played this game centipede. It鈥檚 kind of like hide and seek. The next day, we rode the bike park.鈥 They did downhill runs with big jumps and took the ski lift back to the top.
The older boys are squeezed in together on the opposite side of the table. One of the team鈥檚 three coaches, 36-year-old Brad Kaplan, is across from me. He used to be a scout for the Oakland Raiders, but after 12 years he left pro football and decided to raise a family. In 2020, he and his wife and their new baby moved from the Bay Area to Richmond, closer to his wife鈥檚 family, where their money would go further. Brad took graduate classes in nonprofit studies. Before working for the RCC, he knew nothing about mountain biking. But he鈥檚 comfortable working with young athletes.
Between greasy bites, Brad turns to Wop, a slender freshman with tightly twisted locks that fall just below his ears. 鈥淚 heard you lost someone this week,鈥 Brad says.
鈥淵eah,鈥 Wop replies. It was his older brother鈥檚 friend, Keshon.
鈥淗ow old was he?鈥
鈥淭wenty. He鈥檇 just gotten out of jail.鈥 Keshon was shot in Creighton Court, the projects where Wop used to live, near a convenience store where a lot of kids get shot or shot at.
Wop doesn鈥檛 know if he鈥檒l go to the funeral. It鈥檚 May, and he鈥檚 already been to four this year.