I am one of thousands of people who can say with pride that they raced with 辞苍肠别.听
In my case, it was an inconsequential cyclocross race held after dark about a decade ago. Steve, being an immortal cycling god, crushed the field and lapped me. But through some merciful turn of fate, I got to share a podium step with Steve after being named “fastest slow person”聽of the night. I have ridden with and and 聽but the memory of standing next to Tilford, both of us splattered in mud, him whispering in my ear that I had done awesome, is something that will forever make me smile.聽
. A man who long had embodied invincibility perished in a bizarre and tragic incident on Interstate 70 near the Utah-Colorado border. News reports indicated that shortly after a big rig overturned in the early morning hours, Tilford's van crashed into the trailer. At that point, no one was badly injured. But soon after, a second tractor trailer plowed into the wreckage, leaving Tilford and the driver of that truck dead. He was 57. Steve is survived by his wife, Trudi, who was in Europe working as a soigneur with .
In an instant, American cycling lost one of its all-time greats. A quick summation of his professional and elite highlights does not really capture what made him extraordinary, but it's valuable context. He , represented the U.S. as a road cyclist in four World Championships, , and came in second at the 1996 Olympic Trials and earned five Masters World Championships in that discipline.聽
In an instant, American cycling lost one of its all-time greats.
It's fair to say that Steve ripped people's legs off for more than 40 years. He began racing at the age of 14, when he was a student at Topeka High School聽in Kansas'聽capital city, and never stopped. Multiple friends guess that he might have contested more than 2,500 bike races since his early days in Kansas. For decades after his professional career was over, Steve would show up at elite races鈥攆our-corner crits, road races, cross races, mountain-bike races, whatever鈥攁nd often triumph over competitors who were half his age.聽
During and after his professional career, . His career racing on the road in Europe intersected with the start of an era of unprecedented biochemical shenanigans, and Steve harbored unmitigated hostility to racers who doped. For years, he wrote a blog that explicitly expressed his view that people who cheated didn't just violate some cherished values of sport 鈥 they took life opportunities from other deserving athletes. While some observers saw nuance and shades of gray in the challenges and flaws of the sport, Tilford tended to see things in black and white鈥攕ome people were cheaters, period, end of story. He never was afraid to call someone out; in fact, he seemed to relish it. I didn't always agree with his point of view but it was impossible to question his passion or his intentions to improve the sport.
After hearing the news of Steve's death, I spent part of the day talking to people who knew him well鈥攆riends, teammates, competitors. The picture that emerged from these conversations is of a man who built his life鈥攁 wonderful life鈥攁round his joy of racing bikes. A man who had childlike qualities and passion that most of us cannot sustain for a lifetime, someone who seemed to have no conception of retiring from sport. A man who said what he believed and lived how he believed.
I talked with retired , who has known Tilford for a couple decades and found inspiration in the way he lived on and off the bike. “He had this personality where he was all-in for every moment, every race,” Johnson said. “Whether he was 28 or 48, if he showed up at a crit or a cross race, the guy looked at it as today's opportunity to do his best. I'm telling you, that guy was never afraid to jump in any race.”聽
“Steve lived and breathed bike racing,”聽said Bill Elliston, a retired pro who also raced with and against Tilford in multiple disciplines for two decades. “I mean the guy had a huge engine and could win races on any terrain or surface, but what impressed me the most was how he was a lifer in the sport. Most people who race think at some point they need to stop and get on with the real world, but Steve showed me and other people that you can make a life out of it. I鈥檓 48 and still racing against pros鈥攈e taught me that you can keep at it if you love it.”
Mark Legg, a former pro and husband to , admits that he didn't like Tilford聽until he got to know him well. “We came to become friends and I never got to express my mistake to him鈥擨 wish I did,” admitted Legg, who also said he'll miss Steve's “slightly goofy”聽personality. “He was such a good guy inside and out. The way I want to remember him is with those groovy 70s flowing locks under his helmet, cruising around on his bike making it rain pain on the guys trying to hold onto his rear wheel.”
Mountain bike legend Ned Overend, another guy who has rained pain for decades, recalled his former teammate's solicitous side. “The reason so many people will miss Tilford is because he genuinely cared about other people and went out of his way to help them,”聽said Overend. “When he was racing on the Specialized mountain bike team, it was like he was a self-appointed member of the support staff鈥攈e was always positive; he wanted to see other people succeed. We used to share hotel rooms and the night before an important race he has other people's bikes in the room and he's wrenching on them, friends of his from wherever, that he was helping out. He was a sensitive guy but tough as nails.”
I talked with a couple that was among Tilford's closest friends鈥reigning Olympic triathlon gold medalist Gwen Jorgensen and her husband, . Steve attended their wedding and goaded them into biking 100 kilometers to pick up their marriage certificate. (He came along, of course.)聽Both Jorgensen and Lemieux talked with great admiration about Tilford's handy side鈥攅specially his elaborate skill laying tile鈥攁nd how he had a plan to visit their new house in Portland, Oregon, next week to help with some remodeling projects. Then we got to talking about bike racing. “He was so in the moment and so aggressive at every race because every race was important to him,”聽said Lemieux, who first remembers meeting Steve at a 2006 that Tilford won.”鈥淗is mind was not floating around the way normal people would. He was fully in the moment of every minute of every race.”
Jorgensen still stunned by the loss, talked about the annual vacations they took with Tilford, his exuberance of jumping in a cold lake at 10:30 p.m., the time she woke up at 1 a.m. and found him tinkering in the garage. “I learned a lot from Steve鈥攁bout patience, the way he didn't make plans, the way little things could make him so excited,”聽she said, choking up. 鈥淚鈥檓 sorry, it鈥檚 been a tough day.鈥澛
Also mourning was , who first met Tilford in the mid 1990s when he was doing neutral support in races for Shimano. He remembers that unlike many pros, Steve was “friendly, polite, and respectful,”聽and fully engaged in giving product feedback. “Steve raced every discipline but, man, did he shine in mountain bike criteriums,”聽DiStefano recalled. “He would just hammer on those narrow, slick mountain bike tires and grind everyone off his wheel. I have this loop in my head 鈥 聽it'd be a sweet GIF these days 鈥 of him at the nighttime crit in Scottsdale just flying through this series of corners on a line no one else could handle.”
DiStefano took a stab at describing his grief. “Losing Steve feels like a familiar place has been taken from me,”聽he said. “I don't go to races year after year any longer and it might be several years before I find my way back to the or . While I never thought directly about it, I guess I knew Steve would be there and, at some point walking around, I'd see him. He'd stop to say hello. He was always coming from somewhere and about to head off to somewhere with stories about both. I'll miss those conversations about the journey he was on and the mutual friends we had, about how one of us had seen someone the other knew. I'll miss seeing the continuation of the forward and upward trajectory he was on. Every cyclist on Facebook shared, commented, or saw the story about the聽105-year-old Frenchman who set the new record for 100+ this year. I'd bet all of Steve's friends expected to see him in a straight up elite field at some race somewhere when he was 100.”
Davis Phinney, an American road cycling star in the 1980s and early 90s, wrote me from Europe to share his memories of Tilford. “The thing that stands out for me with Steve was his undiminished enthusiasm for bike racing in any form,”聽said Phinney, who first raced against Tilford in the late 1970s. “Back in the day, Steve was always the first rider to attack off the start line鈥攈e was just so fired up to get the race going. And in later years, the stories are legendary of him patching himself up after crashing and getting back in the game. Always in the game. I ran into him a few years back at a criterium where after a fall in the final turn he was torn up. Bleeding. But when he saw me he excitedly launches into a story from when we were racing together years ago and wouldn't let Trudi attend to his wounds till he'd finished the story. That was Steve鈥攋ust irrepressible.”
Former pro Adam Myerson said he “cried at his desk a lot” when he heard that Steve had died. When asked to describe Tilford's racing ability, Myerson had plenty to say. “Steve was just really, really good at bike racing, and really good at squeezing every ounce of energy out of himself,”聽he said. “He wasn't a sprinter, but he could sprint. He wasn't a TT rider, but he could ride away at the perfect moment, solo. He wasn't a climber, but he wasn't going to get dropped, either. When it was the right time to attack, he attacked, regardless of how good he did or didn't feel. I'm going to miss him being the crotchety old man he's been for decades. Yelling at me for no reason, trying to get me to do something in a race that benefited him more than me.”
Then Myerson tried to explain how or why Tilford remained a top racer for decades after he left the professional ranks. “Steve was, in many ways, cycling's equivalent of surf or ski bum,”聽Myerson said. “But I don't want to use those terms in a negative way, because I relate to it so strongly, understand intimately why he stayed out there, and can't imagine denying him the happiness it gave him. Racing was a lifestyle for him, so work and relationships sort of formed around that, not the other way around. He never stopped caring.”
Almost everyone I talked with at some point mentioned 鈥攁nd the people he felt were in the wrong. “He was never afraid to call out bullshit, and he often knew the backstory to support his claims,”聽said Myerson.聽
One person who , the . Even though the two did not always see eye to eye, Vaughters said he had deep respect for Tilford. “I respected Steve even though he pounded on me because, end of the day, he was after the same end goal, regards doping, that I was,”聽Vaughters said. “And he was uncompromising with聽his words pursuing that. So, while I was hurt by his words, I knew what he was saying was coming from a good place. And I respected that. Always.”
When asked to assess how Tilford was able to race competitively for so long, Vaughters said “the dude was the quintessential road warrior his entire life” and then relayed a funny story. “As part of our ongoing debates, I invited Steve out to get tested by our sports science crew,”聽Vaughters recalled. “So, I can tell you as a matter of fact: the reason he ripped people's legs off is that he had a very big motor. He was very physically talented. Very big. The sports science dudes were a bit shocked a guy that age still had so much under the hood.”
Then Vaughters and I got to talking about the horrific scene out on I-70 early Wednesday morning. Out of the blue, Vaughters said “I keep wondering why he was still out on the highway. Bet you anything he was looking for his dog in the wreck.”
I had no idea so I made some calls. Multiple people told me that had heard that Tilford had moved away from the wreckage, but, deeply concerned that his beloved dog, Tucker, was loose, had walked back toward his truck to find a leash. (Steve would be relieved to know that Tucker is fine.)
I wrote Vaughters back and told him what I'd heard. “Fuck,”聽he replied. “Shows he was a good guy鈥攁ll the way to the end.”
All the way to the end. From the start to the finish鈥攐f thousands of bike races, in every discipline, over 40 years鈥擲teve Tilford was in the moment, not floating around, just doing the thing he loved most, pushing others to do the same. Often he won, but the most impressive thing is how often he showed up, how often he laid it down. This seems true about how he raced bikes and also how he lived life. He drove it all the way to the end.
. It's just a few paragraphs long, talking about hitting聽the road from California to Utah. (With two pictures of Tucker, of course.) It is impossible now, one聽day聽later, to read that post without staring at those photos or the sentence that opens the final paragraph. In it, Tilford wrote: “I'm short of time, so that is about it.”