An interview with Rahsaan Bahati, July 17, 2008
One leg tied behind his back
Rahsaan Bahati is one of top criterium racers in the U.S., and he's
had a strong season since joining the Rock Racing team last year. Yet
his wins have come despite a multitude of injuries which have left him
able to pedal fully with only one leg. Cyclingnews' Mark Zalewski talked with Bahati on the team's 'bling-bling' bus during Philly week.
Bahati found a home with Rock Racing.
Photo ©: Jon Devich
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Back in 2000 Rahsaan Bahati turned quite a few heads by winning the
U.S. elite criterium national championship... as a junior. That win
launched his career through several top teams – Mercury, Saturn and
TIAA-CREF (now Slipstream.) But none of the teams seemed to match his
personality, until 2007 when he found himself on the upstart Rock
Racing team. The kid from Compton was 'home,' and his win at the CSC
Invitational put the new team on the map.
This year, just when he should be making a career jump equal to the
size of his team, Bahati has been quieted by a long-standing set of
injuries. Nonetheless he crossed off a major career goal by winning the
infamous Athens Twilight criterium and recently defended his win at
Manhattan Beach Grand Prix, but did so mostly using one leg.
A little has been already written about Rahsaan Bahati and his chronic
leg injury – but to be more specific it is actually a combination of
four separate ailments, each of which would cause a cyclist significant
pain.
"The first thing, what is giving me the most problems, is that my L7(correction) L5
vertebrae is crushed," he said. "It hasn't actually slipped out, it is
just crushed. I had a MRI done on it because I get these huge lumps in
my back when I race – they are really big. I can stretch it out but
then it always comes back. When I finally got the MRI they did it in
two halves – when they got to my back they saw my L7(correction) L5 is crushed. But
they also found this tendon called the triremeal is completely torn!"
"They said we can do surgery on that and totally fix it, but you'll be out for like 8 weeks to heal."
"For the most part I've been racing pretty much with one leg the last three years and I just figured it out a month ago."
-Bahati explains all the physical problems which left him without power in one leg.
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"The third thing is that my right femur's head is overgrown for some
reason and it doesn't fit in my hip socket," he said. "At the top of my
pedal stroke the hip socket is touching the head of the femur. They
want to go in and chisel it down."
Finally, rounding out the list is effectively a result of the
previous three. "For the most part I've been racing pretty much with
one leg the last three years and I just figured it out a month ago. My
right leg, I'm not even really using it for the most part. They think
that because I've been dealing with it for so long that it transferred
over to the left [leg] because I am overcompensating with it – even
when I walk."
Of course a normal person would take the doctor's advice and correct
the problem with surgery. But an athlete's body is finely tuned and can
be significantly affected by invasive surgery – especially to an area
such as the back. "The doctors feel that it won't get any worse, but I
do need to take care of it. I have to say I am nervous about getting
surgery and that is the first thing they want to do. I'm going to do
Harlem, Austin, Manhattan Beach and then hopefully make it to crit
nationals. Then see if maybe I can do some rehab, because if you start
cutting anything can happen. But my goal is to make it to Downers Grove
[US national criterium championship] – that is the race I've always
wanted to win, because I've never won it as a pro."
Indeed, he only won the elite amateur category as an 18 year-old junior... pish-posh.
Still winning
He's number one again - Rahsaan Bahati
Photo ©: Vero Image
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Injury or no injury, one cannot say he is not delivering quality
wins for his team. Though he had an understandably quiet early season
due to the lack of crit racing, he started the first major race of the
season off right, with a win in the famous Athens Twilight criterium – a race that had eluded him until then.
"I've raced it a lot and I think I've come as high as ninth, and that was without sprinting. I was just trying to hold on then!"
"In the last lap I was in some pain but I was riding in the moment too.
To have all those people out there yelling, going crazy. Peter [Dawson]
had been doing a great job setting me up by taking all the pressure off
of me by sitting in the break for 85 percent of the race. At the end
when I found myself in the position to win I kept telling myself, 'Suck
it up, suck it up!' "
"It was like one of those days like CSC – you have those days twice
a year if you are lucky... at least I do. I knew I had to take
advantage of it."
But the effort took a toll on him and his injuries, enough that he
did not even go out and celebrate the win on the even more infamously
raucous streets of Athens, Georgia. And celebrating a win is something
that Bahati enjoys almost
as much as cycling. "It hurt a lot. I didn't even go out that night! I
took a shower, laid in bed, and that was it! I was walking around like
and old man – people were so surprised. I blew my chances!
Bahati was unable to defend his win at the CSC Invitational, mostly due to a breakaway lapping the field. But at the Manhattan Beach Grand Prix, he successfully defended his title.
This time hurt a little more because his physiotherapist was not on
hand. "It actually hurt a lot because the chiropractor we had for
Philly week wasn't there, and I was depending on him to put the kinesio
tape on my back."
The kinesio tape is the blue tape that has found its way on to many
athletes in recent years, especially cyclists. "That stuff really
works!" he added. But not having it made his back even more
uncomfortable than usual.
"My legs felt good, I just had the uncomfortable aching in my back, but I put that aside because I felt so good."
Team support
Bahati rides in the Harlem Skyscraper Classic.
Photo ©: Vero Image
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Being on an unconventional team like Rock Racing does have its
challenges. Team owner Michael Ball is well-known for having a 'win or
you are fired' approach to motivating his riders. But for Bahati, Ball
and the team have been completely supportive of him, no matter what he
chooses to do regarding his injury.
"They've been supportive. Michael Ball said he'll support me if I
want to take the season off and get it fixed or if I want to race – he
knows I want to compete. It was good to hear that he supports me. It's
been a tough year all around, having so many good guys on the team and
not getting a chance to race as much. When he heard that I wanted to
race, and was sincere about it, he was supportive."
His wins so far this year has convinced the management to give him
the green light to continue racing a rather full schedule, building up
to Downers Grove. "I got the OK to do some of Superweek and then the
Chicago crit. Then I'll do Charlotte and Downers Grove. The winning is
how I convinced them, to send guys with me to lock it in, so that I can
win Downers."
His run in Superweek has been good so far - he took the win in the second race, and then again in race five.
Being sidelined from the team also had the potential to make relations
with his fellow teammates difficult. But he said that this has not been
the case. "I feel it has been good, but kinda from the outside looking
in," he said. "I haven't been around as many races with the whole team.
I think the team is great – we have experienced guys racing, and we
have some new staff too. But team morale is good, especially after
Redlands, but even before that."
"At San Dimas, Sevilla had a mechanical. Most guys would have
freaked out and yelled at the mechanic, but he was so laid back. That
helped everyone be professional and say, 'That is the way to take care
of a situation.' He is a very good leader even though he doesn't speak
very much English."
In fact, until Philly week, Bahati had not raced with the full team
all year except for the team's training camp. "Training camp, that was
pretty memorable! It was like a two week race because I was dealing
with the injury and the death of a friend – it was a rough time for me,
definitely. But to ride that fast with those guys – I love to ride fast
and it was great to go out and ride 60kph for 30 minutes. It's
therapeutic."
A product of surroundings
Rahsaan Bahati (Rock Racing)
Photo ©: Jon Devich
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Growing up in a not-so-nice part of Los Angeles has had its effects
on Bahati, but even the bad experiences can be turned into positive
ones. For one, when looking to life after cycling, Bahati said he wants
to become a homicide detective – in part because the death of a friend
he referenced was a homicide.
"I have other goals I want to achieve in my life. I've been telling
my wife I want to race another three to five years. I can stop today
and be totally happy – I'm happy with what I have done so far in my
career. I can totally stop and be happy but I want to continue to grow
with Rock Racing. But I've been joking around a little with Halden
about becoming some kind of management in the next few years. I don't
want to leave the sport all the way because I love it. Maybe after I'll
do something I actually learned in school!"
Speaking of school, Bahati did finish his university degree from
Indiana University (famous in cycling circles for the Little 500), even
though he postponed some of it to pursue racing professionally. "I
finished online – computer animation through the telecom school!"
But his degree might not relate to what he says is his ultimate
goal. "I'm going to become a homicide detective! That's my next thing.
Detective B! After cycling, in L.A. – I'll always stay busy there! I've
always been intrigued with law enforcement. My favorite show is 'The
First 48 Hours' on A&E. That is pretty realistic. When I lost my
friend Aaron this year it prompted me to do more. And I've been
surrounded by Sheriff officers for the last three years. I'm coaching a
guy who is a detective, my next door neighbor is a detective, and I've
been talking to them about it. He even said he will sponsor me when I
go to the academy."
Bahati also has his hands in the product end of the industry. "I've
been dealing with a friend of mine and we started this company called
Attack Cycles. We just want to make the 'bling bling' wheels and
accessories. Just for the people who like to spend money but don't
really go that fast. But the wheels are good – I raced them at San
Dimas. It keeps me busy and some other income."
Bling bling indeed, and as the company tag line goes, "Ride like you stole them!"
Photography
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Images by
Jonathan Devich/
Images by
Vero Image/www.veroimage.com